CORRIDOR in the confirmed view.
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Kevin Capozzoli of Critical Materials Group warns U.S. explosives production cannot scale for prolonged war, highlighting bottlenecks, aging infrastructure, and the need for modern, distributed manufacturing.
Teams lose time when the signal, the dependency, and the decision impact live in different places. Re-ins pulls that chain into one inspectable view so you can follow the issue, understand the knock-on effect, and move faster with the rationale still visible. Click any node to inspect how the picture changes.
1 step from the active issue to the selected item.
Forward corridor sits 1 hop away from the active event and exposes 2 direct relationships in the current view.
Forward corridor enters the visible route through centers on.
Directly linked to America’s Munitions Bottleneck Is, Readiness impact.
Confirmed evidence dominates this selection, so the visible route should be read as a hard operational dependency. The current selection sits in the confirmed view.
Forward corridor is selected by default to anchor the issue in a real operating surface instead of leaving the graph as abstract relationship mapping.
Military source provides the current initiating evidence. Forward corridor carries the local operating context while movement pressure and readiness impact remain linked in view.
Click any neighboring pill above or another node on the board to move the active route and inspect a different context chain.
CORRIDOR in the confirmed view.
Connected to America’s Munitions Bottleneck Is, Readiness impact.
Route uses centers on to travel from the active event to this node.
Use this article as the public proof point, then move into a guided pilot when you want the full workflow around your own context.