
Old Ships, Modern Menace: How to Tackle the World’s Shadow Fleets
Shadow fleets—aging, flag‑hopping tankers that spoof AIS—now move roughly 12% of global maritime trade and account for at least 48% of the world’s large oil tankers. The United States seized a seventh covert tanker in January 2026, while France and Finland each interdicted vessels in recent weeks. Analysts warn that these fleets enable sanctions evasion, environmental catastrophes, and hybrid warfare, yet Western responses remain fragmented and largely kinetic. A coherent, multilateral strategy is essential to close legal, operational, and financial loopholes.

Boeing Posts Fourth-Quarter Profit Despite Losses in Commercial Aircraft, Defense Units
Boeing reported a fourth‑quarter profit of $8.2 billion, buoyed by the $10.6 billion sale of its Jeppesen software unit and a record 160 commercial aircraft deliveries. However, its Commercial Airplanes and Defense, Space & Security divisions posted losses of $632 million and $507 million...

AIAA Senior Member Mackey Died in September 2025
Col. Wilfred “Glenn” Mackey, a retired USAF colonel and AIAA senior member, passed away in September 2025. He logged over 4,000 flight hours, served as a Skyraider pilot in Vietnam, and later led test and development programs. After retirement, Mackey...

BRICS Holds a Maritime Exercise at the Indo-Atlantic Crossroads – Without India
BRICS held its inaugural maritime exercise, "Will for Peace 2026," off Simon’s Town, South Africa, from Jan 9‑16, focusing on shipping‑lane safety and interoperability. The drill was led by China with South Africa hosting, and saw participation from China, Russia, Iran, the...

US Warship Pays First Port Call at Cambodia’s Ream Naval Base
On Jan. 24, the U.S. Navy’s littoral combat ship USS Cincinnati docked at Cambodia’s Ream Naval Base, marking the first American warship visit to the facility. The base, recently expanded with Chinese‑funded infrastructure, has been a flashpoint in U.S.–China strategic competition....

What Are China’s New Wolf Warriors Really Fighting For?
China’s “wolf‑warrior” diplomats have re‑emerged as a visible front of aggressive foreign policy, but their rhetoric is driven largely by internal CCP pressures rather than pure external strategy. Recent investigations of senior Central Military Commission members and the removal of...

Indonesia Takes Delivery of First French-Made Rafale Fighter Jets
Indonesia received its first three French‑made Rafale fighter jets on Jan 23, marking the initial delivery of an $8.1 billion contract for 42 aircraft. The jets are now based at Roesmin Nurjadin Air Base and will kick‑start pilot training and operational conversion. The...

US Defense Strategy Signals Shift in Korea Defense, Pushing Seoul to Lead
The U.S. Department of Defense’s new National Defense Strategy declares that South Korea must assume primary responsibility for countering North Korean conventional threats, while Washington narrows its role to nuclear extended deterrence. This pivot redirects U.S. resources toward deterring China,...

Yemen Rebels Threaten New Red Sea Attack as US Aircraft Carrier Heads Toward Iran
Yemen’s Iran‑backed Houthi rebels issued a fresh threat to resume attacks on vessels transiting the Red Sea as the U.S. aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and accompanying destroyers move toward the region. The warning coincides with President Donald Trump’s declaration...

Drugs Trafficking in Venezuela Is an Ocean Away From the Capture of Maduro
The article argues that the capture of Nicolás Maduro will have little effect on Venezuela’s role as a major cocaine transit hub. About 250 metric tons of cocaine—roughly 10 % of global output—pass through the country each year, facilitated by criminal groups...

Iran's Revolutionary Guard Commander Warns the US, Says His Force Has Its 'Finger on the Trigger'
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) commander Gen. Mohammad Pakpour warned the United States and Israel that his forces have “finger on the trigger” as U.S. warships, including the USS Abraham Lincoln, move into the Indian Ocean. The warning comes...

