All Activity
- Today
-
Defence Blog - Spain’s next-gen Eurofighter is ready for its maiden flight
The first Eurofighter built under Spain’s Halcon I program has rolled out of the factory at Getafe, Madrid, with Airbus Defence and Space confirming that the aircraft is ready for its first engine run and maiden flight, marking the arrival of a new generation of European air combat capability on the Spanish Air Force’s flight […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - Northrop Grumman’s Jackal missile passes key flight test
Northrop Grumman completed a successful flight test of its Jackal precision strike missile on June 1, demonstrating the core systems that will define how American ground forces deliver long-range strikes in the most contested environments they are likely to face. The test validated the missile’s automated turbojet engine startup, autopilot-controlled flight, and high-speed maneuvering, confirming […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - UK orders hundreds more battle-proven LMM missiles
Britain has ordered hundreds more Lightweight Multirole Missiles from Thales to rebuild stockpiles and reinforce the air defense of British forces in the Middle East, with the contracts worth a combined £36 million, roughly $48 million, George Allison of the UK Defence Journal reported June 1. The two contracts were placed by the National Armaments […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - California firm rethinks missile defense without rocket motors
The U.S. military fired more than 1,000 Patriot interceptors during the Iran conflict but received only 172 new ones in return, according to a Center for Strategic and International Studies analysis, leaving American air defense stockpiles in a deficit that won’t be replenished until 2029 at the earliest. That gap has driven a search for […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - U.S. Navy buys Israeli anti-drone rifle scope
An Israeli fire control technology company has now secured contracts with all four major branches of the U.S. military, completing a sweep across the American armed forces that took less than a year. Smart Shooter announced June 1 that it received its first significant U.S. Navy contract, a $1.8 million award for soldier-portable SMASH 2000LE […]View the full article
-
CDR Salamander - R-280 From Rostov to Simferopol: SLOC from San Diego to WESTPAC
With so much else going on, it is easy to forget that the Russo-Ukrainian War of 2022 is still ongoing. It has always been true that if you want to better prepare your nation for its next war, watch closely what works or does not work in other people’s wars. We’ve seen a cottage industry build around this concept when it comes to the conflict in Ukraine. Some of it gets rather tiresome as people try to directly translate what works on the Ukrainian steppe to a potential Taiwan conflict, for just one example. Much of this pontificating and projecting is firmly where most people are comfortable, the Tactical level. We’re not going to do that today. Recently, breaking above the background noise is a development at the Operational and Strategic level that keeps tapping me on the shoulder. We’ll return to that in a bit, but for those who have been focused on DC-centric issues, Venezuela or Iran, let’s catch up. In case you were not tracking, Putin’s “72-hour War” that he started on February 24, 2022 has been going on longer than the Soviet Union fought Nazi Germany in WWII. That war lasted 1,418 days, from the invasion on June 22, 1941, to Victory Day on May 9, 1945. The Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022 surpassed that 1,418-day mark in January 2026. Yes, this war is longer than WWII for the Russians and Ukrainians. At the end of February 2022, if you showed anyone this graph, they would not have believed you. For Russia alone: 1.3 million+ casualties, almost 12,000 tanks, and double that number in AFVs, etc…yet here we are, and more importantly, plucky Ukraine is still standing—even with the often miserly, occasionally intermittent, yet growing support from Europe and North America. It seems each month, another drip to help Ukraine from the West gets added. JDAM-ER is just the latest. The ghost of McNamara’s incrementalism still haunts us all. If you need to catch up in more detail, as always there are two sources that consistently produce quality products. Both of them underscored to me that something new and important is happening as summer arrives. There is a lesson here, one that I am sure the People’s Republic of China (PRC) is noting. First, Cappy’s videos are prime. If you are more of a text guy, the Institute for the Study of War. Ukraine is actively challenging the positional character of the war that has dominated the battlefield since 2023. Russian battlefield gains are approaching net zero, while Ukrainian forces are setting conditions potentially to break out of positional warfare by reintroducing limited elements of mechanized maneuver at the tactical level. Ukraine has re-secured an overall drone advantage and fielded systems capable of disrupting Russian forces throughout their operational depth in support of planned Ukrainian offensive or defensive ground operations. Neither Russia nor Ukraine can conduct operational maneuvers yet, however. Ukraine’s success in blunting Russian advances and reversing Russian gains in some sectors of the line, in tandem