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  1. Today
  2. Sudan’s military appears to have used a Turkish-made HİSAR-A surface-to-air missile during an attempt to repel a drone attack over Khartoum, offering open-source evidence that Turkish-made HİSAR-A air defense missiles may be in use by the Sudanese Armed Forces. Rich Tedd, an OSINT analyst who tracks military hardware through imagery and wreckage identification, published photographs […]View the full article
  3. Two U.S. Army soldiers were pulled from the waters off the coast of Oman on June 8 after their helicopter went down during a patrol mission, rescued within two hours by a joint American force that scrambled across multiple military branches to reach them. U.S. Central Command, the military headquarters overseeing American operations across the […]View the full article
  4. The U.S. Marine Corps has placed a follow-on order for Israeli-made AI-powered rifle scopes that allow Marines to engage small drones with standard rifles fitted with SMASH fire control systems, awarding a contract worth up to $5.8 million to Smart Shooter. Smart Shooter, an Israeli defense technology company specializing in fire control systems, announced the […]View the full article
  5. Ukraine’s commander-in-chief has approved a formal development concept for the country’s rocket forces and artillery through 2030, setting out a blueprint that prioritizes domestic weapons production, targets strike capability reaching 2,000 kilometers (1,243 miles), and commits to phasing out Soviet-era artillery systems that can no longer be repaired or modernized. General Oleksandr Syrskyi, Commander-in-Chief of […]View the full article
  6. The Ukrainian startup behind the autonomous Shahed interceptor system announced this week by Ukraine’s Defense Minister has a name, a price tag, and a detailed technical story: MaXon Systems, a Kyiv-based defense technology company, built an interceptor drone that kills Shaheds on autopilot for approximately $3,500 per unit, Defender Media reported in an exclusive interview […]View the full article
  7. An Israeli drone manufacturer whose production facility was struck by an Iranian ballistic missile just two months ago has announced that its G3 reconnaissance drone platform completed operational readiness and training activities with unnamed security organizations over the past two weeks, with photographs showing the aircraft carrying blurred external payloads that were obscured, apparently for […]View the full article
  8. U.S. Army soldiers recently trained alongside the Wild Goose robotic ground vehicle, a small unmanned platform designed to carry heavy weapons, ammunition, and casualties across terrain that wheeled vehicles cannot reach, according to an announcement from American Rheinmetall, the American subsidiary of the German defense giant. The training, conducted over several days in partnership with […]View the full article
  9. The U.S. Air Force awarded a $4 billion contract on June 8, to keep its training bases running for the next decade, selecting 19 companies to provide everything from aircraft maintenance and fire services to IT support, grounds keeping, and human resources across eleven Air Education and Training Command installations, including several of the Air […]View the full article
  10. Britain’s next-generation main battle tank has completed another round of Battlefield Mission serials, putting Challenger 3 trial vehicles through cross-country driving, road work, gunnery drills, and full crew exercises in conditions designed to mirror real operational use, UK Defence Journal reported. The results are feeding directly into the engineering baseline as the program builds toward […]View the full article
  11. Industrial robots have arrived at L3Harris Technologies’ new GMLRS facility in Camden, Arkansas, marking a visible step in the Pentagon’s drive to rebuild the American munitions production base at a pace the country has not attempted since the Cold War. L3Harris posted photographs of the robotic arms on its official social media account, describing the […]View the full article
  12. Yesterday
  13. Germany and France have jointly decided to abandon the fighter jet component of the Future Combat Air System, known as FCAS, after years of industrial disputes between Airbus and Dassault Aviation proved impossible to resolve, according to Der Tagesspiegel. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and French President Emmanuel Macron reached a shared conclusion that Airbus and […]View the full article
  14. The same family of unmanned surface vessels that has been hunting Russian warships in the Black Sea made its Indo-Pacific debut at the largest annual U.S.-Philippines military exercise, sinking a decommissioned target ship in live-fire conditions off the northern tip of the Philippine archipelago. UFORCE, the exclusive manufacturer of the Magura maritime drone family, confirmed […]View the full article
  15. A still image pulled from a newly released Russian Ministry of Defense video on Su-34 strike aircraft operations against Ukraine has provided what Israeli defense analyst Guy Plopsky described as “the clearest view yet” of what appears to be a new dorsal antenna hump fitted aft of the cockpit on at least one variant of […]View the full article
  16. A German company that makes the transmission inside the Leopard 2 main battle tank has started production of its 4,000th unit, marking a milestone that speaks directly to how central one piece of engineering has been to Western armored capability for more than four decades. RENK Group AG, headquartered in Augsburg, Germany, announced on June […]View the full article
  17. As U.S. forces confront a growing wave of low-cost drone attacks that have exposed a fundamental flaw in how America stocks and prices its air defense arsenal, the Army has tapped a rocket technology startup to scale a more affordable answer: a laser-guided version of one of the most proven rockets in the American inventory. […]View the full article
