Milley’s Future Tank: Railguns, Robotics & Ultra-Light Armor

Milley’s Future Tank: Railguns, Robotics & Ultra-Light Armor
Milley’s Future Tank: Railguns, Robotics & Ultra-Light Armor

NATIONAL PRESS CLUB: The tank is far from obsolete and the US will need a new armored vehicle to replace its 1980-vintage M1 Abrams, the Army Chief of Staff said here this afternoon. But what kind of tank, on what kind of timeline? Gen. Mark Milley made clear he was looking for a “breakthrough,” not…

Best Of 2016: Russia Resurgent

Best Of 2016: Russia Resurgent
Best Of 2016: Russia Resurgent

The military’s top generals have called Russia the number one threat. The incoming administration doesn’t seem convinced that Russia is a threat at all, with Trump himself speaking warmly of Vladimir Putin and dimly of NATO allies. But whatever Putin’s intentions for the future, Russia has proved what its capabilities are in Estonia in 2007,…

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 Rolls Out Upgunned Stryker: 30m Autocannon Vs. Russians

Army Rolls Out Upgunned Stryker: 30m Autocannon Vs. Russians
Army Rolls Out Upgunned Stryker: 30m Autocannon Vs. Russians

Today, after 18 months of urgent work, the Army rolled out its first upgunned Stryker vehicle, nicknamed Dragoon. The armored eight-wheel-drive troop transport, built by General Dynamics and normally armed with no more than a 0.50 calibre (12.7 millimeter) machinegun in an unprotected mount, has been rebuilt with an armored turret containing a 30 mm…

Rebuilding The M2 Bradley: Same A4 Turret But Most Is New

Rebuilding The M2 Bradley: Same A4 Turret But Most Is New
Rebuilding The M2 Bradley: Same A4 Turret But Most Is New

WASHINGTON: More horsepower. Higher suspension. A blast-resistant underbody. Safer fuel tanks. A larger hull. Take it all together and this may not just be another upgrade but more like a complete rebuild. The goal is allow the 1980s-vintage M2 Bradley to survive on the battlefields of the 2030s, contractor BAE Systems said. Since there is no money in…

Army Seeks Early Industry Input On Mobile Protected Firepower

Army Seeks Early Industry Input On Mobile Protected Firepower
Army Seeks Early Industry Input On Mobile Protected Firepower

After two decades of canceled combat vehicles, the Mobile Protected Firepower program is a crucial test for the Army’s new approach to acquisitions. The service is seeking off-the-shelf technology instead of gambling on breakthroughs. It’s bringing together industry, combat officers, and acquisition professionals together at an earlier stage than ever before. And it intends to rein…

Big Guns For Light Infantry: Mobile Protected Firepower

Big Guns For Light Infantry: Mobile Protected Firepower
Big Guns For Light Infantry: Mobile Protected Firepower

This week at Fort Benning, Ga., the Army told some 200 industry representatives from 59 companies what it wants in its next war machine, the Mobile Protected Firepower vehicle (MPF). The MPF must be light and nimble enough to accompany foot troops where the massive M1 Abrams cannot go: into dense jungle and narrow streets, up mountains and…

Army Vice Says Yes On Anti-Drone Tech; Maybe On Missiles; No On Iron Man

Army Vice Says Yes On Anti-Drone Tech; Maybe On Missiles; No On Iron Man
Army Vice Says Yes On Anti-Drone Tech; Maybe On Missiles; No On Iron Man

WASHINGTON: The Army is developing promising new technology, from long-range missiles to anti-drone defense, Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Dan Allyn told reporters today. The problem, of course, is paying for it — which, he said, puts pricey innovations like Iron Man-style powered armor out of reach. So what’s the most exciting tech that could…

Iron Man, Not Terminator: The Pentagon’s Sci-Fi Inspirations

WASHINGTON: “When most people when they hear me talk about this, they immediately start to think of think of Skynet and Terminator,” said the deputy secretary of defense. “I think more in terms of Iron Man.” The Pentagon wants artificial intelligence, said Bob Work, but it doesn’t want “killer robots that roam the battlefield” without…

Army Commission: Pay More To Keep Apaches in Guard

Army Commission: Pay More To Keep Apaches in Guard
Army Commission: Pay More To Keep Apaches in Guard

UPDATED: Retired Gen. Ham Adds Apache Cost Info At Friday breakfast WASHINGTON: The congressionally chartered National Commission on the Future of the Army recommends splitting the difference between the regular Army and the National Guard in a bitterly polarizing dispute over AH-64 Apache attack helicopters. That’s the most politically high-profile recommendation out of dozens, many of them…

‘The Terminator Conundrum:’ VCJCS Selva On Thinking Weapons

WASHINGTON: The vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff called today for an international debate about the use of intelligent weapons and of boosted human beings. “Where do we want to cross that line, and who crosses that first?” asked Gen. Paul Selva — considered one of the brainier occupants of an office that…

Army Armor Modernizes In Slow Motion

Army Armor Modernizes In Slow Motion
Army Armor Modernizes In Slow Motion

WASHINGTON: The US Army is deploying extra stocks of heavy weapons to Europe to deter Russia’s increasingly naked aggression. These are the most advanced ground weapons America can field — but the tanks and other heavy fighting vehicles in this buildup are the same ones we had the last time the Russians were a danger, back when…

What Should Congress Do About Ukraine?

Poland suddenly reappeared in 1919, 120 years after it vanished from the map of Europe, sowing confusion at the Versailles Peace Conference as the great powers tried to heal the wounds of World War I. The British questioned the legitimacy of the new Polish State and the French were suspicious of Polish ambitions. Frustrated with…