with Ukraine’s limited reintroduction of elements of tactical mechanized maneuver, may nevertheless mark the beginning of a new phase of the war. Combat in Ukraine will likely become less positional and feature more tactical maneuver until Russia’s innovation cycle renders Ukraine’s current operational concepts ineffective. Ukraine likely has a unique and time-constrained opportunity to exploit its current initiative while Russian forces remain vulnerable. … Russia is losing more soldiers to make fewer gains, with monthly Russian casualty rates reportedly outpacing monthly recruitment since December 2025. … Ukraine is starting to regain more ground than it is losing for the first time since 2023. Perhaps the Russians may have culminated…again…but more cards need to come out through the summer to make that call. Perhaps. The restructuring to align more closely with NATO standards is great; continued modernization and scale of production are superb, but this is what keeps tapping me on the shoulder. Ukraine significantly intensified its intermediate-range strike campaign against dynamic targets in Spring 2026 in order to degrade Russian logistics at operational depths ahead of a planned Ukrainian maneuver. Logistics. Logistics. Logistics. You cannot conduct offensive operations without robust logistics. None of this is new. The pilots of P-47s who haunted the roads and rails of Western Europe in WWII could tell you the story. Our pilots who targeted the Ho Chi Minh Trail knew exactly what their mission was. The key is if you have the weapons, intel, and mass to do it with a scale of effect to make a difference to the front-line effort. What is the Achilles Heel of the U.S. military in any conflict west of the International Date Line? It is our undercapitalized sealift, our forward repair and rearming capability, and our ability to replace losses in the strategic sealift and airlift we possess. Don’t forget: we may couch any conflict against the PRC as ‘defending our allies’, but our operations will be offensive in nature. We will have extended exterior lines of communication far from our homeland. Our enemy will have short, interior lines of communication from their homeland. What is the Pacific Sea-Lines-of-Communication (SLOC) for the U.S. that is comparable to Russia’s Ground-Lines-of-Communication (GLOC)? Simple: the SLOC west from Guam, north from Australia, and southwest from Japan. The deep fight is everything east of there. When you look at what the PRC has built up, specifically in their rocket forces, over the last two decades, it is clear they already know this. What they are seeing in Ukraine will only tell them that they are on the right track. Do they have the weapons, intel, and mass to make our sustainment, repair, and rearmament west of Guam untenable? So, what are we doing to counter it? Leave a comment Share This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. View the full article
-
Defence Blog - China claims its J-10 swept one of Europe’s best jets 9-0
Pakistan’s Chinese-made J-10CE fighter jets went undefeated against Qatar’s Eurofighter Typhoons in nine simulated air combat engagements during a joint exercise in 2024, with China’s state broadcaster CCTV confirming the result last week without identifying the specific drill or the countries involved, according to an analysis by Harrison Kass published by The National Interest. Pakistani […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - South Korea joins elite club of nations that can build laser weapon
South Korea just cracked one of the most tightly guarded engineering secrets in global defense, successfully developing a domestic laser oscillator for its Cheongwang laser weapon system, a component so strategically sensitive that only the United States, Israel, China, and Germany are known to produce it independently. The announcement from South Korea’s Defense Acquisition Program […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - Germany’s new unmanned helicopter just flew for the first time
A German aerospace firm completed the first flight of its Wespe unmanned helicopter on Thursday, marking a milestone for a platform designed to solve one of the most dangerous problems in modern combat medicine: moving critically wounded soldiers from forward field hospitals to surgical facilities without putting additional crew members in harm’s way. Aerospace, the […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - Israel’s Uvision connects drone swarms to one AI command system
Israeli loitering munitions manufacturer Uvision launched a new battle management software system on June 1 that connects sensors, decision-making processes, and multiple weapons into a single unified framework, announcing the CORTEX active Battle Intelligence and Mission Management system at ILA Berlin 2026 as the company’s most ambitious step yet toward automating the full sensor-to-shooter chain […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - NATO certifies Dutch drone command system after live exercise
A Netherlands-based command and control platform led one of four competing teams at NATO’s largest counter-drone interoperability exercise in May, fusing sensor data from 13 countries into a single operational picture and receiving an official certification from NATO’s communications agency confirming it successfully connected with 46 separate counter-drone nodes across two tiers of the alliance’s […]View the full article
