No More Iron Mountains: Lighter Logistics Key To Multi-Domain Battle

No More Iron Mountains: Lighter Logistics Key To Multi-Domain Battle
No More Iron Mountains: Lighter Logistics Key To Multi-Domain Battle

A grim vision of future battlefields has the Army urgently exploring every option to streamline its logistics, everything from cargo drones to “compact fusion reactors.” Moving iron mountains of supplies has been a signature strength of the US military since the Civil War. But against an adversary with precision weapons, those sprawling supply dumps, the…

Army Confidential: Service Seeks Private Dialogue With Companies

Army Confidential: Service Seeks Private Dialogue With Companies
Army Confidential: Service Seeks Private Dialogue With Companies

HUNTSVILLE, ALA.: Can we talk? In private? If you’re a defense contractor with a good idea, the US Army wants to say yes — but laws and regulations get in the way. That’s a problem the Army Capabilities Integration Center (ARCIC) is struggling to solve with what it calls a Capabilities Information Exchange. Here’s the…

The Long Road To Army’s Next-Gen Combat Vehicle

The Long Road To Army’s Next-Gen Combat Vehicle
The Long Road To Army’s Next-Gen Combat Vehicle

  ARLINGTON: Two years after the demoralizing cancellation of the Ground Combat Vehicle, the Army is rallying round a new vision for its future armored force. That vision has come into sharper focus just in the last few months, armor leaders said Tuesday. Facing a rising Russia with an aging American arsenal, the Army will…

Army Gets Serious About Next Tank: Next Generation Combat Vehicle

Army Gets Serious About Next Tank: Next Generation Combat Vehicle
Army Gets Serious About Next Tank: Next Generation Combat Vehicle

ARLINGTON: The US Army wants its Next Generation Combat Vehicle to serve as pack master to a swarm of crawling and flying robots. It wants lighter weapons with heavier firepower, able to aim almost straight up to shoot drones out of the sky and hit rooftop snipers. It wants miniaturized missile defenses to shoot down incoming anti-tank…

Army’s ‘Multi-Domain Battle:’ Jamming, Hacking & Long Range Missiles

Army’s ‘Multi-Domain Battle:’ Jamming, Hacking & Long Range Missiles
Army’s ‘Multi-Domain Battle:’ Jamming, Hacking & Long Range Missiles

Days before the biggest defense conference of the year, one of the Army’s top thinkers is unveiling the service’s new push to expand its role beyond its traditional domain — land — to air, sea, space, and cyberspace. Even as the US defense budget shrinks, the Army is prioritizing new investments in downing drones, hacking networks, jamming…

Confronting Conflict In The ‘Gray Zone’

Confronting Conflict In The ‘Gray Zone’
Confronting Conflict In The ‘Gray Zone’

A new Army War College report, Outplayed: Regaining Strategic Initiative in the Gray Zone, argues that the United States should adopt innovative approaches against a new and more complex set of international security challenges. “Outplayed” is the culmination of a nine-month study effort that was sanctioned by the Army Chief of Staff and sponsored by…

What Lessons Do China’s Island Bases Offer The US Army?

What Lessons Do China’s Island Bases Offer The US Army?
What Lessons Do China’s Island Bases Offer The US Army?

WASHINGTON: If ground forces are obsolete, why are the Chinese bothering to build all those artificial islands in the South China Sea? The answer to that is key to the US Army’s emerging vision of its future role, a complex combination of old-fashioned close combat, resilient wireless networks, and advanced long-range weapons that extend the Army’s reach…

Army Taps Controversial Generals: What McMaster & Mangum Mean For The Future

Army Taps Controversial Generals: What McMaster & Mangum Mean For The Future
Army Taps Controversial Generals: What McMaster & Mangum Mean For The Future

[UPDATED 6:30 pm] HUNTSVILLE, ALA.: The ever-beleaguered Army has a reputation — not undeserved — for being bland, conformist, and bureaucratic, an organization where brilliant mavericks are forced to retire at colonel and the guys who make general don’t rock the boat. Just ask any of the long-serving and long-suffering officers convening here in Huntsville, home…

Why The Army Matters: Human Factors And Killing

Why The Army Matters: Human Factors And Killing
Why The Army Matters: Human Factors And Killing

FORT BELVOIR: The intellectual ice is beginning to break. You could see it at the Fort Belvoir Officers’ Club on Tuesday afternoon, where the Army’s Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) hosted a three-day, tri-service conference on “Strategic Landpower.” The US Army is wrestling with how to stay relevant once large-scale counterinsurgency in Afghanistan comes to…

Army Challenges AOL Defense On Competition With Marines, Tech Threats

In a conference call this afternoon to discuss the new Army Capstone Concept with reporters, Maj. Gen. Bill Hix made a special point of rebutting two recent articles in Breaking Defense. Thursday’s article suggested the new Capstone Concept’s pledge to create unspecified “new formations… as early entry forces” might trespass on territory long claimed by…

The End Of Advantage: Enemies May Catch Up With US Technology — Or Surpass It

WASHINGTON: “We in the United States are a bit arrogant in thinking [that] we own the technology high ground,” the civilian told the assembled generals. “Technology doesn’t necessarily belong to us and where it goes is not necessarily in our hands.” For six decades, the United States could count on being the planet’s preeminent economic…

Less Money, More Bureaucracy: Military Robotics After Afghanistan

LAS VEGAS: “We’ve been spoiled,” the colonel said. Since 9/11, the military has had “giant pots of money” to throw at urgent problems without going through the full acquisition process. It’s been a bonanza for contractors with innovative technology to offer. But as the war winds down, Lt. Col. Stuart Hatfield of the Army Capabilities…