  18. Ukraine has crossed a significant threshold in its air defense campaign against Russian drone attacks: an autonomous interceptor drone that can hunt down and destroy Shahed loitering munitions with minimal human input has now completed its first successful combat engagements in the Kharkiv region. Ukrainian Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov announced the achievement, describing a system […]View the full article
  19. It is far past time to pick up the conversation point we last visited back in September: AUKUS. Just to refresh everyone on my position that I’ve held since this program was announced a half-decade ago: this is one of the most important military and diplomatic initiatives of this century. There are a host of reasons we discuss this on a regular basis. They are also why I have been emphatic that it not only must work, but must come online as early as possible. Australia is one of our most critical allies. She is one of our most reliable allies. She occupies one of the most strategic positions in the world. Our greatest adversary—and hers—are aggressively attempting to subdue her. Her geography demands what nuclear submarines alone can deliver. As such, this came as great news. Through discussions today, the Deputy Prime Minister and Secretaries confirmed that AUKUS Pillar I remains on track to support Australia’s acquisition of a conventionally-armed, nuclear-powered submarine capability. …Just this month, the United States authorized establishment of the U.S. Navy support elements for SRF-West and will begin rotating the first U.S. Navy personnel to HMAS Stirling later this year. Likewise, the United Kingdom reaffirmed its commitment to have a rotational presence as part of SRF-West and noted the successful Submarine Maintenance Period conducted earlier this year by HMS ANSON. …Australia to acquire three in-service VCS in lieu of a mixture of new and in-service VCS variants. In summary: we’re setting up shop at the Australian naval base on the western end of the continent within liberty-distance of Perth, and we are ensuring early delivery of capability by slating three already in service Virginia Class SSN from American to Australian service. This is a variation of exactly what I continue to believe is essential: sooner rather than later this needs to happen to cement alliances, and send messages to our adversaries. If that means a submarine that might have been USS X will instead be HMAS Y, then so be it. Should a Great Pacific War emerge, we should expect that an HMAS SSN will be able to create 87.6% of the effects a U.S. Navy SSN would have in that conflict. There is no downside. As Tom Shugart pointed out Sunday, I nodded my head until I read what he was quote tweeting. Shock-not-shocked…but the usual suspects are trying to turn this into a negative for some reason. Well, we know the reason(s). Been seeing them since the Cold War. Amazing. Jennifer Parker, Adjunct Professor, Defence and Security Institute, The University of Western Australia; UNSW Sydney did a good job trying to counter emotion with facts over at The Conversation: A stopgap solution is required. The purchase of three Virginia class submarines in 2032, 2035 and 2038 will provide this, and also give Australia the ability to start operating nuclear-powered submarines. Think of it as a “crawl, walk, run” approach. The Virginias are the walk phase before we start building our own nuclear-powered submarines. Acquiring submarines already in service reduces risk and complexity, avoids the challenges of introducing a new submarine, and removes the need for initial certification trials. Is Australia getting a less capable submarine?Not in any meaningful sense, though the third Virginia will be an older version than planned, so its sensors will probably be slightly less capable. Australia will now receive three Block IV Virginia class submarines. These remain among the most capable attack submarines in the world. They carry more than 20 torpedoes and 12 Tomahawk land strike missiles. Much of the commentary this week has suggested Australia has lost additional missile capacity because the submarines we’re receiving won’t have the “Virginia Payload Module” – a new hull section that allows the submarines to carry more missiles. But that commentary is incorrect. The submarine Australia was expected to receive in 2038 was never intended to have that capability. In conflict, Australia would predominantly use these submarines in an anti-submarine and anti-ship role. Land strike missiles are not used for this and so the extra capacity isn’t essential. It’s also capability the US has said it is not willing to provide. The main difference is the third submarine will have fewer years of life remaining than a new boat. A Virginia class submarine off the production line would normally have a 33-year life. At Senate estimates this week, the Australian Submarine Agency said each boat will have more than 20 years of life remaining when we receive them. Claims these submarines would only have eight years of life do not withstand scrutiny. The kind of submarines Australia will receive only started entering service in 2020. The Australian Prime Minister is being firm, but it appears some in his party are…well…being Laborites: Australia needs a backup plan for the Aukus submarine agreement, Labor MP Ed Husic has warned, arguing sluggish US production and the “transactional nature” of the Trump administration have put the multibillion-dollar defence deal at risk. The defence minister, Richard Marles, this week agreed to US requests for Australia to accept three second-hand Virginia-class nuclear submarines, rather than a combination of new and old vessels. Husic spoke out during Labor caucus on Tuesday in what former Labor minister Kim Carr described as an “courageous” intervention. It was the most significant internal criticism of the $368bn deal – agreed by the Morrison government in 2021 and endorsed by the then-Labor opposition – since heated debate at the ALP national conference three years ago. Labor ultimately continued its support of the multi-decade pact. Husic said production rates of submarines in the US were too low for Australia to realistically expect boats to be handed over in the early 2030s. The