
Wizz Air Quietly Walks Back the A321XLR Bet
Wizz Air has slashed its Airbus A321XLR order from 47 to 11, converting most to standard A321neos. The carrier plans to operate the remaining XLRs as if they were A321neos, focusing on short‑ to medium‑haul economics rather than ultra‑long routes. Management signaled possible sale‑leaseback financing for the five pending XLRs and confirmed no scheduled US service, limiting the aircraft to charter use for the World Cup. Fleet growth will now target 334 aircraft by FY30, well below its earlier 424‑plane ambition.

Aer Lingus Confirms Its Closing Manchester Long-Haul Base After Cabin Crew Asked For More Money
Aer Lingus announced it will permanently close its Manchester transatlantic long‑haul base on March 31, 2026, ending flights to New York, Orlando and Barbados. The shutdown eliminates roughly 200 cabin‑crew positions and follows a strike over a rejected 9% pay rise....

Is American Airlines Preparing to Oust CEO Robert Isom Once The DCA Crash Anniversary Has Passed?
American Airlines posted an 87% drop in 2025 profit, widening the gap with Delta and United. The loss is tied to CEO Robert Isom’s cost‑cutting and a muddled premium‑focus strategy that left the carrier competing with low‑cost rivals. Rumors suggest...

China’s Stunning Military Purge – and What It Means For Taiwan
President Xi Jinping has purged two of the most senior members of the Central Military Commission, General Zhang Youxia and General Liu Zhenli, effectively gutting the PLA's top command. The removals, framed as discipline violations, follow a broader campaign that...

Air Canada Unveils Airbus A321XLR Base At Toronto Pearson
Air Canada announced an Airbus A321XLR base at Toronto Pearson, enabling year‑round service to Copenhagen and extending the seasonal Manchester route into the winter of 2026. The new base complements an existing A321XLR hub in Montreal, expanding the carrier’s narrow‑body...
FAR Part 13: Can I Wait to Protest When the Agency Tells Me a Debriefing Will Be Provided?
This episode breaks down a recent GAO decision (ASG Solutions Corp.) that clarified how timeliness rules apply when a contract is awarded under FAR Part 13. The GAO held that because the Navy’s procurement was a simplified acquisition, it was not...

India’s Regional Jet Second Front
Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) has signed a landmark deal with Russia's United Aircraft Corporation to assemble the Sukhoi Superjet 100, rebranded as the Yakovlev SJ‑100, in India. The agreement, announced at Wings India 2026, marks the nation’s first domestic civil...

POLARIS Spaceplanes Wins Contract for Reusable Hypersonic Vehicle
Polaris Spaceplanes has secured a contract from Germany’s Federal Office of Bundeswehr Equipment, Information Technology and In‑Service Support (BAAINBw) to develop and flight‑test a fully reusable, two‑stage hypersonic vehicle dubbed the Hypersonic Test and Experimentation Vehicle (HYTEV). The vehicle, roughly...

How to Improve UK261 & EU261
The episode examines the UK261/EU261 passenger rights regulation, highlighting its importance for travelers and exposing gaps when flying with non‑EU carriers like American Airlines, which often leave passengers to foot hotel and meal costs during weather‑related delays. The host proposes...

Oceanic Barrier Systems: Barrier Concepts for War and Competition in the Pacific
The episode examines China’s recent deployment of 1,000‑2,000 fishing vessels to create a 400‑kilometre maritime barrier near Taiwan and Japan, interpreting it as a rehearsal for civilian‑ship‑based anti‑access tactics. It links this maneuver to broader PLA strategies that repurpose civilian...

Inside Trump’s New ‘Board of Peace’
President Donald Trump signed the charter for the newly created Board of Peace (BOP) at Davos, positioning himself as its inaugural chairman with sweeping authority over membership, agenda, and dissolution. The charter grants Trump unilateral power to appoint and remove...

They're Coming for Our Kids: How Extremists Target Children Online
Extremist groups are increasingly targeting children on platforms such as Discord, Instagram, Reddit, and gaming chats, turning these digital third spaces into recruitment hubs. In 2024, teenagers accounted for roughly two‑thirds of ISIS‑linked arrests in Europe, and similar patterns are...

The Next FATF Test: Can the West Demand Results From Pakistan?
The Financial Action Task Force will meet in February 2026 to reassess Pakistan after its 2022 removal from the grey list. While Pakistan has introduced anti‑money‑laundering laws and institutional reforms, open‑source evidence shows terrorist groups like Jaish‑e‑Mohammad and Lashkar‑e‑Taiba still...

What to Watch for as NTSB Determines D.C. Midair Crash Probable Cause
On Tuesday the NTSB will announce and vote on the probable cause of the Jan. 29, 2025 midair collision between an Army Black Hawk and an American Airlines CRJ700 at Washington D.C. The board will also consider safety recommendations, though the final...
Netflix: Waning Optimism
The episode reviews the author's evolving stance on Netflix, noting a recent 200‑basis‑point trim to the stock after several reductions throughout 2024, signaling waning optimism. Despite the cut, Netflix still comprises about 8% of the portfolio, reflecting lingering confidence in...

