Bomber

Assessment of Stealth Fighter and Bomber Industry: Global Long-term Road to 2025 and 2035 - Meeting Joint All-Domain Command and Control (JADC2) Requirements - ResearchAndMarkets.com

Retrieved on: 
Monday, March 25, 2024

Stealth technology is a cornerstone feature essential for safeguarding national borders and ensuring dominance in the global airspace amidst the evolving defense landscape.

Key Points: 
  • Stealth technology is a cornerstone feature essential for safeguarding national borders and ensuring dominance in the global airspace amidst the evolving defense landscape.
  • This market focuses on the development and deployment of advanced stealth bomber and fighter aircraft, showcasing the evolution of military aviation technology.
  • This market showcases the key players, technological advancements, market trends, and strategic initiatives shaping the assessment of stealth fighter and bomber market landscape.
  • The cost-effectiveness of next-generation stealth bombers poses a substantial challenge to the assessment of stealth fighter and bomber market.

Stealth Fighter and Bomber Industry Assessment 2023-2035: Focus on Ongoing Programs - Requirement to Increase the Number of Long-Range Strike Bombers for Meeting the Critical Operational Demands

Retrieved on: 
Saturday, March 23, 2024

Moreover, favorable government policies are also expected to support the growth of the assessment of stealth fighter and bomber market in North America and Europe during the forecast period 2025-2035.

Key Points: 
  • Moreover, favorable government policies are also expected to support the growth of the assessment of stealth fighter and bomber market in North America and Europe during the forecast period 2025-2035.
  • This market focuses on the development and deployment of advanced stealth bomber and fighter aircraft, showcasing the evolution of military aviation technology.
  • This market showcases the key players, technological advancements, market trends, and strategic initiatives shaping the assessment of stealth fighter and bomber market landscape.
  • The cost-effectiveness of next-generation stealth bombers poses a substantial challenge to the assessment of stealth fighter and bomber market.

Cult of the drone: At the two-year mark, UAVs have changed the face of war in Ukraine – but not outcomes

Retrieved on: 
Friday, February 16, 2024

Some analysts claim that drones have reshaped war, yielding not just tactical-level effects, but shaping operational and strategic outcomes as well.

Key Points: 
  • Some analysts claim that drones have reshaped war, yielding not just tactical-level effects, but shaping operational and strategic outcomes as well.
  • It’s important to distinguish between these different levels of war.
  • The strategic level of war relates to the way these military objectives combine to secure political aims, especially ending a war.

Drone warfare in Ukraine

  • The drone war in Ukraine is evolving in ways that differ from how other countries, especially the United States, use UAVs.
  • Unlike this pattern of “over-the-horizon” strikes, Ukraine and Russia use drones during an internationally recognized conflict that is bounded by their borders.
  • Second, the U.S. operates armed and networked drones, such as the Reaper, the world’s most advanced drone.
  • Ukraine has also operated Turkish-manufactured TB-2 Bayraktar drones – the “Toyota Corolla” of drones.
  • It has also expanded the domestic production of drones, such as the Orion-10, used for surveillance, and the Lancet, used for attacks.
  • Third, the U.S. uses drones to strike what it designates as high-value targets, including senior-level personnel in terrorist organizations.
  • Ukraine and Russia use their drones for a broader set of tactical, operational and strategic purposes.

Tactical effects

  • Drones have had the biggest impact at the tactical level of war, which characterizes battles between Ukrainian and Russian forces.
  • It did so by destroying slow-moving vehicles that stretched nearly 50 miles, causing Russia to abandon its advance.
  • It also spoofs this link by creating a false signal that disorients Ukrainian drones, causing them to crash.
  • This includes going “back to the future” by adopting terrain-based navigation, though this is less reliable than satellite-based navigation.

Operational limitations

  • Drones have been less successful at the operational level of war, which is designed to integrate battles into campaigns that achieve broader military objectives.
  • In spring 2022, Ukraine used a TB-2, along with other capabilities, to sink Russia’s flagship ship — the Moskva — in the Black Sea.
  • Since then, Ukrainian officials claim to have destroyed 15 additional Russian ships, as well as damaged 12 more.

Strategic myths

  • Drones have not, and are not likely to, shape the outcome of the war in Ukraine.
  • They have not allowed Ukraine to break its stalemate with Russia, nor have they encouraged Russia to end its occupation of Ukraine.
  • Russia and Ukraine use drones to terrorize each other’s citizens as well as generate propaganda to stiffen their own citizens’ resolve.


Paul Lushenko does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Fuse Continues Double-Digit Growth Trajectory with Record-High Revenue in 2023

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 13, 2024

SAN DIEGO, Feb. 13, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Fuse Integration , a warfighter-focused engineering and design firm, today announced record-high revenue for 2023, continuing its double-digit growth trajectory.

