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- Past hour
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Scenario Editor out?
I fear the current scenario editor is not working after Microsoft don't support now Windows 10 (But I use Windows 11!), I get an error message apparently related with that, are you getting some similar issues?
- Today
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Defence Blog - NATO jets intercept six Russian aircraft over the Baltic in one day
Six Russian military aircraft operating in Baltic airspace in a single day triggered a joint NATO scramble involving French and Swedish fighter jets, the latest reminder that the skies above one of Europe’s most sensitive stretches of territory remain an active theater of aerial friction between the alliance and Moscow. NATO Air Command confirmed that […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Northrop Grumman pushes battle-tested radar to world market
More than 40 of Northrop Grumman’s most advanced ground radar systems are already in the hands of U.S. Marines and airmen, and the company is pushing the system hard to international buyers as demand for mobile, multi-mission air defense sensors surges worldwide. Northrop Grumman published a capability overview on June 4, highlighting the operational status […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Ukrainian Humvee took a direct drone strike and kept rolling
A First-Person View (FPV) drone, the cheap remote-controlled kamikaze weapon that has killed more soldiers in this war than almost any other single weapon type, struck a Ukrainian military Humvee directly in the windshield during a combat mission in the Zaporizhzhia direction. The crew inside survived. The glass held. Ukraine’s Defense Intelligence directorate, known by […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Lockheed installs engine in Germany’s first F-35 fighter jet
The most consequential fighter jet Germany has ever ordered just crossed a milestone that brings it meaningfully closer to the flight line. Lockheed Martin announced that the engine powering Germany’s first F-35 has been installed, confirming that the aircraft is progressing through final production and moving toward delivery of what will be Berlin’s first fifth-generation […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Silicon Valley meets the cannon: Anduril joins Team SIGMA
Two of the U.S. defense industry’s most closely watched companies announced they are joining forces to compete for one of the Army’s most significant ground combat modernization programs, pairing a combat-proven Israeli-American cannon system with Silicon Valley’s most prominent defense technology firm. Elbit Systems of America and Anduril Industries announced a strategic teaming agreement on […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Raytheon to repair JSOW glide bombs for Greece
Four of Greece’s American-made standoff missiles need fixing, and the U.S. Navy is about to pay the only company on Earth capable of repairing them to do exactly that. The procurement notice, published June 4, 2026, signals that Greece’s air force is keeping its American-supplied precision strike arsenal in fighting shape at a moment when […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Plasan launches three armor systems for drone-age warfare
An Israeli armor company is heading to Eurosatory later this month with three new vehicle protection systems, each targeting a category of threat that has grown sharply more lethal on the modern battlefield: mines, top-attack munitions, and shaped charge warheads that conventional armor struggles to stop. Plasan, the Kibbutz Sasa-based survivability specialist with more than […]View the full article
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CDR Salamander - If the USAF can have Jeremiah Weed, why can't the Navy have Old Overholt?
Every now and then I hear about some vague connection between the USAF and the liquor Jeremiah Weed. Though the USAF is better known for its anime swords, I guess they can up their game a bit by creating some legends of their own to justify a connection to a drink. I’d prefer Robin Olds and a bucket of champagne vibe, but I’m not USAF, so that’s up to them. What about the U.S. Navy? Sadly, General Order 99 took the wind out of our sails a bit, but I had a thought recently. I ran into this pic. Just get a look at these ballers. I dug around a bit and found the backstory via the Navy SEAL Museum: Aboard the USS Burrfish (SS 312) near Peleliu in the Pacific Ocean, part of a UDT special mission group of volunteers that conducted the only UDT submarine launched operation during World War II. (L-R) Leonard Barnhill, John MacMahon, LT M.R. Massy, Bill Moore and Warren Christensen, John MacMahon (pictured) and Robert Black and CPO Howard Roeder (not pictured) were captured by the Japanese the night after this photograph was taken and killed while in captivity. That was the easy part. Next I needed to find out not just how that bottle of liquor got on a submarine, but why, and what brand it was. I even had to enlist ChatGPT and Grok, but they were no help. Their image enhancement just made things up. So I dug around old-school…and SUCCESS! I’ll spare you the details, but that is a bottle of Old Overholt. Here’s a similar period bottle. The Old Overholt brand is about as American as you can get, and it is the longest continually produced whiskey in North America—legally made even during Prohibition. But why was it on that table? Old Overholt rye whiskey was a staple "medicinal" alcohol for the United States Navy, frequently stocked aboard ships and affectionately nicknamed "Overcoat" by sailors. This 100-proof, bottled-in-bond rye. Why, in the year of our Lord Two Thousand and Twenty-Six, am I now only finding out about this? Why has the U.S. Navy not made this, if not official, then, at least culturally, its official whiskey? Don’t tell me the U.S. Navy should just have “rum” or some concoction called “grog”. We should have something quintessentially American and connected to our fighting history. It is still around—now produced by Beam Distilling. Same recipe, but perhaps not as sexy of a bottle. It isn’t that expensive. You can get a bottle for sale for under $10. Maybe if enough Navy types showed an interest, Beam might consider a special bottling using the WWII Era Bottle? Wait, they may not have to do that. The bottle they use for their 11 year old stuff is close, they’d just need to create the right label and fill it with the appropriate 100 proof. This should be a thing. I’ve found out where to buy it locally. I think I’ll pick up a bottle. 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
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Defence Blog - Poland shuts low-altitude airspace on Ukraine and Belarus borders
A stretch of Polish sky running along the country’s most sensitive borders is about to go quiet. Starting June 10, 2026, Poland will enforce a new restricted airspace zone along its eastern frontier with Ukraine and Belarus, blocking most low-altitude flights for three full months in a move the government has justified on national security […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - U.S. Army buys new Outlaw Gen 3 drones
America’s military campaign against Iran has been running for three months, and the Army is already writing checks to close one of the capability gaps it exposed. A $68 million contract awarded June 3, 2026, to Griffon Aerospace of Madison, Alabama, will deliver the next generation of one of the U.S. military’s most widely used […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - U.S. Army buys 82 P550 drones in $117 million deal
The U.S. Army awarded California-based AeroVironment a $117 million contract on June 3, 2026, to deliver 82 of the company’s P550 unmanned aircraft systems, giving ground commanders an organic reconnaissance and targeting capability that requires no runway, no catapult, and no launch crew beyond the soldiers already in the unit. AeroVironment (AV) is one of […]View the full article
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bossman joined the community
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Defence Blog - Finnish startup builds affordable surveillance plane to hunt drones
Finland is set to begin manufacturing a new class of affordable surveillance and drone-detection aircraft at the country’s only aircraft factory, with the first prototype test flight scheduled within days, Titta Puurunen of Finnish public broadcaster Yle reported June 3. The program belongs to Sensofusion, a Finnish defense technology company that employs more than 100 […]View the full article
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CDR Salamander - Episode 40: 03JUN2026
Show LinksUkrainian FP-1/2 drone attacks Russian frigate Admiral Essen at the Novorossiysk Naval Base Ukrainian attack on the Kronstadt Naval Base Attack on Kuwait International Airport Saronic commentary by John Konrad on gCaptain AV-8B closes its story MQ-25A opens its story AUKUS update SummarySal discusses the ongoing Ukraine conflict, its historical cont… Read more View the full article
- Yesterday
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CDR Salamander - ...but what about the MK-57 VLS?
In both comments and via a couple of email/DMs yesterday, there were some sincere questions about why no one is talking about installing the “newer” design MK-57 VLS cells that we see in the three ships of the Zumwalt Class. In isolation they appear to be fine VLS cells, but are creatures of the time and place in which they were designed. Let’s go back to their first name: the MK-57 Peripheral Vertical Launch System (PVLS). They are a custom solution for the DDG-1000 Class designed in the Age of Transformation™ in the first decade of this century. It is an evolutionary dead-end riding on a white elephant. The MK-57 has a common problem found on most designs from this decade of error: it was built around novel ideas about warship construction and design that time proved wrong. Critique and best practices were hand-waved away, and entire systems were designed around weapons that simply never showed up. That left the future with all the costs of compromise without the promised delivery of new systems. Seriously, whatever happened to those “larger missiles” that were supposed to fit in there that couldn’t fit in a MK-41? Here are three major downsides from my seat that explain why we will not see them again: Inefficient use of volume: The Mk-57 is built in 4-cell modules rather than the traditional 8-cell grids, which isn’t too much of an issue. However, they take up significantly more interior hull space per missile. If you need a 1x4, the nice sales representative at LMT can get that for you in a MK-41. Not worth the additional cost: For the price and deck space it demands, it did not offer a proportionally higher return in firepower. Though they were designed to accommodate larger, next-generation missiles, that design limits the flexibility of what can be loaded. It has a slightly wider cell diameter than the MK-41, but is still not large enough to house the Conventional Prompt Strike (CPS) / hypersonic missiles. Exceptionally FPV vulnerable: Though I am sure they can be installed elsewhere, with the Zumwalts they were installed next to the skin of the ship. Everyone is worried about small drones (FPV), especially nearshore and in port. They carry small warheads, which are not too much of a concern to a big ship (however, the shaped-charge warhead of an RPG-7 many seem to be strapped with will cut right through our thin-skinned warships)...but when you have a big missile just an external bulkhead away from the side of the ship...you can figure it out from there....not to mention a Fitzgerald/McCain like collision or Cole attack. At the end of the day—larger with no additional gain, more expensive without any value, expanded vulnerability without any enhansed lethality. That is why we don’t see them. 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
