When it comes to defense-industrial collaboration, the best time to start was 20 years ago, and the second best time is now.
Reports of possible 10% to 20% cuts to Army special operations forces seem misaligned with U.S. goals.
Suggestions that there is no need for a sea-based battle staff platform fly in the face of Cold War and recent history.
Zealous reformers continue to over-focus on weapons buys when hardware is increasingly the commodity.
Systemic barriers to innovation persist within the military’s acquisition system that prevent the adoption of emerging technology.
The Pentagon is woefully unprepared to integrate commercial technologies and private capital at scale.
The political fight over the U.S. federal debt ceiling makes the outcome for the fiscal 2024 defense budget difficult to predict. But we'll still try.
Given the political drama stemming from the FY24 budget request, it is worth investigating what’s not in the president's submission.
China is on a fast track to displace America as the world’s dominant naval power.
While the Iranian drone threat may have previously seemed distant for Europe, the appearance of these weapons in Ukraine has brought the problem home.
A stronger European defense is in the making, emerging in fits and starts from the war in Ukraine.
By weaving energy security into the heart of our national security strategy, we can bolster our capacity to deter and resist authoritarian aggression.
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