From Electrum to Sterling: A Brief History of Money
The episode traces the evolution of money from the first electrum coins minted in Lydia around 640 BC, through the early experiments with paper money in China and Sweden, to the rise of national central banks that backed notes with government...

The Sorry Tale of New Drax OCGTs Highlights Growing Capacity Market Irrationality
Drax has built three 299 MW OCGT plants that secured GB Capacity Market contracts, yet none can operate because grid connections have not been delivered. Under the Capacity Market rules, the lack of connection triggers non‑delivery penalties that could wipe out...

Loosening the Gordian Knot of Global Terrorism: Why Legitimacy Must Anchor a Counterterrorism Strategy
The 2026 terrorism environment is more hybrid and unpredictable than ever. The author argues that a legitimate U.S. counterterrorism strategy—grounded in legal credibility and international partnership—is essential for the second Trump administration. Past strategies, like the 2018 National Strategy for...

Three Imaginative Airline Services
The host recounts a stellar long‑haul flight on an American Airlines 787‑9 and uses that experience to propose three low‑cost airline service innovations. The first idea is a simple notification system that alerts passengers when their checked bag misses the...

FAA Moves to Codify Existing DCA Helicopter Restrictions Into Law
The FAA issued an interim final rule on Jan. 22 that permanently codifies helicopter and powered‑lift restrictions around Washington’s Reagan National Airport following the Jan. 29, 2025 Black Hawk‑CRJ700 collision. The rule lowers the vertical‑lift altitude ceiling to 1,500 feet and defines “essential” flights—medical,...
Trilateral Shipbuilding: Build a Missile Corvette Fleet with Asian Allies
In this episode, CDR Chase E. Harding outlines a proposal for a trilateral shipbuilding program among the United States, Japan, and South Korea to produce fast‑attack missile corvettes that can counter China’s expanding naval fleet. He details the historic decline...

The Accountability Problem Exposed by the First Garmin Autoland Deployment
Garmin’s Emergency Autoland, designed for pilot incapacitation, saw its first operational use on Dec 20, 2025 when a Beechcraft King Air B200 experienced rapid depressurization. The system automatically engaged and guided the aircraft to a safe landing at Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport, while...

The Kremlin Files: Russia’s Way to the Gray Zone
The article examines Russia’s evolution of gray‑zone or hybrid warfare, focusing on the doctrine of “non‑contact war” and the intelligence‑driven “active measures.” It traces the concept from Soviet‑era sixth‑generation warfare ideas through the writings of generals Slipchenko, Gareev and Gerasimov,...
The Arctic Is a Strategic Distraction
In this episode, T.X. Hammes argues that the U.S. focus on the Arctic is a strategic distraction that diverts scarce defense resources from higher‑priority theaters. He dismantles the hype around new Arctic shipping routes, showing that current traffic on the...

Assisted Thinking
The episode “Assisted Thinking” dissects the stark contrast between China’s massive reliance on coal—accounting for 58% of its primary energy in 2024—and the Western media narrative that paints Beijing as a climate leader. By examining data from the Statistical Review...

What’s a Hawker?
The Hawker business jet line, originating from de Havilland’s HS‑125 in the early 1960s, evolved through dozens of variants and multiple owners before ending production in 2012. Over 1,670 aircraft were built, praised for ruggedness, spacious cabins, and long‑range capability, while...

New Reports Reveal Years of Unaddressed Osprey Safety Risks
New GAO and NAVAIR reviews expose decades‑long safety gaps in the V‑22 Osprey program, highlighting 34 unresolved risks, eight of them catastrophic, and a surge in serious mishaps during 2023‑2024. The reports show that critical component failures—such as hard‑clutch engagement...

The Death of the Earth Return Orbiter
The episode examines the abrupt termination of the Mars Sample Return (MSR) program, focusing on ESA’s Earth Return Orbiter (ERO) and the implications of Daniel Neuenschwander’s declaration that the mission will not continue. It delves into the historical context of...
Charting a Course: Addressing Chinese Maritime Coercion Around Taiwan
In this episode Anthony Marco and Nils Peterson examine the Chinese Coast Guard’s escalating gray‑zone incursions around Taiwan’s peripheral islands, especially the recent series of violations at Dongsha Atoll. They explain how these maritime coercion tactics aim to erode ROC...

The Coast Guard's Mission in the Gray Zone
The opinion piece argues that U.S. defense planning over‑emphasizes expeditionary warfighting while neglecting the Coast Guard’s crucial role in enforcing sovereignty in the gray zone. The Coast Guard uniquely combines law‑enforcement authority, Title 14/10 flexibility, and continuous maritime presence to counter...