Key Points: 
  • SAN DIEGO, Feb. 13, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Fuse Integration , a warfighter-focused engineering and design firm, today announced record-high revenue for 2023, continuing its double-digit growth trajectory.
  • “2023 was a pivotal year for Fuse.
  • We added exceptional executive talent, continued warfighter-focused innovation and strengthened production and delivery to our defense customers,” said Sumner Lee , Fuse CEO.
  • To align the company for efficiency and productivity, Fuse hired defense technology growth executive Scott Rosebush as President to oversee the company’s operations.

Fuse Continues Double-Digit Growth Trajectory with Record-High Revenue in 2023

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 13, 2024

WASHINGTON, Feb. 13, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Fuse Integration , a warfighter-focused engineering and design firm, today announced record-high revenue for 2023, continuing its double-digit growth trajectory.

Key Points: 
  • WASHINGTON, Feb. 13, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Fuse Integration , a warfighter-focused engineering and design firm, today announced record-high revenue for 2023, continuing its double-digit growth trajectory.
  • “2023 was a pivotal year for Fuse.
  • We added exceptional executive talent, continued warfighter-focused innovation and strengthened production and delivery to our defense customers,” said Sumner Lee , Fuse CEO.
  • To align the company for efficiency and productivity, Fuse hired defense technology growth executive Scott Rosebush as President to oversee the company’s operations.

US raids in Iraq and Syria: How retaliatory airstrikes affect network of Iran-backed militias

Retrieved on: 
Monday, February 5, 2024

U.S. bombers struck dozens of sites across Iraq and Syria on Feb. 2, 2024, to avenge a drone attack that killed three American service members just days earlier.

Key Points: 
  • U.S. bombers struck dozens of sites across Iraq and Syria on Feb. 2, 2024, to avenge a drone attack that killed three American service members just days earlier.
  • The retaliatory strikes were the first following a deadly assault on a U.S. base in Jordan that U.S. officials blamed on Iranian-backed militias.
  • Sites associated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) were among those hit by American bombs.
  • The Conversation U.S. turned to American University’s Sara Harmouch and Nakissa Jahanbani at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point’s Combating Terrorism Center – both experts on Iran’s relationship with its network of proxies – to explain what the U.S. strikes hoped to achieve and what could happen next.

Who was targeted in the U.S. retaliatory strikes?

  • This term, Islamic Resistance in Iraq, does not refer to a single group per se.
  • Rather, it encompasses an umbrella organization that has, since around 2020, integrated various Iran-backed militias in the region.
  • Iran officially denied any involvement in the Jan. 28 drone strike.
  • In recent months, parts of this network of Iran-backed militias have claimed responsibility for more than 150 attacks on bases housing U.S. forces in Syria and Iraq.
  • As such, the U.S. retaliatory strikes targeted over 85 targets across Iraq and Syria, all associated with Iranian-supported groups and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

What do we know about the network targeted in the strike?

  • The Islamic Resistance in Iraq acted as a collective term for pro-Tehran Iraqi militias, allowing them to launch attacks under a single banner.
  • Over time, it evolved to become a front for Iran-backed militias operating beyond Iraq, including those in Syria and Lebanon.
  • Today, the Islamic Resistance in Iraq operates as a cohesive force rather than as a singular entity.
  • Operating under this one banner of Islamic Resistance, these militias effectively conceal the identities of the actual perpetrators in their operations.

What are the strikes expected to accomplish?

  • The strikes targeted key assets such as command and control centers, intelligence facilities, storage locations for rockets, missiles, drones and logistics and munitions facilities.
  • The goal is not only to degrade their current operational infrastructure but also to deter future attacks.
  • The action followed the discovery of an Iranian-made drone used in an attack on Jordan.

How will this affect Iran’s strategy in the region?

  • It is possible that the cessation was the result of pressure from Tehran, though this has been met with skepticism in Washington.
  • The U.S. airstrikes – combined with sanctions and charges – serve as a multifaceted strategy to deter further aggression from Iran and its proxies.
  • The comprehensive and broad nature of the U.S. response signals a robust stance against threats to regional stability and U.S. interests.
  • The aim is to isolate Iran diplomatically and economically, while squeezing its support for regional proxies.
  • Yet the impact and repercussions of such sanctions on Iran and the broader regional dynamics is complex.
  • Editor’s note: Parts of this story were included in an article published on Jan. 29, 2024.


The views, conclusions, and recommendations in this article are the authors’ own and do not reflect those of the Department of Defense or the U.S. government. Sara Harmouch does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

BizWorld Names Tech Diplomacy Leader Keith Krach 2023 Riskmaster of the Year

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, November 30, 2023

BizWorld.org, a global non-profit that provides entrepreneurship education programs to youth, has named Keith Krach , Chairman of the Krach Institute for Tech Diplomacy at Purdue , former Under Secretary of State and Silicon Valley entrepreneur its 2023 Riskmaster of the Year.