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Defence Blog - Raytheon wins $516M to keep the Navy’s top radar combat-ready
The U.S. Navy is doubling down on what it considers its most capable air and missile defense radar at sea, committing $516 million to keep the system integrated, tested, and ready across the fleet. Raytheon Missiles and Defense, the Marlborough, Massachusetts-based defense arm of RTX Corporation, secured a $515.8 million contract modification this week to […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Israeli firm claims new laser cuts counter-drone costs by 75%
An Israeli defense firm is preparing to show off a laser weapon at Eurosatory later this month that can burn through a drone in under two seconds while drawing only a fraction of the power that comparable directed-energy systems require. Esh-Tech, a laser-focused defense technology company based in Omer, Israel, announced DroneLight on June 3, […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Ukraine hits Russian missile corvette at Kronstadt base
Ukrainian forces struck the Russian Baltic Fleet corvette Boyky at Kronstadt Naval Base on the night of June 2-3, 2026, in the same overnight operation that set the St. Petersburg Oil Terminal ablaze on the opening day of Putin’s annual economic forum, with Ukraine’s Unmanned Systems Forces and the Security Service of Ukraine confirming the […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Canada orders 26 HIMARS launchers for $1.9 billion
Canada announced on June 2 that it finalized a deal in January 2026 to purchase 26 HIMARS rocket artillery systems from the United States for approximately $1.9 billion, giving the Canadian Army its first long-range precision strike capability and a weapon that Ukraine has used to devastating effect against Russian logistics, ammunition depots, and command […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Ukraine’s new heavy drone lets operators attack from anywhere on Earth
A Ukrainian defense technology company has unveiled a heavy quadcopter drone designed specifically for satellite-controlled strikes, precision minelaying, and logistics resupply at ranges and from positions that conventional radio-controlled drones cannot reach, delivering a capability that Ukrainian frontline units requested directly as the nature of drone warfare on their front evolved in ways that ground-based […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Ukraine struck St. Petersburg’s oil terminal on the eve of Russia’s Davos
Ukraine struck a major Russian oil terminal in Saint Petersburg and hit a military industrial target near the Baltic Fleet’s Kronstadt base on the night of June 2-3, with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy confirming the operations were part of his “long-range sanctions” campaign designed to make Russia’s war economy pay a direct price for its attacks […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Japanese lawmaker demands Patriot missile transfers to Ukraine
A Japanese opposition lawmaker has gone directly to Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi in a parliamentary committee hearing to demand that Japan supply Patriot air defense missiles to Ukraine, citing Zelensky’s stated desperation for interceptors and arguing that Japan now has both the legal authority and the moral obligation to act. Shigefumi Matsuzawa, a member of […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Saab rolls out first Gripen F two-seat fighter jet
Saab rolled out the first Gripen F two-seat fighter to the Brazilian Air Force on June 2 at its Linköping facility in Sweden, presenting the newest variant of the Gripen E family to the air force that helped develop it and marking a milestone in one of the most substantive defense industrial partnerships between a […]View the full article
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Defence Blog - Rheinmetall spends $41M to expand U.S. Army production
American Rheinmetall is spending $41 million to expand and modernize six manufacturing facilities across Michigan, Ohio, and Maine, accelerating production capacity for some of the U.S. Army’s most important ground combat modernization programs while deliberately avoiding the time and cost of building entirely new factories. The German defense giant’s American subsidiary announced the capital investment […]View the full article
- Last week
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Defence Blog - Ukraine fitted Soviet-era BMP with Spanish 30mm cannon turret
Ukraine’s 146th Separate Repair and Restoration Regiment published photographs of a Soviet-era BMP infantry fighting vehicle fitted with a Spanish GUARDIAN 30 remote weapon station. The photographs, posted to the regiment’s official social media page, show a standard BMP hull carrying the GUARDIAN 30 turret in place of the original conical Soviet turret that the […]View the full article