Edelweiss Brigade Appoints New Commander
The Ukrainian Ground Forces have named Colonel Oleksii Chuzykov as the new commander of the 10th Mountain Assault Brigade, known as the Edelweiss Brigade. The change follows the loss of Siversk and the dismissal of the previous commander, Colonel Volodymyr Potyeshkin. Chuzykov previously served as chief of staff of the 93rd Mechanized Brigade and has combat experience in Bakhmut and Chasiv Yar. The brigade remains a key component of the 15th Army Corps, alongside several artillery and mechanized units.

Harnessing the People: Mapping Overseas United Front Work in Democratic States
Cheryl Yu’s report maps more than 2,000 organizations in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and Germany that are linked to the Chinese Communist Party’s United Front Work Department. The dataset classifies 2,294 groups into eight functional types, with...

2/21/26 National Security and Korean News and Commentary
David Maxwell’s latest commentary offers a sweeping roundup of current national security and Korean Peninsula developments. Highlights include the U.S. deploying MQ‑9 drones to track China’s Pacific maneuvers, a looming Trump decision on Iran that could define his legacy, and...

Ukraine's 'Flamingos' Fly 1,300+ Km Deep in Russia to Hit Putin's Missile Megafactory
The episode examines Ukraine’s covert ‘Flamingo’ drone operations that penetrated over 1,300 km into Russian territory to strike a major missile production facility linked to President Putin. It outlines the technical capabilities of the drones, the strategic impact of disrupting...
George Answers Your Questions: European Nuclear Umbrella, Risks of a United Europe
At the Munich Security Conference, George addressed Europe’s reliance on the U.S. nuclear umbrella, noting that European nuclear forces are insufficient to deter Russia’s vastly larger arsenal. He highlighted the continent’s high population density, which amplifies the catastrophic potential of...

South Korea’s Undersea Dilemma: Why SSNs and UUVs Must Work Together
South Korea confronts simultaneous undersea threats from North Korea’s emerging SLBM‑capable submarines, a potential Taiwan crisis that could stretch U.S. and Japanese naval assets, and an increasingly active Russian presence via the Northern Sea Route. The author argues that choosing...
Defense & Aerospace Report Podcast [Feb 20, ’26 Washington Roundtable]
The Defense & Aerospace Report Washington Roundtable featured experts dissecting the Supreme Court’s decision blocking the Trump administration’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose tariffs. Participants also examined Washington’s mounting pressure on Kyiv amid Russia’s claim...

Russian MOD Shows U.S. F-35, F-16 Intercepting Tu-95MS And Su-35S Off Alaska
On February 19, 2026 the U.S. Air Force deployed two F‑35As, two F‑16Cs, an E‑3 AWACS and tanker support to intercept a Russian formation of two Tu‑95MS bombers, two Su‑35S fighters and a Beriev A‑50 AEW aircraft transiting the Alaskan...
American and Estonian Divers Train Under Ice in Baltic
U.S. Navy Seabee divers partnered with Estonian rescue and navy teams for ice‑diving and underwater demolition training in Estonia from Jan. 31 to Feb. 17, 2026. The exercise took place at Rummu Quarry Lake and Miinisadam Naval Base, combining classroom instruction, safety drills,...

Avalanche Technology Introduces Next-Gen VNX+ Storage Module for Space and Military Applications
Avalanche Technology unveiled its VNX+ storage module, combining Space Grade MRAM with Lattice’s CertusPro‑NX FPGA to deliver true radiation immunity without sacrificing density, speed, or endurance. The solution is engineered for military and Low Earth Orbit (LEO) applications and satisfies...

U.S. Navy Seeking Anti-Radiation Missile Which Can Also Kill Airborne Radars
NAVAIR has issued a Sources Sought notice for an Advanced Emission Suppression Missile (AESM) that would exceed the range of the current AGM‑88G and add the ability to engage both air‑to‑air and air‑to‑ground targets. The missile must integrate with the...
A Concept of Operations for Achieving a Navy Fleet of 500 Ships
Captain George Galdorisi outlines the U.S. Navy’s ambition to field a 500‑ship “hybrid fleet” of 350 crewed vessels and 150 large uncrewed maritime vessels (USVs), emphasizing the need for a concrete concept‑of‑operations (CONOPS) to satisfy congressional requirements. He details ongoing...

