Author: Defenceline Webdesk
Robbin Laird, SLDinfo The Abraham Accords, Iran, and the Global War in Ukraine Source link
The Pentagon is all in on artificial intelligence — but there are plenty of questions about how it will be used and what surprising challenges may emerge. Trey Coleman, a retired US Air Force colonel, is the chief product officer at defense tech firm RAFT. In this fireside chat, he talks with Breaking Defense’s Aaron Mehta about the challenges of bringing AI to the edge of the battlefield, how the Pentagon is using AI today, and how the Rifleman’s Creed applies to modern data. Source link
Lawmakers have questions about the Pentagon’s increased keenness to take partial ownership stakes in companies, demanding details from defense officials while they weigh the need for legislation. Government equity investment adds pressure on companies to “stimulate growth” and production without “pursuing control,” Michael Duffey, the Pentagon’s top weapons buyer, said Wednesday during a House Armed Services Committee hearing on the defense industrial base. “We view equity investment as an important tool—amongst a range of tools—that we can apply to build resilience and reduce fragility within the defense industrial base,” Duffey said. Those other tools include grants and loans, he said, but the…
US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth was critical of the UK’s delay in allowing bombers access to the Diego Garcia air base. Credit: US DoD via X US CENTCOM continues its operations over Iran, striking hundreds of military and command targets in recent days The US military is switching some of its bomber force to include B-52 platforms, as air superiority of Iran has been achieved US Secretary of War Hegseth has said the US military has the munitions needed to sustain operations The US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has said it was “unfortunate” the UK did not allow…
Russia’s Su-57 Felon has faced criticism for its limited role in the Ukraine conflict, primarily launching long-range missiles from safe distances rather than engaging in contested airspace.This usage highlights concerns over its survivability against modern air defences, despite promotional claims from Sukhoi. The aircraft’s design compromises, including engine face exposure, suboptimal inlet shaping, and a larger radar cross-section compared to true stealth fighters like the F-22 or F-35, remain inherent limitations.India’s potential acquisition of the Su-57E export variant offers a unique opportunity for enhancement through indigenous systems. By replacing Russian avionics with Indian-developed radar, electronic warfare suites, mission computers, and…
N. Hashemi, RCDefense The Pentagon’s AI Adoption Problem Is Institutional, Not Technical Source link
WASHINGTON — The US Air Force is seeking other vendors capable of supplying a radar-killing missile like one that the service already has on contract with Northrop Grumman, according to a recent notice. Through a sources sought notice posted Wednesday, the Air Force says it is seeking a missile with “similar or improved capabilities compared to” the service’s Stand-in Attack Weapon (SiAW). The notice says the period of performance could begin this year so that production units would arrive by 2030. Interested suppliers should be able to provide an “All-Up-Round (AUR) missile to include hardware and software, as well as…
U.S. forces destroyed Iran’s military space command, Adm. Brad Cooper, the head of Central Command, announced Thursday, saying the move degraded the regime’s ability to coordinate retaliatory strikes. But experts told Defense One that the country’s nascent space capabilities never posed a significant threat. “We’ve also struck Iran’s equivalent of Space Command, which degrades their ability to threaten Americans,” Cooper said during a press conference.The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps announced the existence of its own space command in April 2020 during the launch of its first reconnaissance satellite. Iran has launched a total of 26 satellites since 2005, and 13 of…
An unarmed Minuteman III ICBM launches during a test at Vandenberg Space Force Base on 3 March 2026. Credit: U.S. Space Force photo by Staff Sgt. Joshua LeRoi. The US Air Force Global Strike Command (AFGSC) has carried out a “scheduled” test launch of an unarmed Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. The launch, named GT 255, took place on 3 March 2026 and included two test re-entry vehicles. It coincides with the ongoing US military activity in Iran, known as Operation Epic Fury. Discover B2B Marketing That Performs Combine business intelligence and…
A Pakistani national, Asif Merchant, has claimed in a United States court that he was coerced by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) into plotting the assassination of President Donald Trump. Merchant, facing charges of terrorism and murder-for-hire, insisted during his trial that his involvement was not voluntary but driven by threats to his family in Tehran.The Justice Department alleges that Merchant sought to recruit individuals in the US to execute the plot, targeting Trump and other prominent figures. This scheme, according to prosecutors, stemmed from retaliation for the US airstrike that killed IRGC commander Qassem Soleimani in 2020. Merchant’s defence…
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