Bunker Talk: Let’s Chat About All The Stories We Did And Didn’t Cover This Week
We can talk about ancient sub hunters, navalized high-power lasers, geopolitics, metamaterials—you know, no big whoop.
We can talk about ancient sub hunters, navalized high-power lasers, geopolitics, metamaterials—you know, no big whoop.
The system being moved represents a big leap in ship-based directed energy capabilities and is slated to be tested aboard USS Portland.
The secret cargo is only being described as a "U.S. Navy demonstration project" that is destined for San Diego.
The Army says it will be exploring "novel materials" and other technologies under an unpaid collaboration with To The Stars Academy.
Navy officials claim their radical electromagnetic and superconductor technologies aren't theoretical, they're already operable in some form.
The system would be air, rail, road, or sea transportable, allowing for long-range, hard-hitting drone swarms to make unpredictable attacks.
As American troops withdraw in northern Syria, it looks as if Turkey is on a collision course with the Assad regime and its Russian backers.
It's corny, but the horse is special in North Korean culture, making this among the most propaganda-laden imagery the regime can distribute.
The Marines are inching closer and closer to executing their "Lightning Carrier" concept that would see amphibious assault ships bristle with F-35Bs.
The rapidly evolving crisis in Syria may prompt the U.S. to finally remove its nuclear stockpile from Turkey, a move that some say is long overdue.
The Army wants a survivable and fast "knife fighter" helicopter to fight in contested areas. The Raider X certainly seems like it could be just that.
China's navalized version of its Black Hawk clone breaks cover. Its capability is badly needed within the growing People's Liberation Army Navy fleet.
When it comes to laying out everything in detail like an action figure playset, it's hard to beat taking an entire twin-turbine helicopter apart.
We can talk about Northern Syria, the helicopters of Area 51, geopolitics, mysterious Navy patents—you know, no big whoop.
A new Air Expeditionary Wing is being set up in The Kingdom, which will be able to accommodate large influxes of airpower over the long term.
It isn't clear what happened to the ship, but the fact that it is burning off the Saudi coast at a time of extreme tension is highly concerning.
As the security situation in the region erodes, the carrier question becomes more pressing for Seoul.
The service quickly found that what had worked for years in Afghanistan meant failed strikes in Iraq and Syria.
The drone's manufacturer Kratos says that the airbag system it uses to cushion its parachute landings after flights suffered an "anomaly."
The money made from the sale will likely go to the families of Otto Warmbier and Kim Don Shik, who died at the hands of the North Korean regime.