-
Far Nth Aus future ship maintenance facility
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-06-01/us-navy-interest-in-nt-darwin-ship-lift/106736536?utm_source=abc_news_app&utm_medium=content_shared&utm_campaign=abc_news_app&utm_content=other
- AUKUS Virginia purchases changed
- Yesterday
- AUKUS Virginia purchases changed
-
Defence Blog - Slovakia signs $580M deal for military excavator systems
A Slovak defense engineering company has signed a framework agreement worth up to $580 million with Slovakia’s Ministry of Defence for military excavator systems, structured under the European Union’s new SAFE financing program in a way that allows any other EU member state to join the contract without running its own separate procurement competition. CSM […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - U.S. Army’s top official tested laser-armed vehicle in New Mexico
The U.S. Army’s top civilian official sat down at the operator’s seat of a laser-armed pickup truck at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico and personally checked the weapon at a drone target, the latest signal from Washington that directed energy weapons have moved from science fiction to serious policy in a very short […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - San Francisco startup’s hydrofoil boat wows U.S. Navy brass
A San Francisco-based maritime technology company’s hydrofoiling electric boat stopped senior U.S. Navy admirals and captains in their tracks at the Sea-Air-Space conference, drawing repeated assessments of ‘game changer’ from operators who work with small naval craft for a living, Navier CEO Sampriti Bhattacharyya revealed following the company’s debut at the major naval exposition. The […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - Neros Technologies shrinks its attack drone controller by half
A Los Angeles-based drone technology company has redesigned its ground control station for FPV attack drones to fit on a soldier’s body armor, cutting total system size by more than half while preserving the full 25-kilometer (15.5-mile) operational range that the previous version offered, and is already delivering the new hardware to customers. Neros Technologies […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - Canada’s new warships get British-proven sub-hunting sonar
Canada’s Royal Canadian Navy will equip its next generation of warships with the same submarine-hunting sonar system that the British Royal Navy operates, after Thales Canada secured a contract from Lockheed Martin Canada to supply the S2087 towed array sonar for the future River-class destroyers. The award makes Canada the 20th navy worldwide to select […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - Poland builds 155mm artillery shells with British help
Poland and Britain are building artillery shells together at scale, and their governments and chambers of commerce have just given that partnership a formal award recognizing it as one of the most consequential industrial collaborations between the two countries. The British Embassy in Warsaw and the British Polish Chamber of Commerce jointly presented the British-Polish […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - U.S. Army tests British-made interceptor to beat drones
The U.S. Army’s 52nd Air Defense Artillery Brigade has tested a new low-cost interceptor called Skyhammer in Europe, putting Cambridge Aerospace’s system through developmental evaluations designed to determine whether it can fill critical gaps in the layered air defense architecture that American and NATO forces are urgently trying to build along the alliance’s eastern flank. […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - Ukraine-tested spy drone passes French electromagnetic warfare test
A drone equipped with an airborne signals intelligence system successfully detected, classified, and geolocated every high-priority radio frequency emitter in a French military exercise earlier this month, demonstrating a capability that could fundamentally change how ground forces find and track adversary communications equipment, drone operators, and jammers without putting soldiers within range of the threats […]View the full article
- Last week
-
AUKUS members to develop drones
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-30/aukus-announcement-to-develop-undersea-vehicles/106741398?utm_source=abc_news_app&utm_medium=content_shared&utm_campaign=abc_news_app&utm_content=other
-
Defence Blog - U.S. Army invests $461M to rebuild short-range air defense fast
The U.S. Army is nearly doubling its investment in its primary short-range air defense system for fiscal year 2027, requesting $461 million for the Maneuver Short-Range Air Defense program, known as M-SHORAD, up from $296 million the previous year, as the service races to rebuild air defense capabilities it dismantled two decades ago and now […]View the full article
-
Defence Blog - Poland orders 146 more Borsuk fighting vehicles in $2B deal
Poland signed a contract for 146 more of its domestically built infantry fighting vehicles, expanding a rearmament program that has become one of the most significant ground force modernization efforts in NATO Europe, with a deal worth approximately 7.5 billion Polish zloty, equivalent to roughly $2.07 billion at current exchange rates, funded through Poland’s SAFE […]View the full article