News
The Future of Special Operations: Lawrence of Arabia, Kim, & 007
The future of Special Operations Forces may look less like Zero Dark Thirty and more like Lawrence of Arabia or Rudyard Kipling’s Kim – with just a dash of 007. It’s a future that builds on the last ten years of raids and advisor missions, then adds solo operators in foreign lands, proxy wars with nuclear-armed rogue states, and stealth aircraft infiltrating commando teams to sabotage high-tech defenses.
Budget Watchdog: Special Operations Forces Need More Rosetta Stone Subscriptions, Fewer White Guys
It seems everyone these days is clawing for a bigger piece of the Pentagon's shrinking budget pie and special operations forces (SOF) are elbowing their way to the trough.
Shrinking Budget Forces Army Into New Battlefield
As it prepares for peacetime budget cuts, the Army must shrink. But Pentagon officials say reducing ground forces too much would leave the U.S. vulnerable to threats by such countries as North Korea or Iran. That means continuing to train with tanks, heavy weaponry and big formations--and, in the view of some military analysts, pulling the Army back to its roots and away from its promised future/.../
How Much Would a No-Fly Zone Over Syria Cost?
[L]et's assume the United States insists on the more robust option of maintaining an actual no-fly zone over Syria. In Iraq, for example, the U.S. much of the air force intact on the ground opting to patrol the skies. How much would that cost?
Fewer Troops Prompts BRAC Talk
More military base closures and cuts are unavoidable. It’s just a matter of when, some observers say.
Debate Over Army’s Future Vehicle Raises Question: Why Heavy Armor?
Army officials and manufacturers of combat vehicles have shifted into damage-control mode as the service’s flagship armor-modernization program comes under attack on multiple fronts.