Key Points: 
  • BizWorld.org, a global non-profit that provides entrepreneurship education programs to youth, has named Keith Krach , Chairman of the Krach Institute for Tech Diplomacy at Purdue , former Under Secretary of State and Silicon Valley entrepreneur its 2023 Riskmaster of the Year.
  • The award is in recognition of Krach's fearless leadership and transformative impact, spanning business, technology, academia, mentorship, economic diplomacy, social causes and national security.
  • “Keith embodies the essential qualities of a Riskmaster through his historic achievements, including architecting the Bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act that secured a $280 billion in funding for the tech industry.
  • Krach continues to shape the future of technology and public policy as leader of the congressionally mandated Global Tech Security Commission and co-founder and chairman of the Krach Institute for Tech Diplomacy at Purdue.

Introducing Free Video Streaming App for WWII Documentaries

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, December 7, 2023

SOUTH KINGSTOWN, R.I., Dec. 7, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- The nonprofit World War II Foundation has released a free video streaming app with its library of award-winning, celebrity-narrated documentaries—the WWII Streaming Channel. The app offers 34 original films and counting to educate current and future generations on the values and sacrifices of those who served in World War II. It can be downloaded from all major app stores, including from Apple, Google, Roku, Amazon Fire TV and more. Featured films have aired globally and rank nationally in the top 5 most requested programs by PBS and Public Television affiliates.

Key Points: 
  • Get inspired and educated by personal tales from World War II with the new WWII Streaming Channel, a free app developed by the nonprofit World War II Foundation with 34 celebrity-narrated, award-winning documentaries.
  • Download the app in all major app stores, or watch the foundation's latest VR film, The Tuskegee Airmen, for free on YouTube VR and Oculus Quest.
  • SOUTH KINGSTOWN, R.I., Dec. 7, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- The nonprofit World War II Foundation has released a free video streaming app with its library of award-winning, celebrity-narrated documentaries—the WWII Streaming Channel .
  • "The WWII Streaming Channel app and our Virtual Reality 360-degree films make the legacies of millions accessible to all."

CPI Aero Delivers 1st B-52 Radar Rack Structure to RTX

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, October 12, 2023

EDGEWOOD, N.Y., Oct. 12, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CPI Aerostructures, Inc. (“CPI Aero®” or the “Company”) (NYSE American: CVU) today announced that it has delivered its first B-52 Radar Rack Structure to Raytheon, an RTX business under an IDIQ contract signed in late 2021 with a ceiling value of $20 million.

Key Points: 
  • EDGEWOOD, N.Y., Oct. 12, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CPI Aerostructures, Inc. (“CPI Aero®” or the “Company”) (NYSE American: CVU) today announced that it has delivered its first B-52 Radar Rack Structure to Raytheon, an RTX business under an IDIQ contract signed in late 2021 with a ceiling value of $20 million.
  • Under this first phase of the IDIQ contract, CPI Aero is building and delivering 9 development units and 2 spares, along with completing the tooling and other non-recurring engineering efforts.
  • “This B-52 program is one of multiple new programs on-boarded at CPI Aero in 2022, including multiple airborne pod structures supporting critical Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance missions,” said Dorith Hakim, president and CEO of CPI Aero.
  • “CPI Aero is proud to support Raytheon on this important B-52 Radar Modernization Program.

Terrorist vs. militant: The complicated language of reporting atrocities in Israel-Hamas war

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, October 17, 2023

So why, even after the mass killings and kidnappings in Israel on Oct. 7, do major news organizations resist multiplying calls to describe Hamas as a terrorist organization?

Key Points: 
  • So why, even after the mass killings and kidnappings in Israel on Oct. 7, do major news organizations resist multiplying calls to describe Hamas as a terrorist organization?
  • Wire services, public broadcasters and national news brands with broad readerships reach more diligently for neutral terms.
  • To those who mourn or rage in violent times, neutral language may seem performative at best — or even cruel.
  • On both sides of the Gaza-Israel Iron Wall, wells of semantic offence rise from aquifers of generational trauma and justified fear.

The enduring offence of neutrality

    • Today’s 24/7 feed of alerts and updates includes a stew of alleged facts and newsy opinions.
    • Some say this is OK because truth is whatever people come to believe after exposure to a variety of reports.
    • According to this view, sometimes dubbed “standpoint epistemology,” truth-seekers should defer to the realities born, especially, of suffering and prejudice.

The reporter’s role as listener

    • Professional roles shape collective standards and influence, however imperfectly, practice.
    • But for those in conciliatory roles, such as mediators and therapists, a key demand is non-judgmental listening.
    • “This didn’t happen (because) Palestinians are just some terrible other form of human beings,” he said.
    • For reporters to honour their listening role demands a disciplined withholding of judgment that requires, in turn, a restrained lexicon.

Elevating facts as an act of faith

    • Facts matter locally, nationally, and internationally (see war, above).
    • For their part, the most responsible journalists know that their choices of stories, sources and words sometimes deepen innocent people’s wounds.
    • Minimizing harm stands alongside truth-telling amongst journalists’ frequently conflicting principles but making facts plain could carry more weight than that borne by professional diligence.
    • If so, the enduring draw of unembellished facts could express a collective leap of faith — a gut belief that “reporting things as they are” will ultimately do less harm than good.