– Virginian Pilot – Tens of thousands of sailors in Hampton Roads would deploy more often – but also, defense officials say, on a more predictable schedule – under a plan the Navy hopes to launch by the end of next year.
Monthly Archives: April 2013
Royal Australian Navy – Planning the Unthinkable War with China: An Aussie View of AirSea Battle
– Defense News – As the US pushes forward on the AirSea Battle doctrine and the so-called Asia Pivot, many in the Asia-Pacific are asking for clarification on a subject that could involve them in an unnecessary war with China.
US Navy – US Navy warship cybersecurity 'vulnerable'
– Reuters – The computer network on the US Navy’s newest class of coastal warships showed vulnerabilities in cybersecurity tests, but the issues were not severe enough to prevent deployment.
Malaysian Navy – Royal Malaysian Navy Gowind class Corvettes for LCS program to be fitted with stealth 57mm Guns
–Navy Recognition – The latest updates on the Malaysian LCS program.
US Navy – Ships Ahoy
– Aviation Week – For all of the wringing of hands and gnashing of teeth over the impacts of sequestration and continuing resolutions, it is interesting to point out that the Navy shipbuilding plan, especially for the immediate future, remains pretty intact.
Terrorism – The School
– Esquire – (An archival article, from CJ Chivers, on terrorism in Chechnya. Relevant in regards to last week’s tragic events in Boston.) – On the first day of school in 2004, a Chechen terrorist group struck the Russian town of Beslan. Targeting children, they took more than eleven hundred hostages. The attack represented a horrifying innovation in human brutality. Here, an extraordinary accounting of the experience of terror in the age of terrorism.
Chinese Navy – Japan PM Abe warns China of force over islands landing
– BBC – Japan would respond with force if any attempt is made to land on disputed islands, PM Shinzo Abe has warned.
Chinese Navy – China's first aircraft 'preparing for first long distance mission'
– Daily Telegraph – China’s first aircraft carrier could make its maiden long distance journey “within the year”, state media has announced in a further indication of the country’s growing military clout.
US Navy – Osprey on the Truman, Fishing for COD
– Aviation Week – The MV-22 Osprey is preparing to take a major step in the program’s quest to garner more customers outside the U.S. Marine Corps and the Air Force special operations community. The aircraft is onboard the deck of the carrier USS Harry S. Truman in preparation for trials to validate whether it is suitable to be considered as a replacement for aging C-2 Greyhounds.
Fourth Generation Warfare – Two Intifadas and a Flawed Theory
– American Conservative – William Lind writes that for at least a decade, Colonel Tom Hammes has been one of the Marine Corps’ leading intellectuals. His book The Sling and the Stone: On War in the 21st Century should be read by anyone who has an interest in Fourth Generation warfare (4GW).
US Navy – F-35’s ability to evade budget cuts illustrates challenge of paring defense spending
– Washington Post – The F-35 has features that make pilots drool. It is shaped to avoid detection by enemy radar. It can accelerate to supersonic speeds. One model can take off and land vertically. Onboard electronic sensors and computers provide a 360-degree view of the battlefield on flat-panel screens, allowing pilots to quickly identify targets and threats. But its greatest strength has nothing to do with those attributes. The Defense Department and Lockheed Martin, the giant contractor hired to design and build the plane, also known as the Joint Strike Fighter, have constructed what amounts to a budgetary force field around the nearly $400 billion program.
US Navy – USS Freedom arrives in Singapore as part of US 'pivot'
– BBC – A US Navy ship has arrived in Singapore as part of US plans to increase its military presence in the region.
US Navy – Murky Waters: Seagoing Drones Swim Into New Legal and Ethical Territory
– Defense News – Yet, water-going robots bring unforeseen challenges — technological ones, to be sure, but also legal, regulatory and ethical tangles. Drones that fly or crawl on the ground are controlled by radio waves, but it is difficult — often impossible — to communicate with underwater vehicles. The answer, it seems, is autonomy — robots that are not remotely piloted, but that operate on their own. “There are legal implications,” especially if the drones are armed, said Card, the director of naval intelligence and the chief of information dominance. “We are going to really have to think our way through this.”
