The National Interest on MSN
Which “Standoff Weapons” Did America Use in Operation Epic Fury?
The United States, Israel, and Iran all possess “standoff weapons”—and have used them against each other for years.
Operation Epic Fury enters a seventh day Friday as new video released by CENTCOM shows Iranian targets are being “decimated” ...
Throughout the Cold War, military planners on both sides of the Iron Curtain built weapons designed to deter the unthinkable. Yet several of those systems came dangerously close to coming active and ...
States often succumb to the temptation of decapitation. But gunboats, poison pens and drones promise more than they deliver.
National Security Journal on MSNOpinion
600 Tomahawk missiles gone: The US Navy’s Ohio-class SSGN cruise missile crisis
Summary and Key Points: Jack Buckby, a New York-based defense analyst and British researcher, evaluates the looming “magazine ...
Navy Media on MSN
Biggest submarine in the world: Discover underwater warfare
1. The Silent Giants of the Deep2. What Makes a Submarine “Biggest”?3. The Typhoon Class: Russia’s Arctic Leviathan4. The ...
Images of retired U.S. Navy minesweepers being transported up the Delaware Bay sparked online rumors that the United States no longer has mine-clearing capability, but the Navy has already ...
Navy Times on MSN
US Navy rotates last cruiser homeported in Japan to San Diego
The USS Robert Smalls will be replaced by the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Mustin.
There is much current discussion about having foreign shipyards build U.S. Navy warships as a way to increase production and fleet numbers. That sounds good on paper, but if the target is combatant ...
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