News

Search News
Categories
Filter
Experts
Date Range
In the News

Missile Defense’s Real Enemy: Math

Will American commanders in the future face large missile forces aimed at their ships that can just simply overwhelm their defenses through sheer numbers?

In the News

Defending Against Defense Cuts

The F-35 is designed to replace a long list of planes, doing jobs from dogfights to attacking ground targets and reconnaissance. It'll let the U.S. fight diverse conflicts in an unpredictable world, coordinating with allies, said O'Bryan, a former Navy pilot. "The same airplanes we used in (1991's) Operation Desert Storm, we're still using today," he said. "We've put some miles on them."

In the News

Pentagon Sent to Budget Boot Camp to Cut 8 Percent

The sequestration cuts are not focused in specific areas but instead are across the board. According to Todd Harrison, a senior fellow for defense budget studies at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, this will make the sequestration process more difficult.

In the News

GOP Hawks Sound Alarm on Sequester

The Pentagon has moved to take steps ahead of the March 1 deadline, including a hiring freeze and some spending reductions. Among lawmakers, there’s been no talk of having the kinds of rallies that occurred in 2012 to try and win over public support against the cuts.

In the News

Hackers: The Next American G.I. Joes?

As the Pentagon seeks to vastly expand its cyber warfare efforts, experts and hackers warn that hackers who have the skills to wage this war are not a good fit for America’s straight-laced military culture. In short, potential soldiers in cyber warfare break the military mold.

In the News

Sequestration Effects Becoming Clear for DoD

Under sequestration, military personnel accounts are completely exempt from cuts, and according to Todd Harrison, the senior defense budget fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, that's where DoD faces the biggest budget heartburn, at least over the long-term.