War Zone – A modified version of Boeing’s T-7A Red Hawk could well be the aircraft to beat considering the Air Force is already buying hundreds of them.
Yearly Archives: 2021
Carl Vinson strike group using first deployment with F-35C, beefed-up air wing to hone advanced operations
Defense News – The air wing the Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group is hauling around not only includes the F-35C Joint Strike Fighter for the first time in history but also a beefed-up complement of EA-18G Growlers and E-2D Advanced Hawkeyes for an “air wing of the future” leaders think can defeat high-end adversaries before they even spot the U.S. Navy coming.
Why is a British Carrier Strike Group Heading to the Indo-Pacific?
War on the Rocks – Post-Brexit Britain has entered a new phase in security policy, one in which the use of its maritime posture as a tool of national statecraft will determine the global nature of its international standing.
Explosion on a ship in the port of Latakia
I24News – A large explosion on a commercial ship moored in the Syrian port of Latakia took place on Tuesday afternoon. Some media report that the targeted ship is Iranian.
(Thanks to Alain)
Chinese icebreaker sails to North Pole, explores remote Arctic ridge
Barents Observer – The Xue Long 2 (Snow Dragon 2) is on its second Arctic voyage during which it will conduct scientific surveys in the Gakkel Ridge.
Israeli submarine enters Red Sea via Suez Canal
Israel Hayom – Iranian news portal Nournews, a mouthpiece of the ayatollah regime in Tehran, reported on Monday that an Israeli Dolphin-class submarine secretly entered the Red Sea last Wednesday, August 4, through the Suez Canal. Reports on the movements and whereabouts of Israeli submarines are typically uncommon. According to Nournews, two Israeli Navy destroyers also crossed the Suez Canal at the same time, most likely as escorts for the submarine.
(Thanks to Alain)
Disrupt the Navy’s Operational Model to Counter China
CDR Salamander – Bryan Clark and Bryan McGrath suggest a way for the U.S. Navy to confront the threat posed by China.
New submarine hints at China’s search for stealth ahead of potential Taiwan war: analysts
South China Morning Post – French and American submarine watchers note features of a new Type 039A Chinese sub would make it quieter and more agile
(Thanks to Alain)
Small Unmanned Helicopters Used Lasers To Map Littorals In Recent U.S. Navy Tests
War Zone – The U.S. Navy recently conducted successful flight tests of a UAV carrying an aerial laser system designed to map the ocean floor in shallow water areas. While details are scarce, we know that the tests used a Light Detection and Ranging, or LIDAR, system aboard a small unmanned helicopter. While such a system could be an important tool for making detailed topographic maps of waterways and littoral areas, there could be other potential applications of well beyond general cartographic ones.
Tension on the Black Sea: What great power competition looks like from the deckplates
Navy Times – Though U.S. defense leaders talk about the idea of great power competition, they often do so in the future tense — and often about a conflict that would start in the South China Sea. But the U.S. Navy’s regional leaders say great power competition is already taking place in Europe and there’s a race underway to assemble a strong enough coalition of allies and partners to keep day-to-day tensions with Russia at a simmer, instead of boiling over into an all-out conflict. Perhaps nowhere is that clearer than the Black Sea.
After 2014 decimation, Ukrainian Navy rebuilds to fend off Russia
Defense News – When Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, it absorbed land and people. But in the process, and with less attention, Russia also took 75 percent of Ukraine’s naval fleet, the majority of its helicopters and the bulk of the country’s ship repair capacity.
The Navy Wants A Fleet Of Unmanned Ships. Can Industry Take The Strain?
Breaking Defense – Shipbuilding executives say they can take the strain of maintenance for a fleet of unmanned vessels, but industry and the Navy have historically struggled with the warships they are currently managing.
A New U.S. Navy Planning Model for Lower-Threshold Maritime Security Operations, Part 2
CIMSEC – Navy doctrine on planning for maritime security operations is inadequate.
Navy conducts final blast in Ford full-ship shock trials
Defense News – The U.S. Navy completed its three-part explosive shock trials on aircraft carrier Gerald R. Ford on Aug. 8, with no major casualties on the first-in-class ship and less damage to repair during an upcoming maintenance availability than expected.
Improve Cybersecurity for Information System Defense
USNI Proceedings – Designing and fielding information systems capable of preventing compromise and weapon systems that cannot be hacked is a readiness imperative.
Maritime Solutions to Continental Conundrums
USNI Proceedings – Continental powers covet conquests; Maritime powers compound wealth.
Mysterious New Electronic Warfare System Spotted On U.S. Navy Aircraft Carriers
War Zone – An intriguing upgrade has been installed on the USS Carl Vinson and the USS Abraham Lincoln that points to new defensive capabilities.
Phantom Warships Are Courting Chaos in Conflict Zones
Wired – The latest weapons in the global information war are fake vessels behaving badly.
China’s Strategy To Control The South China Sea: Defense Of The Indefensible
1945 – Recognizing what an antagonist is up to constitutes the beginning of wisdom.
The Royal Navy in the Indo-Pacific: Don’t Use a Sledgehammer to Crack a Nut
War on the Rocks – Why is the Royal Navy sending two of its smallest warships to the world’s largest ocean? The First Sea Lord’s announcement of the Royal Navy’s intention to forward deploy two offshore patrol vessels to the Indo-Pacific has been met with skepticism. Given the region’s sheer size and the growing menace of China within the South China Sea, some argue that a frigate is a better platform for this role. But using a frigate, the work horse of the fleet, for all overseas tasking is akin to using a sledgehammer to crack a nut. Each new maritime task needs to be judged on its own merits considering its objectives and operating environment.
New Egyptian Base Sends Messages of Support to Libya, Challenge To Turkey
Breaking Defense – The opening of the base signifies Egypt’s determination to assert itself as a regional naval power with vast capacities and challenge efforts by its competitors like Turkey to expand their area of influence and control oil and gas rich zones of the Mediterranean.
Fleet Problem IX and Enduring Lessons For the Anti-Access Dilemma
CIMSEC – Fleet Problem IX—an exercise conducted almost a century ago—is still instructive for naval strategists, tacticians, and planners today. While it is remembered, and rightly so, for demonstrating the offensive potential of the aircraft carrier, it also demonstrated their vulnerability, particularly when the adversary presents an opposing carrier fleet with a multi-layered A2/AD system consisting of complementary capabilities.
Is the Pentagon Killing Today’s Maritime Force to Save Tomorrow’s Force?
National Interest – James Holmes writes that a divest-to-invest strategy might yield a fleet equal to the challenges America will confront decades from now. But divestment might leave too little combat power in the fleet to, say, repel a Chinese assault on Taiwan in the next few years.
Drone Makes First Autonomous Aerial Delivery Between Two Military Vessels
War Zone – The U.S. Navy has been experimenting with a variety of drone delivery concepts in recent years in order to ease its logistical burden.
The Porcupine in No Man’s Sea: Arming Taiwan for Sea Denial
CIMSEC – Heavily reinforcing Taiwan through focused security subsidies while maintaining a policy of strategic ambiguity would maintain conventional deterrence through denial against China.
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