Connecticut Guard Home to Specialized Aircraft Maintenance Facility
The Connecticut National Guard’s 1109th Aviation Classification and Repair Depot (AVCRAD) in Groton performs depot‑level refurbishment of Army rotary‑wing aircraft, including UH‑60 Black Hawks, CH‑47 Chinooks and AH‑64 Apaches. By stripping helicopters to component level and rebuilding them to factory...

China’s Drone War in Ukraine
The Russia‑Ukraine war has become a drone‑centric conflict, with low‑cost UAVs driving artillery spotting, surveillance and strike missions. China, while officially neutral, dominates the global commercial drone market and supplies the majority of components used by both sides. Chinese firms...

Connecticut Guard Joint Staff Trains for Emergency Response as Winter Storm Arrives
The Connecticut National Guard’s Joint Force Headquarters completed a five‑day Joint Task Force Staff Training Course at Camp Nett, sharpening its ability to plan and coordinate Guard support during domestic emergencies. The curriculum covered logistics, personnel management, and inter‑agency coordination, culminating...

Nevada Army Guard 321st Signal Company Activated to Support 17th Sustainment Brigade
The Nevada Army National Guard officially activated the 321st Signal Company on Dec. 6, 2025, assigning it to the 17th Sustainment Brigade. Capt. Howard Kemple Jr. and 1st Sgt. Justin Strong now lead the unit, which expands the brigade’s organic communications capability. The...

Oregon Guard Innovation Becomes Army Standard for Medevac Operations
Oregon Army National Guard aircrews identified a mismatch between the new Vita Vertical Rescue System (VRS) and existing Black Hawk litter straps, prompting them to redesign the strap as SK‑1189‑V. After prototyping with Skedco and six months of testing, the...

Japan’s Southwest Islands in Focus at Latest Japan-US Defense Minister Meeting
Japanese Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi and U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth met in Washington on Jan 15, 2026, reaffirming plans to boost Japan‑U.S. security cooperation in the Southwest islands. They agreed to upgrade command‑and‑control systems, conduct more realistic joint drills,...

The UK and Trump’s National Security Strategy
The Trump administration’s new National Security Strategy pivots toward a narrow, "America First" agenda, emphasizing national‑interest priorities, Western Hemisphere dominance, great‑power stability, an aggressive Indo‑Pacific posture, and economic revitalisation. It downplays global leadership in Europe, relegating the U.S. role to...

29th ID Participates in Warfighter Exercise in Finland
Virginia National Guard soldiers from the 29th Infantry Division headquarters joined Finland’s Operation Karelian Spear from Nov. 28 to Dec. 4, 2025. Integrated into the Finnish 4th Army Corps, they supported warfighting functional cells and observed tactical field operations. The exercise, part...

Threat Simulation Turns Into Battlefield Deception
Slovenian firm Carboteh unveiled the Battlefield Anti‑Aircraft Non‑Kinetic (BANS) system at UMEX & SimTEX 2026, a handheld UV emitter that mimics a missile launch to trigger aircraft missile‑warning systems. The device forces hostile helicopters and low‑flying aircraft to dispense flares, depleting their limited...

Operation Teardrop: The Secret Navy Mission to Stop German Submarines From Launching Rockets on New York City
Operation Teardrop was a secret U.S. Navy campaign in early 1945 aimed at intercepting German Type IX U‑boats believed to be equipped with V‑1 rockets targeting New York City. Acting on intelligence from captured spies and Enigma decrypts, the Navy assembled barrier...

Pentagon Brushes Off Request to Understand How Wind Turbines Threaten National Security
The Pentagon has invoked a classified national‑security claim to halt work on the Revolution Wind offshore project, yet it refuses to disclose the underlying threat. Federal courts have twice rejected the administration’s stop‑work orders, allowing the $5 billion development to proceed....

Pearl Harbor's Forgotten 1944 Disaster Killed at Least 163 Men and Reformed Navy Safety Measures
The West Loch disaster on May 21, 1944, erupted when a mortar round aboard LST‑353 detonated, igniting gasoline drums and causing a chain‑reaction explosion that engulfed six landing ships and nearby vessels. Official Navy records list 163 dead and 396...

