The US Army is planning to deploy the Pentagon’s first hypersonic weapon by the end of the year, even though the Defense Department’s own test office said the weapon hasn’t yet proven it would be ...
Army Secretary Dan Driscoll pledged at the AUSA Conference to adopt a Silicon Valley-like approach to weapons and tech ...
The US Army's command and control system, NGC2, is a prime example of the service's new approach to developing weapons.
What if artillery rounds, mini-drone swarms of explosives, rockets and even air-fired missiles are all approaching forward-positioned Army troops at the same time? Imagine that these incoming weapons ...
The Army announced plans Monday to spend $750 million per year on a new initiative to bring Silicon Valley-style entrepreneurial speed to weapons development, particularly drone and anti-drone ...
Hypersonic weapons are so fast, their speed can change the surrounding air molecules. They can carry a nuclear warhead, fly low and be hard to detect. Because of their potential to transform modern ...
Long-range weapons will not totally reshape war as we know it—but they could blur the difference between offensive and defensive operations.
In a speech to the United Nations Security Council last month, Australia's Minister for Foreign Affairs, Penny Wong, took aim ...
North Korea’s Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un has said the use of artificial intelligence is a “top priority” in modernising his ...