Deep Dive: The US Air Force’s Costly ‘Box Cutters’
Air Force maintenance units have spent $1.79 million on 5,166 high‑end combat knives—dubbed “box cutters”—between 2017 and June 2025, despite chronic shortages of essential supplies. The knives were ordered through misclassification that sidestepped normal procurement scrutiny, allowing rapid acquisition across multiple...

16 Air Assault Demos AI-Enabled Air Manoeuvre Strike
The British Army’s 16 Air Assault Brigade Combat Team showcased AI‑enabled reconnaissance‑strike capabilities during a visit by Chief of the General Staff General Sir Roly Walker. The demonstration linked new hardware, software and procedures to accelerate target acquisition and air‑delivered...

Navy Declares IOC for SDB II on Super Hornet
The U.S. Navy has declared initial operational capability for the GBU‑53/B Small Diameter Bomb II on its F/A‑18E/F Super Hornet, completing a transition that began with limited use in 2025. The StormBreaker’s tri‑mode seeker—infrared, millimeter‑wave radar and semi‑active laser—enables all‑weather,...

UK Joins NATO Ballistic Missile Defence Effort
The United Kingdom has joined six NATO allies in a new High Visibility Project aimed at bolstering ballistic missile defence. Announced on 12 February 2026, the initiative will develop and field sensors, interceptors and tactical control systems to plug gaps...

From Readiness to Resilience: Two Decades of Extreme Weather Impacts on US Military Infrastructure
Over the past two decades extreme weather events have surged in frequency and intensity, directly threatening U.S. military installations across coastal, inland, and western regions. Hurricanes such as Katrina, Sandy, and Michael have inflicted multibillion‑dollar damage, while wildfires, floods, and...

China, Afghanistan, and Critical Minerals: Options for U.S. Strategic Competition Below the Threshold of War
Afghanistan has re‑emerged as a venue for great‑power competition below the threshold of war, with China pursuing cautious economic engagement focused on mineral extraction and limited infrastructure projects. U.S. analysis shows Chinese contracts have underperformed and remain exploratory, leaving a...

Pratt & Whitney Shows F-47-Like Fighter in Latest XA103 Adaptive Engine Video
Pratt & Whitney released a new video showcasing its XA103 adaptive engine alongside a speculative F‑47‑style fighter design. The rendering features a twin‑engine, tailless aircraft with canards, differing from official Air Force images and likely serving as a concept illustration....
Federal Court: Temp Workers Count As Employees Under SBA Rules
A federal district court in Bloomfield v. Engineered Structures ruled that temporary workers from staffing agencies must be counted as employees under SBA regulations. The decision relied on 13 C.F.R. §121.106 and the SBA Size Policy Statement, confirming that the...

CSIS Panel Discussion | United States and Iran on the Brink: What’s at Stake?
The Center for Strategic and International Studies hosted a panel examining the escalating crisis between the United States and Iran after Tehran’s harsh suppression of recent protests. President Trump responded by dispatching an aircraft carrier strike group to the Persian...

Kongsberg to Supply RS4 Weapon Stations for CAVS Fleet
Patria and Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace have signed a €140 million contract to equip more than 300 Patria 6×6 armoured vehicles with PROTECTOR RS4 remote weapon stations under the Common Armoured Vehicle System (CAVS) programme. The deal includes additional orders for...

The Principle of Distinction in the Autonomous Age | Texas National Security Review
The Texas National Security Review podcast features Nathan Wood discussing how the principle of distinction must evolve for autonomous warfare. Wood argues that debate should shift from abstract concerns to the legal and operational specifics of existing systems, ensuring human...
Water Replaces Complex Receptor Molecules in Carbon Nanotube Gas Sensor
Researchers at UNIST have demonstrated that hygroscopic salt films can stably coat carbon‑nanotube chemiresistors, enabling receptor‑free detection of nine toxic gases, including chemical warfare agents. By selecting salts with low deliquescence relative humidity (LiBr, H₃PO₄, LiCl), the aqueous layer remains...

Royal Navy Submarine Trainees Pass Out at HMNB Clyde
Thirty-nine Royal Navy submarine qualifying students completed the classroom‑based dry phase of training at HMNB Clyde, marking the first double‑class pass out this year with 15 Astute‑class and 24 Vanguard‑class trainees. Commodore Ben Haskins presented certificates and highlighted the ceremony’s...

