The US Army's command and control system, NGC2, is a prime example of the service's new approach to developing weapons.
We Are The Mighty (WATM) on MSN
The Army’s (possible) future grenade launcher is like a rifle on steroids
At just 10 pounds, the MTL-30 combines the great features of other U.S. military weapons, but adds a new supply chain problem ...
Responsible Statecraft on MSN
Army Secretary: Love the drone or be left behind
A rmy Secretary Dan Driscoll’s opening remarks at this year’s United States Army (AUSA) Annual Meeting & Exposition — that drones will “absolutely dominate warfare in the twenty-first century” — set ...
An apocalyptic vision of a million autonomous drones battling a million autonomous drones in the sky may sound like science ...
To the surprise of many, the U.S. Army, long considered to be the most bureaucratically hidebound of the military services, appears to have successfully reoriented itself toward the demands of a ...
Drawn by local talent, cheap labor and state cash incentives, start-ups building the weapons of the future are revitalizing ...
Imagine an operational environment in the near future. Inside a main command post, a decision is made quickly but agonizingly. Over a radio net and the Maven Smart System, the division commander ...
WEST POINT, N.Y. — Cadets at the U.S. Military Academy recently received hands-on basic rifle marksmanship training from the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit’s Instructor Training Group, aimed at ...
To the surprise of many, the U.S. Army, long considered to be the most bureaucratically hidebound of the military services, appears to have successfully reoriented itself toward the demands of a ...
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