deal requires the sitting US president to agree to release submarines based on the US having an adequate supply for its own navy, even though Australia is paying to boost production. “We need to be open as a nation that we are not going to get the deal that was promised to us,” Husic said. You know where this is going… “Given how transactional the Trump administration is, you can almost imagine them saying ‘we give you these, you will do this with them’, and so there’s an active sovereignty question there. “It won’t be a renegotiation; it’s a reality about the production rates and whether or not we’ll get them. What’s the contingency? What’s the plan B?” AUKUS is not a Trump plan, nor an Albanese plan. It is an Australian, American, and British plan that is already bringing on other partners. Making this personal and partisan only demonstrates the immaturity of the people trying. Of course, the Greens are being defense-clueless, as usual: Appearing on ABC’s Insiders program on Sunday, the Greens’ defence spokesperson, David Shoebridge, said the focus of Australia’s military assets should be on defending the nation’s borders. He suggested that could be done with conventional submarines and other weapons, rejecting the need for capabilities designed to operate “thousands of thousands of kilometres from our shore” – such as the nuclear-powered vessels. Shoebridge said buying the Virginia-class submarines would make Australia an “interoperable” part of the US military, drawing the country into a potential conflict with China. “Nuclear submarines are pretty much a disaster on every front,” he said. “Why are we inviting ourselves to a US war with China by buying this weapons platforms and making our defence an interoperable part of the US?” I’m sure it sounded better in the original Mandarin Chinese. If you would expect any shade to be thrown, you’d think it would be the French, but even their reporting is fact based. Sooner is better than later. More is better than less. Money is in short supply. At the end of the day, you get the world’s most capable submarine. Not bad. 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
  20. A Lithuanian defense firm that has been developing hybrid electric military vehicles since 2020 demonstrated its latest capability to the Lithuanian Armed Forces last week: a remote-control system that can turn virtually any vehicle into an unmanned ground platform, tested during the military experimentation exercise Vanguard 2026 at the Rūdninkai Training Area. Ostara, the Vilnius-based […]View the full article
  21. A Czech aircraft manufacturer that has been building military planes for a century just posted the best financial results in its modern history, with profit before tax jumping more than 400 percent in a single year as demand for affordable jet trainers accelerates across defense markets worldwide. AERO Vodochody AEROSPACE, the largest aircraft manufacturer in […]View the full article
  22. Russia’s official position on negotiations with Ukraine hardened further on Monday when Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that it is “difficult to imagine” how talks with what he called the “current Kyiv regime” could take place, adding that Kyiv was taking every possible step to obstruct the peace process. The statement arrived three days […]View the full article
  23. A Ukrainian strike drone flew hundreds of kilometers into Russian territory and hit the hangars of a research and production center that Russia uses to develop and manufacture its own unmanned aircraft systems, targeting the kind of facility that feeds the very drone campaign Russia has been waging against Ukrainian cities every night for years. […]View the full article
  24. Last week
  25. In creating a maritime renaissance in the U.S., there is a lot of work, discussion, and money going toward not just buying more ships, but also expanding the industrial base and training skilled tradespeople to make that expansion possible. A cornerstone of this should be training more dedicated Merchant Mariners and employing their skills in a better way. Returning to Midrats today is Brent D. Sadler to discuss this and related topics. Along with Hollins Randolph and Peter Lynch, he co-authored a report at Heritage, Time to Bring Back the U.S. Maritime Service to Support America’s Maritime Revival and a Wartime Economy, that we will use as a basis for our conversation. We go LIVE at 5pm Eastern, and you can join at this link. If you are reading this after the show, refresh the Substack page later Sunday night for all the podcast links. Brent is Senior Research Fellow for Naval Warfare and Advanced Technology in the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for National Security at The Heritage Foundation, and a retired U.S. Navy Captain. 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
  26. Fresh Sentinel-2 satellite imagery has confirmed what local Russian officials initially denied: Ukrainian long-range attack drones struck the 15th Naval Arsenal of the Russian Navy at Bolshaya Izhora in the Leningrad region, triggering a massive fire and secondary detonations powerful enough that more than 600 residents of nearby settlements had to be evacuated while Russian […]View the full article
  27. The U.S. Army has selected a European-pedigreed precision artillery shell capable of hitting targets 70 kilometers away, awarding General Dynamics Ordnance and Tactical Systems a contract to develop an American version of a munition already in service with Germany, Italy, and other allied nations. General Dynamics Ordnance and Tactical Systems, a business unit of General […]View the full article
  28. A Spanish defense technology company has transformed a decommissioned military truck into one of the more unusual vehicles currently making the rounds in European defense circles: a fully operational mobile electronic warfare platform packed with jamming systems, satellite connectivity management, signal geolocation hardware, and real-time anti-drone capability, all integrated into a single deployable unit, El […]View the full article

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