PLA naval escort taskforce conducts in-port replenishment in Djibouti

China Military Online – The comprehensive supply ship Dongpinghu (Hull 960) attached to the 36th escort taskforce of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy left the Port of Djibouti recently after more than 7 hours’ in-port replenishment. This is the first in-port replenishment of the taskforce since it set sail from China on September 3. And all the supplies of the in-port replenishment came from domestic China.

Hidden Threat To Navies: How Freely Available Satellite Imagery Can Track Radars

Naval News – Open source intelligence can pose a threat to naval operations of any nation. It is free available and, largely, easily analyzed. Anyone with an internet connection can potentially locate warships in operational settings. Radar satellite data is not the most intuitive, but it provides OSINT watchers with yet another tool to track navies. And no navy is immune from OSINT.

Teaching Technology, Innovation, and Modern War at Stanford, Part 7: Reimagining Naval Power

Modern War Institute – Today’s topic was the Navy and modern war. Our guest speaker was Rear Adm. Lorin Selby, Chief of Naval Research, United States Navy. He is responsible for the Naval Research Enterprise—the “venture capital” of the Navy and Marine Corps. It’s made up of the Office of Naval Research (ONR), ONR Global, the Naval Research Laboratory, and PMR-51, which is responsible for special projects.

Drive Them into the Sea

Military Review – The only method of preventing China from successfully annexing Taiwan is to reject calls for a cease-fire, contain Chinese bridgeheads and airheads into as small a perimeter as possible, and then drive the invaders into the sea. Contrary to the limited Army supporting role envisioned in the Pacific, an Army corps will be indispensable and must be fully incorporated into U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM) Taiwan contingency plans.