Luftwaffe Unmanned Systems Unit Expanded to Regiment
Ukraine has upgraded its 422nd Battalion of Unmanned Systems, known as the “Luftwaffe,” into a full regiment. The new 422nd Regiment now falls under the 17th Army Corps operating along the Zaporizhzhia axis. The unit evolved from a volunteer territorial‑defense...

Overhauling the Innovation Ecosystem
The episode examines the Department of Defense’s sweeping reforms to its innovation ecosystem, focusing on SECWAR’s restructuring of the USW(R&E) portfolio, a $1 billion investment by the DoD in L3Harris for next‑generation SRM capabilities, and the Army’s push for more flexible...

Chernyi Appointed Commander of 54th Mechanized Brigade
On January 15, 2026, Colonel Vadym Chernyi was named commander of Ukraine’s 54th Mechanized Brigade. The change follows the dismissal of Colonel Oleksiy Konoval after the rapid loss of Siversk north of Bakhmut in December 2025. Chernyi, a Kherson native, has served since 2013,...

Jeppesen ForeFlight CEO Cites Automation and AI in Justification for Layoffs
Jeppesen ForeFlight announced significant layoffs, citing automation and artificial intelligence as drivers of change. The cuts come months after Boeing divested the two aviation‑software units, which were bought by private‑equity firm Thoma Bravo. CEO Brad Surak emphasized the need to modernize development...

What U.S. – China Cooperation Means for the World
An opinion piece argues that despite recent U.S. criticism of China over the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, the United States and China must deepen cooperation to avoid global crises. It highlights historic joint efforts—from Cold‑War intelligence sharing to...

Oliver Explains: How Are Plane Seats Created?
In this episode Oliver walks listeners through the five-stage process airlines use to turn a seat concept into a certified, flight‑ready product, drawing on his firsthand experience at Qatar Airways. He explains the Initial Technical Co‑ordination Meeting (ITCM) where stakeholders...

United Converts 56 787-9s to -10s as GE and Rolls Spar for Engine Deal and A350 Looms
United Airlines announced it will convert 56 pending Boeing 787‑9 orders into the larger 787‑10 model. The shift addresses chronic gate shortages and limited air‑traffic‑control capacity at U.S. airports. United has not yet chosen an engine supplier for the aircraft,...

Earth Observation Investments: 2025 Review
Earth observation (EO) venture funding reached a record $2 billion in 2025, up 15% from 2024 and surpassing the 2023 peak. Over 90% of the capital flowed into acquisition and intelligence segments, while processing finally recorded meaningful investment. Late‑stage rounds exploded...

Xero’s Jolly on Building a Tech Roadmap to Level Playing Field for Small Businesses
Xero has launched an AI‑powered analytics suite aimed at small‑business owners, a move driven by chief product and technology officer Diya Jolly. After acquiring Syft and Melio, Xero now offers customizable dashboards, cash‑flow managers, health scorecards and instant AI‑generated insights....

ALPA Writes Open Letter to Spirit Airlines Bondholders
The episode examines the Airline Pilots Association’s (ALPA) open letter to Spirit Airlines bondholders, accusing them—particularly Citadel—of jeopardizing Spirit’s Chapter 11 restructuring and threatening thousands of jobs in South Florida. It contextualizes Spirit’s woes within broader challenges facing the U.S....
RDML T.J. Zerr on Strengthening Surface Force Lethality
In this interview, RDML T.J. Zerr outlines how the Surface and Mine Warfighting Development Center (SMWDC) is translating Red Sea combat lessons into faster, data‑driven training and tactics, notably through the Surface Warfare Combat Training Continuum (SWCTC) and increasingly sophisticated...

How Plausible Are Boom Supersonic's Use Cases?
The episode examines Boom Supersonic’s proposed Overture routes—New York to London, Paris to Washington DC, and Tokyo to Honolulu—by assessing their economic plausibility, market fit, and competition from sub‑sonic flights. The host argues that the New York‑London service could attract business travelers and...

The Consumer Frontier
The episode explores the "consumer frontier"—the point where technology becomes culture—as it shifts from software to hardware (atoms) and then to biology (cells). It explains how lowering technological difficulty and rising cultural readiness have turned software into pop culture, and...
Cosmetics versus Combat: Inspect for Warfighting Over Rust
In this episode, LT Spike Dearing argues that 7th Fleet surface ships are prioritizing preservation—rust and paint inspections—over combat readiness, despite operating in a high‑threat environment near China. He critiques senior officers’ focus on cosmetic inspections and proposes “snap combat...

The Case for the Messerschmitt Bf 109 Being the Greatest Fighter of the Second World War
In this episode, host Jim Smith argues that the Messerschmitt Bf 109 was the greatest WWII fighter, citing its groundbreaking 1934 design, superior performance in early campaigns, and sheer production numbers. He compares the Bf 109E to the early Spitfire,...