Warfare
Lockheed Martin to buy Ultra Maritime for $3.45 billion
The $3.45 billion deal will fold Ultra Maritime into Lockheed’s rotary and mission systems business, strengthening its naval defense portfolio.
Russia approved secret China military training at top level, sources say
Israel must seize the opportunities created by Japan's strategic awakening - opinion
Armies to markets: The changed nature of power - opinion
Ukraine’s sling against Russia: How 'geniuses in garages' transformed robotic warfare
The road to becoming a robotic superpower was paved with skepticism, but Ukraine did not set out to become a world leader in military robotics - it set out to survive.
Ukraine secures drone deals with nearly 20 countries, Zelensky announces
Ukrainian President Zelenskiy announces four signed drone agreements with 20 countries, marking a key milestone in Ukraine's global defense diplomacy.
Israel's new threat map is a system, not a front
The new reality is not sequential threats, but simultaneous pressure across physical and digital domains
The ground loyal wingman and the future of manned-unmanned combat - opinion
If the skies have become dangerous, the ground battlefield has become a truly lethal trap. So instead of adding more and more soldiers or additional manned combat platforms, we add robots.
Rafael subsidiary strikes deal with four NATO countries for Trophy APS
'In the coming years, APS will be increasingly embedded as a standard requirement across armored fleets...and treated as an essential element of modern land warfare'
Gaza reveals future of urban combat western armies aren't prepared for - opinion
The war in Gaza was modern urban war, not genocide, writes Andrew Fox in his latest research paper for the Henry Jackson Society
What’s in a name? A lot: Why Israel must reframe hasbara as informational warfare - opinion
In a world where narratives shape policy and policy shapes survival, adapting Israel’s communications doctrine to information warfare is not optional. It is the existential imperative of our time.
US Navy launches first one-way attack drone from ship amid growing threats
The US Navy has launched its first one-way attack drone from a ship, a milestone in the mission to field low-cost drones at scale.
Armed drones continue to fly ahead, and so is the tech bringing them down - analysis
Several dozen c-UAS companies, both Israeli and international, took part in the recent UVID Drone conference in Tel Aviv last week, highlighting their technology
'Moneyball Military': How civil tech and sheer numbers are reshaping global defense strategies
The next era of warfare will be defined by the fusion of military quality with the speed and scale of civilian innovation