US Navy – Gulf Deployment for US Navy's Laser Weapon
– US Navy – Gulf Deployment for US Navy’s Laser Weapon – The US Navy is going to deploy a high-power laser ship self-defense system to the Gulf of Arabia early next year. The Laser Weapon System (LaWS) prototype will installed on the amphibious transport dock USS Ponce and, in addition to undergoing tests in theater, will provide an operational capability against any hostile fast-attack craft or unmanned aircraft.
US Navy – Boeing reveals updated F/A-XX concept
– Flight International – Boeing is unveiling an updated version of its F/A-XX sixth-generation fighter concept at the Navy League’s Sea-Air-Space Exposition in Washington DC.
US Navy – Lockheed reveals UCLASS design
– Flight International – Lockheed Martin is taking the wraps off its submission for the US Navy’s prospective unmanned carrier launched surveillance and strike (UCLASS) aircraft at the Navy League’s Sea-Air-Space Exposition in Washington DC.
US Navy – Women eager to join ‘brotherhood’ on Navy’s fast-attack submarines
– Washington Times – Life aboard a fast-attack submarine can be rough: Quarters are cramped, operations are hectic and privacy is just a memory, veteran submariners say.
But as the Navy prepares to assign women to fast-attack subs, one of its first female submariners is relishing the challenge of serving in the “dolphin brotherhood.”
Russian Navy – Russian bomber conducts practice strikes on U.S. missile defenses in Asia
– Washington Times – A Russian bomber recently carried out simulated cruise missile attacks on U.S. missile defenses in Asia, raising new questions about Moscow’s goal in future U.S.-Russian defense talks. According to U.S. officials, a Russian Tu-22M Backfire bomber on Feb. 26 simulated firing air-launched cruise missiles at an Aegis ship deployed near Japan as part of U.S. missile defenses.
US Navy – Radar Shove
– Aviation Week – There must be a typo. That’s the understandable first thought that could pass through anyone’s mind upon seeing the U.S. Government Accountability Office’s (GAO) new cost estimates for the Navy’s proposed Air and Missile Defense Radar (AMDR), which is meant to combine S- and X-band radars for simultaneous and unmatched air and ballistic missile defense (BMD). The Navy plans to first put the AMDR on its DDG-51 Flight III destroyers. AMDR’s total price tag is now estimated at about $5.8 billion, compared to the $15.2 billion projected by GAO last year.
Royal Navy – UK must keep Trident nuclear deterrent – David Cameron
– BBC – The UK would be “foolish” to abandon Trident in the face of the potential threat of nuclear attack from North Korea and Iran, David Cameron has said.
Geopolitics / India – Know your own strength
– Economist – India is poised to become one of the four largest military powers in the world by the end of the decade. It needs to think about what that means.
Geopolitics / India – Can India become a great power?
– Economist – India’s lack of a strategic culture hobbles its ambition to be a force in the world
US Navy – Keeping Asian Waters Pacific
– Aviation Week – As the rhetoric boils and simmers over North Korea’s increasingly capable ballistic missiles, it might be wise to consider a thought posed recently by Vice Adm. Richard Hunt, the U.S. Navy director of staff, during an interview with Aviation Week. “Preventing conflict is as important as prevailing in conflict,” Hunt says.
Geopolitics / Jordan – The Modern King in the Arab Spring
– The Atlantic – Amid the social and political transformations reshaping the Middle East, can Jordan’s Abdullah II, the region’s most pro-American Arab leader, liberalize his kingdom, modernize its economy, and save the country from capture by Islamist radicals?
Chinese Navy – The Chinese Navy Has a Problem
– The Diplomat – Debates over China’s anti-access system of systems and its desire to pierce the successive Pacific Island chains often overlook the fact that China faces a very basic set of maritime problems. The PRC draws its most important resources from across an ocean that it cannot control, and exports most of its finished goods to overseas partners who similarly lay beyond the reach of the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN). Whether or not the PLAN can deter or defeat the U.S. Navy (USN) in China’s littoral, the organization’s true test lies in its ability to secure the PRC’s critical lines of communication.
You must be logged in to post a comment.