Flamer At Least 10 Times Bigger Than Stuxnet; Symantec Says Malware Attacks Soar
Posted on
CAPITOL HILL: The number of malware attacks soared 81 percent last year, from three billion in 2010 to five-and-a-half billion in 2012, Symantec senior engineer Patrick Gardner told congressional staff in a briefing here today. But those raw numbers aren’t the really bad news. What’s truly scary is the endless inventiveness of the attackers. They… Keep reading →
F-22 Will Fly Ops If Needed; Bio Research Next ‘Revolutionary’ Science: DepSecDef
Posted on
WASHINGTON: The F-22 will fly in operations if it’s needed while the Air Force keeps a close eye on the oxygen problem, Deputy Defense Secretary Ash Carter said today. “The answer is, yes. The aircraft will be used operationally if need be,” Carter said in response to a question during a morning appearance at the… Keep reading →
Army Mulls $1.7 Billion Effort To Replace 3,000 M113s
Posted on
WASHINGTON: On the margins of the $550-plus billion defense budget, the Army and the defense industry are quietly working on a program that could potentially replace 3,000 geriatric armored vehicles. So far, in this year’s budget, Congress is going along, but the real money — and the real battle — loom in the years to… Keep reading →
Fight Against Afghan Corruption Pits Few People Against Big Foe
Posted on
Anti-corruption programs established to combat graft and fiscal malfeasance in Afghanistan are struggling with a daunting mission. Sparsely resourced, US military and civilian groups battle malign networks that connect distracted American officials, for-profit corporations, predatory Afghan insiders and the Taliban in a toxic system so pervasive that American taxpayers are funding both sides of the… Keep reading →
Why Senate, House Authorizers Both Added Dough For Armor
Posted on
WASHINGTON: It’s spring, and 70-ton Marine Corps M1 tanks rumble through the flowers in southern Afghanistan (pictured above), while at home, both chambers of Congress are adding funds for armored vehicles to the Pentagon spending bill. It may seem counter-intuitive that a nation shifting from hearts-and-minds counterinsurgency to “AirSea Battle” in the Pacific would need… Keep reading →
SASC NDAA Freezes Air Guard Cuts, Pakistan Aid; Rejects Tricare Fee Boost
Posted on
THE CAPITOL [updated 9:40 pm with details from Senate press release]: The Senate Armed Services Committee unanimously passed its mark-up of the annual defense spending bill, rejecting all proposed cuts to the Air National Guard, cutting the Defense Department’s civilian and contractor workforce by 5 percent over five years, and restricting aid to Pakistan. The… Keep reading →
Russia Thumbs Nose At NATO, But Stays Within START Rules
Posted on
With its launch of a new, faster intercontinental missile, Russia appears to have sent a message to NATO and the United States that it isn’t sitting still in the face of what it says is the threat posed by the alliance’s new missile defense system. This new, faster missile — supposedly called the Avant Garde… Keep reading →
Israel Likely to Strike Iran Reactor If Plutonium Risk Rises
Posted on
Little progress was made towards a deal between Iran and the six major powers at talks this week in Iraq.With speculation about a possible Israeli strike still high, one key aspect of a possible conflict with Iran has been little discussed. Michael Adler, an expert on Iran’s nuclear capabilities at the Woodrow Wilson Center here… Keep reading →
Fire Strikes Nuke Sub USS Miami In Portsmouth Dry Dock
Posted on
UPDATED With Navy Statement Thursday Morning Word came late last night about a fire ripping through the USS Miami, a Los Angeles class attack submarine. The ship’s reactor was not operating at the time and no weapons were aboard. The fire, even if the reactor is completely undamaged, is expected to add at least several… Keep reading →
Guard, Reserve Fight For Modern Hardware; JLTV, C-5A, C-17 At Stake
Posted on
WASHINGTON: The military Reserves and National Guard have spent a decade operating with unprecedented intensity alongside the regular active-duty force in Afghanistan and Iraq. Now, as budget cuts loom, their leaders are fighting hard to keep the funding needed to keep their edge in both training and equipment. Going back to the sleepy days of… Keep reading →