News
The Future of America’s Nuclear Deterrent
America’s strategic nuclear deterrent is nearing a crossroads. On one hand, the size, shape and purpose of the U.S. nuclear arsenal are all up for debate. For over two decades Washington has been shedding excess weapons that were a legacy of the Cold War. Senior officials today are also much more concerned with proliferation and the possibility of nuclear terrorism than great-power brinkmanship or the prospect of a massive nuclear exchange. The confluence of declining defense budgets and looming recapitalization costs has made nuclear programs a potential target for funding cuts.
Pentagon Fiscal Chief Robert Hale: ‘I am nervous’
/.../The next two weeks running up to Thanksgiving are pivotal if Congress is to have any chance of restoring some order for the Pentagon and a broken appropriations process. But what’s most remarkable is how lawmakers seem to be backing into decisions without first having a full debate over what level of defense the U.S. needs going forward.
Northern Bases Hit US Pivot Sweet Spot
Australia is poised to become a vital operating base for US military forces in the western Pacific as they seek a safe haven from China's fast-growing missile arsenal, according to a major new report by a key US think tank.
Yes, There Will Be a New Jet Fighter After the F-22 and F-35
/.../If future U.S. national security policy calls for operating over the vast reaches of the Pacific, a future fighter aircraft might be fundamentally different from anything that has come before. “We need to stop thinking about combat aircraft as bombers and fighters or ISR [intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance] platforms for that matter,” says Mark Gunzinger, an air power analyst at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.
For Now, Pentagon Plays It Safe on Compensation Reform
The Pentagon is playing its cards close to the vest on the issue of military retirement and compensation reform.
Precision Strike: An Evolution
Since the 1991 Persian Gulf War, precision strike weapons systems have become ever more central to the American way of war.