The Army Clause: A Forgotten Constitutional Check on ICE, CBP, and the Pentagon
Congress passed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, granting $170 billion for ICE, CBP, DHS and the Pentagon over four years, effectively sidestepping the Constitution’s two‑year funding limit for standing armies. The article argues this multi‑year appropriation violates the Army Clause,...

British and French Troops Train for NATO Rapid Response Role
British 1st Battalion, The Duke of Lancaster’s Regiment (1 LANCS) is conducting joint training with France’s 152nd Infantry Regiment at the CENZUB urban warfare centre near Paris. The exercise forms part of the UK’s contribution to NATO’s Forward Land Forces...

Exercise Hyperion Storm Validates RAF Spec Ops Readiness
Exercise Hyperion Storm, a two‑week drill at RAF Leeming in January 2026, confirmed the Royal Air Force Special Operations Air Task Group’s (SOATG) readiness to lead NATO’s Allied Reaction Force Special Operations Component from July 2026. The exercise tested more...

Kratos Defense & Security Solutions: Additive Manufacturing Powers the Future of Defense and Space
Kratos Defense & Security Solutions is accelerating its defense and space programs by investing heavily in additive manufacturing, highlighted by the acquisition of a Velo3D Sapphire metal 3D printer and the launch of a CAMM materials‑characterization program. The company uses...

Russia’s BRICS Sherpa Debunked Speculation About It Turning Into A Security Bloc
Russia’s deputy foreign minister and BRICS Sherpa Sergey Ryabkov publicly refuted claims that the bloc is evolving into a security or collective‑defence organization. He clarified that recent naval exercises off South Africa were conducted by individual member states, not a...

Airbus Leans Toward Launching “A220-500”, But Faces Challenges
Airbus is poised to launch a stretched A220‑500 variant, potentially at the Farnborough Air Show in July 2026. New commercial‑airplanes CEO Lars Wagner backs the program, echoing his predecessor’s push for a larger‑capacity model. The aircraft would seat roughly 165...

SSC Space Opens Orbital Launch Control Center at Esrange
SSC Space inaugurated the Orbital Launch Control Center (OLCC) at Sweden’s Esrange Space Center, marking a key step toward orbital launch capability. The OLCC will manage vehicle monitoring, countdowns, and coordination with safety and airspace authorities for future missions. Initial...

Where Power Begins: The Strategic Return of the Homeland
The 2026 National Defense Strategy re‑elevates homeland defense from a background condition to a contested, central mission. It argues that securing the interior—through legitimacy, endurance, and protection of economic lifelines—is essential for sustaining power projection abroad. The article draws on...

AI Racing Drone Beats Human Controlled FPV Racing Drones on Aerial Racetrack: An Overlooked ‘AlphaGo Moment’ with Future War Implications
In April 2025, an autonomous racing drone equipped with a neural‑network AI outperformed three human FPV champions at the A2RL Drone Championship in Abu Dhabi. The AI‑controlled craft completed the complex aerial course faster than the pilots, marking the first...
India Takes on the Shadow Fleet (Bonus Video)
India's navy has begun seizing shadow‑fleet oil tankers within its exclusive economic zone, capturing three vessels since early February. The shadow fleet, a network of roughly 1,000 de‑commissioned tankers, moves 3‑4 million barrels of sanctioned crude daily from Russia, Iran...

OMB Rescinds the “Common Form” Secure Software Attestation Requirement
On Jan. 23, 2026 the Office of Management and Budget issued Memorandum M‑26‑05, rescinding the Biden‑era mandate that all federal agencies obtain a CISA “Common Form” software attestation. The new memo replaces the one‑size‑fits‑all requirement with a risk‑based, agency‑specific approach while...
Rubio’s Civilizational Appeals Will Backfire
The episode dissects U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s Munich Security Conference speech, contrasting his diplomatic tone with Vice President J.D. Vance’s confrontational approach and highlighting Rubio’s emphasis on transatlantic ties framed through shared Christian faith and Western civilization. While...

