News
Boeing Super Hornet Faces Emerging Anti-Access Challenges
The US Navy is upgrading its fleet of Boeing F/A-18E/F fighters with new capabilities, but analysts question the Super Hornet's utility against emerging anti-access/area denial (A2/AD) threats.
Ready for a Ray Gun? ONR Plans Laser Tests
Soon, the sound of combat may not be a thunderous boom but an electronic zap. The Office of Naval Research is in the early stages of putting a solid-state laser weapon onto a ship. If the project succeeds, it effectively will make all the sci-fi clichés about lasers — from death rays to “set phasers to stun” — a reality.
Lawmaker Disputes 911th Cost Figures
The Air Force rates the Air Force Reserve's 911th Airlift Wing among the nation's costliest for flying outdated C-130 cargo planes, but that hasn't convinced Western Pennsylvania congressmen that closing the base would make financial or strategic sense/.../
Your New Chief
Gen. Mark Welsh III is soft-spoken, but you want to hear every word he says.
Panel Rejects Proposals To Raise Military Retirees’ Health Care Premiums
At the same time the House passed a bill requiring civilian federal employees to contribute more to their pensions, lawmakers on the Armed Services Committee rejected the Obama administration's proposals to increase the amount military retirees pay for their health care insurance/.../
This Week in Defense News Interview: Directed Energy Weapons
For decades the Pentagon has invested billions of dollars in high-power directed-energy systems from lasers to microwave beams that have promised—but failed to deliver—game-changing capabilities for decades. Not surprisingly, directed-energy programs have prompted skepticism among many military leaders, and rightly so.