Ananda has answered this, but to add on, US ordering from Europe... is extremely unlikely.Europe has a huge latent military production capability. If the US is lacking equipment, they can put in some orders.
All possible but extremely remote. Feels like grasping at straws type argument.* Naval Strike Missile (NSM) is already supplementing Harpoon. Production line is being established in the US however main production line still in Europe. If US wants more they can order not just from the US production line but also the Norwegian one. And if there is an urgent need, they can also "borrow" a few NSM from some of the 12 (soon to be 15) countries that have NSM in their inventories, to will be back-filled later.
* Ukrainans jury-rigged MiGs to use HARMs. If need be the Americans can do something similar to get access to e.g., IRIS-T, Meteor, Mica a2a missiles, Exocet, RBS-15, JSM, SOM, Sea Agle anti-ship missiles, and Taurus, Storm Shadow/Scalp cruise missiles (some of these already integrated into US systems) and get access to not only existing inventories but also European production lines. The total number of Taurus, Storm Shadow/Scalp in NATO countries seems to be more than 1,600, possibly up to 2,000... how many LRASM does the US have...?
* European naval production capacity can be mobilized -- countries like Spain, France, Italy, the UK, Germany, the Netherlands, Turkey, Denmark, Sweden, etc. all have the capabilities to build high-quality, high-performing frigates, and some can also build destroyers and other warships. All the US needs to do, is to place some orders...
It boils down to exactly what type of conflict is going to happen in TW. That conflict is going to be fast and furious because there is only going to be so much ships and planes that either side can lose and so many troops that China can potentially land. It is not going to be WWI redux that we are seeing now, but more like 1942 WWII Pacific.
That's insane. No one is suggesting all-out war where US and China bomb each other's production facilities over TW.Production in Europe has some advantages, in particular in an all-out war between the US and China, they will both try to damage production facilities in the other country. Thus we should expect Chinese manufacturing to be strongly reduced by the US. I don't know if China will have capabilities to hit US production facilities but if they do, European production facilities will become even more important, and pose a conundrum for China: If they attack Europe, it will turn into WW3. If they don't the US will have access to a continuous flow of weapons and munitions, whereas China will struggle quite a lot to produce.
If it is not happening today in Ukraine/Russia, why do you think this is likely in the Pacific?
Hmm, no. That is another can of worms that I suspect no European leader wants, beyond the fact that Europe will be dealing with the mess that is Ukraine and Russia aftermath.Europe can assist US in other ways, not just selling gear, and without becoming directly involved in such a conflict. For instance, the US has significant number of troops, equipment and munitions in the ME. The US can rapidly shift this to Asia, and European countries (e.g., Italy, Spain, France, etc.) can step in and stabilize the situation in the ME. There are many different ways that European countries can support the US.
IMO, the best Europe can do in such a Pacific conflict is to relief the US in Europe and start to buckle up on their defence obligations.