U.S. Allies and Adversaries’ Reactions to Operation Absolute Resolve to Capture Maduro
On Jan. 3 the United States launched Operation Absolute Resolve, a raid that bombed Venezuela’s air defenses, engaged in a gun battle and captured President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, resulting in at least 100 deaths. The UN Security Council...

From Commitment to Action: The Next Steps in Holding Russia’s Leaders Accountable for the Crime of Aggression Against Ukraine
The Special Tribunal for the Crime of Aggression against Ukraine (STCA) was formalised on 25 June 2025 by Ukraine and the Council of Europe, creating a dedicated venue to prosecute Russian leaders for the war of aggression. The ICC lacks jurisdiction because...

Secret Talks to Promote Regime Change in Cuba; Open Attempts to Prevent Regime Change in Peru
The episode examines covert U.S. diplomatic efforts to engineer regime change in Cuba, highlighted by secret talks between Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Raul Castro’s grandson, alongside open U.S. moves to block regime change in Peru. It questions the viability...
Second and Third Prototypes of Turkey’s Kaan Fighter Have Emerged
Turkey’s Kaan fifth‑generation fighter has advanced to its second and third prototypes, designated P1 and P2, with static testing slated for 2026. The airframes show notable design tweaks, including a rearward‑shifted engine intake, wider nose, and a Tulgar helmet‑mounted display....

The F-117 Test Pilot Who Successfully Landed His Nighthawk After Its Nose Wheel Fell Off upon Take Off
In January 1982, Lockheed test pilot Tom Morgenfeld experienced a nose‑wheel loss moments after taking off the third YF‑117A prototype from Area 51. Rather than eject, he continued the flight, burned off fuel, and used the aircraft’s drag chute to execute...
Optimizing Reactor Plant Maintenance: The Case for Shipboard SLMs
LT P.J. Greenbaum and LT Vince Freschi discuss how shipboard Small Language Models (SLMs) combined with Retrieval‑Augmented Generation (RAG) can overhaul nuclear propulsion plant maintenance by turning static manuals and logs into a live, searchable knowledge base. They explain that...

Will Russia (and Iran) Be Forced to ‘Restore Order’ in the Caucasus? Part 2: The March to Central Asia
The article examines how Azerbaijan’s new rail, gas and power corridor through Armenia is reshaping the Caucasus‑Central Asia nexus, while the United States seeks a 74% stake in the infrastructure for five decades. Moscow and Tehran face pressure to intervene...

UK Firm to Begin Work on US Air Force Wedgetail Aircraft
A UK‑based aviation firm, STS Aviation, has been awarded a contract by Boeing to perform the initial conversion of the first two US Air Force E‑7 Wedgetail aircraft, marking the first UK‑built military aircraft for the United States in more...

Polling Shows Britons Feel Less Safe than Five Years Ago
A new Adam Smith Insights poll of 2,052 British adults shows 52% feel less safe than in 2021, with over 60% reporting heightened anxiety about global security. The war in Ukraine and Middle‑East tensions appear to drive this shift, especially among...

BAE Systems Reports Record Sales and GBP 83.6bn Order Backlog
BAE Systems posted record full‑year 2025 sales of £30.7 billion, a 10% rise on a constant‑currency basis, and lifted its order backlog to a historic £83.6 billion. Underlying EBIT grew 12% to £3.32 billion, while free cash flow dipped to £2.16 billion as the...

MOD Confirms Palantir Contract Was Direct Award
The UK Ministry of Defence confirmed that its Palantir Technologies contract for defence data analytics was awarded through a direct award under the Procurement Act 2023. The decision relied on Paragraph 6, citing a lack of viable alternatives, and Paragraph 7, highlighting...

Mapping the Human Terrain: The Enduring Role of Human Intelligence in the U.S. Army
The article argues that U.S. Army human intelligence (HUMINT) collectors remain essential despite a post‑GWOT shift toward interrogation‑only roles. It highlights how the Army has fragmented and down‑scaled its HUMINT training pipeline, risking a loss of scalable, mid‑level “human sensors”...

UK Awards Contract for Nyan One-Way Effector
The UK Ministry of Defence has awarded a £4.996 million contract (≈£5 million including VAT) to Callen‑Lenz Associates for the Callen‑Lenz Nyan One‑Way Effector (OWE). The direct award under the Defence and Security regime aims to strengthen deep‑fires capability for forces deployed...