The New Age of Maritime Multilateralism in the Indian Ocean
The Indian Ocean has shifted from a peripheral zone to a hotbed of great‑power competition, with the United States, Japan, Australia, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and the UAE expanding diplomatic and security footprints. China remains the most aggressive actor, operating in...

Pakistan Eyes Multi-Billion Dollar JF-17 Export Boom Amid Global Interest
Pakistan is actively negotiating JF‑17 Thunder sales with multiple countries, including Bangladesh, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Sudan, Libya and Azerbaijan. The deals on the table range from a $1 billion Indonesian purchase of 40 jets to a potential $4 billion Saudi package...

Japan, Philippines Sign New Defense Pact to Facilitate Flow of Military Supplies
Japan and the Philippines signed the Acquisition and Cross‑Servicing Agreement (ACSA) in Manila, enabling tax‑free exchange of ammunition, fuel, food and other supplies during joint military exercises. The pact builds on the 2024 Reciprocal Access Agreement and comes with a...

Senate Confirms Carden as First Four-Star Vice Chief of the National Guard Bureau
The U.S. Senate confirmed Army Lt. Gen. Thomas M. Carden as the 12th vice chief of the National Guard Bureau, making him the first officer to hold the four‑star rank in that position. The FY2024 National Defense Authorization Act elevated...

Illinois National Guard, Portugal Sign New State Partnership Agreement
The Illinois National Guard and Portugal’s Ministry of National Defense signed a State Partnership Program agreement on Jan. 12, 2026 in Lisbon. The partnership, part of the U.S. Army’s National Guard Bureau program, formalizes cooperation between the Illinois Guard and Portuguese armed...

Appeals Court Rules ‘Fat Leonard’ Must Serve Full Sentence in Navy Corruption Scandal
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously upheld the 15‑year prison term for Leonard Francis, the Malaysian contractor known as “Fat Leonard,” rejecting his Fifth Amendment and sentencing‑disparity arguments. The panel found district judge Janis Sammartino’s sentencing decision reasonable,...

Former Navy SEAL Convicted of Planning to Fire Explosives at Police During San Diego ‘No Kings’ Rally
A federal jury convicted former Navy SEAL Gregory Vandenberg of transporting fireworks and planning to fire explosives at police during San Diego’s June 14 “No Kings” rally. Prosecutors highlighted his neo‑Nazi beliefs, anti‑Israel rhetoric, and a photo of a Taliban...

NY Army National Guard Col. Jason Lefton, a Niskayuna Resident, Takes over 53rd Troop Command
New York Army National Guard Colonel Jason Lefton, a Niskayuna resident, assumed command of the 53rd Troop Command on Jan. 11, 2026 at Camp Smith. The 53rd Troop Command oversees roughly 5,100 soldiers across the state and is one of the Guard’s two general‑officer commands. Lefton...

Leadership Conference Conducted for Junior Enlisted New York Army National Guard Soldiers
The New York Army National Guard hosted a four‑day Junior Enlisted Conference for 61 junior soldiers at its Latham headquarters from Jan 8‑11, 2026. Led by Command Sgt. Major Leyland Jones and adjutant general Maj. Gen. Ray Shields, the workshop covered training, readiness, family programs,...

Pennsylvania Guard, Côte D’Ivoire to Partner Through State Partnership Program
The Pennsylvania National Guard has been selected to partner with Côte d’Ivoire through the U.S. Department of War National Guard Bureau State Partnership Program. The partnership will focus on security cooperation, disaster preparedness, and professional development, while also exploring economic...

Former Navy Sailor Sentenced to 16 Years for Selling Information About Ships to Chinese Intelligence
A former U.S. Navy petty officer, Jinchao Wei, was sentenced to 200 months in prison for selling classified technical manuals and operational data about the amphibious assault ship USS Essex to a Chinese intelligence officer. Wei received more than $12,000 for...

Sen. Kelly Sues the Pentagon Over Attempts to Punish Him, Declaring It Unconstitutional
Sen. Mark Kelly, a former Navy pilot, filed a lawsuit against the Pentagon seeking to block a censure issued by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. The censure stems from Kelly’s participation in a video urging troops to refuse unlawful orders, which...