The Department of Homeland 
Security is set to purchase over 62 million rounds of ammo typically 
used in AR-15 semi-automatic rifles, just weeks after the ATF was forced
 to back down on a ban on M855 bullets.
A posting on FedBizOpps.gov
 this week reveals that the DHS is looking to contract with a company to
 provide 12.6 million rounds of .223 Remington ammunition per year for a
 period of five years – totaling 62.5 million bullets.
The solicitation explains that the 
purchase is intended, “to achieve price savings over the current .223 
Rem duty ammunition.” The bullets will be used by U.S. Customs and 
Border Protection agents nationwide for “training” purposes.
The .223 Remington is one of the most 
common rifle cartridges in use in the United States and is used both in 
bolt action rifles and semi-automatic rifles such as the AR-15 and the 
Ruger Mini-14.

In 2013, following concerns about the 
DHS buying large quantities of several different types of ammunition, 
weapons manufacturers noted that the feds may have been attempting to 
control the ammunition market by forcing manufacturers to hold back 
stock from general sale.
“If they periodically do this in 
increments, they’re going to control how much ammo is available on the 
commercial market,” a weapons manufacturer told Michael Savage,
 adding that the contracts with bullet manufacturers stipulate that 
everything made goes to the government as the number one priority before
 it is allowed to enter the commercial market.
In March 2013, Californian Congressman Doug LaMalfa and 14 of his House peers wrote a letter to the Department of Homeland Security
 demanding to know why the federal agency was buying so many rounds of 
ammunition and whether the purchases were part of a deliberate attempt 
to restrict supply to the American people.
“The extraordinary level of ammunition
 purchases made by Homeland Security seems to have, in states such as my
 own, created an extreme shortage of ammunition to the point where many 
gun owners are unable to purchase any,” LaMalfa wrote in the letter.
The bulk purchase follows attempts by 
the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms to ban M855 ammo, another 
popular round for AR-15’s used by hunters. The ATF justified the ban by 
claiming that the bullets were “armor piercing” and a threat to law 
enforcement officers.
After being on the receiving end of a 
huge backlash, the feds were forced to back down and ATF director B. 
Todd Jones subsequently tendered his resignation. Democratic Congressman Steve Israel called the ATF backdown “cowardly” and vowed to revive the ban.
The ATF’s threat to ban the ammo temporarily caused prices of the bullet to surge more than double in price.
Although federal agencies are increasingly hiding their purchases by 
limiting public information on fbo.gov, it can still be conservatively 
estimated from available data that the feds have purchased at least 2.11
 billion rounds of ammunition since April 2012:Date Reported Agency Amount Caliber
April ’12 – Feb ’13 Various 2,000,000,000 Various
03/25/13 DHS 360,000 .40 S&W
07/26/13 NOAA 72,000 .40 S&W
07/26/13 Army 2,550,000 7.62x39mm
07/26/13 Army 425,000 9x18mm Makarov
08/19/13 TSA 3,454,000 .357 SIG
02/11/14 DHS 141,000 .308 Remington
04/22/14 DHS 25,000,000 12 Gauge
05/22/14 TSA 24,000,000 .357 SIG
04/15/15 DHS 62,000,000 .223 Remington
TOTAL 2,118,002,000
That’s enough ammo to kill around 30% of the world’s population.
Furthermore, U.S. soldiers were shooting around 5.5 million rounds of ammunition per month during the war in Iraq, or 66 million rounds annually. Using that figure, the feds have stockpiled enough ammo over the past two years to fight a 32-year war.
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment