Australian Strategic Policy Institute – Bill Sweetman writes that F-35 program leader Lieutenant General Greg Masiello delivered something of a lite-beer testimony to the Senate Armed Services Committee last week, with many questions deferred to a closed session. But the discussion pointed to a big and little-discussed change to air warfare technology – fighter radars so powerful that they can act as high-power microwave (HPM) weapons. And this involves not just the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning but also British Eurofighter Typhoons and the multinational Global Combat Aircraft Program (GCAP).
EUROGUARD M-SASV Project Moves From Design To Reality With Hull Presentation
Naval News – The European Defence Fund’s (EDF) €95 million EUROGUARD program has completed its Critical Design Review (CDR) and unveiled its 45-meter semi-autonomous prototype hull at the Baltic Workboats shipyard in Estonia.
The US Navy just tested a drone submarine fired from a torpedo tube that swims off on its own to plant a minefield miles from the boat, then settles on the seabed and never comes back, built from the start to be thrown away
Autonocion – General Dynamics drone doesn’t go looking for mines. It plants them, and then it stays down there for good.
(Thanks to Alain)
U.S. Marines Use Commercial Ferries to Haul Anti-ship Missiles Across the Philippines
USNI News – Marine anti-ship missile launchers and air defense rolled off contracted Philippine commercial transport vessels onto an island in the middle of the Luzon Strait near Taiwan during drills earlier this month.
Britain’s laser weapon system will be on warships by 2027
Defence Blog – A British laser weapon capable of destroying drones for roughly $13 a shot is on track to be installed aboard Royal Navy destroyers in 2027, making the UK the first European NATO member to field an operational shipborne directed-energy weapon.
(Thanks to Alain)
What the Defence Investment Plan means for the Royal Navy
Navy Lookout – The Defence Investment Plan (DIP), published on 30th June, finally provides indicative funding and timescales to many of the ambitions set out in the Strategic Defence Review published more than 10 months ago. In this overview, we look at the key decisions impacting the RN.
64 US sailors sickened in diesel generator glitch on ballistic missile submarine
Stars and Stripes – The Navy is investigating a recent generator malfunction aboard the ballistic missile submarine USS Nebraska that sickened dozens of sailors.
(Thanks to Alain)
The C-2 Greyhound Has Made Its Last Landing Aboard A Carrie
The War Zone – It’s truly the end of an era for naval aviation as the C-2’s carrier onboard delivery role has now been turned over to the CMV-22 Osprey.
Anti-Drone Warfare: The Missing Tier in Maritime Defence Architecture
Naval News – The proliferation of autonomous one-way attack (OWA) drones has exposed a critical gap in defence architecture: Anti-Drone Warfare (ADW) is neither conventional air defence nor C-UAS. It is a distinct operational domain — with unique threat physics, unique engagement economics, and unique platform requirements. For maritime environments, that gap is structural and cannot be closed by shore-based systems alone.
Air Force Discloses B-2 Can Launch Stealth Anti-Ship Missiles In Surprise Announcement
The War Zone – Pairing LRASM with the B-2 creates a powerful, penetrating, fleet-killing combination, especially in the broad expanses of the Pacific.
Poland signs $4.8 billion contract for Saab-made A26 submarines
Breaking Defense – Saab has finalized a SEK 47 billion ($4.8 billion) contract with the Polish government for the production of three Swedish-made A26 submarines intended to replace the country’s Soviet-era Kilo-class submarines.
All in on the hybrid navy – the Royal Navy’s surface fleet gamble
Navy Lookout – The Defence Investment Plan (DIP) will confirm the RN’s most significant shift in surface warfare for decades. Rather than replacing the Type 45 destroyer with another generation of large air defence ships, the RN intends to build a distributed force of crewed and uncrewed vessels designed to fight as an integrated system.
Royal Navy downsizes its assault ship ambitions
Navy Lookout – The Defence Investment Plan (DIP) is expected to be published this week. In advance of publication, the MoD has already made some announcements about the shape of the future fleet. Here, we consider the issues surrounding the Commando Force.
U.S. Stations Marine Anti-Ship Missiles in the Western Pacific
Naval News – A Japan-based U.S. Marine Corps unit designed to lock down maritime chokepoints and sink naval vessels has deployed the first forward-based American anti-ship missiles along the first island chain this week.
Royal Navy maintains continuous 3-month watch on Russian warships in UK waters
Navy Lookout – The Royal Navy has been conducting back-to-back monitoring operations, tracking Russian warships in and around UK waters for almost three months, and that vigil continues today. Here we summarise recent efforts.
Romania bolsters Black Sea fleet with Turkish-built corvette
Defense News – Romania received its first new warship in 30 years last week, a the vessel destined to boost Black Sea security and relations with seller country Turkey at the same time.
White House budget director calls for fifth public shipyard amid push to expand fleet
Breaking Defense – The Trump administration is pushing for a fifth public shipyard to support a growing fleet, the head of the Office of Management and Budget said Wednesday.
Royal Navy attack submarine fleet update – all boats alongside
Navy Lookout – HMS Audacious is scheduled to come out of dry dock in Devonport today. This should be an unremarkable routine activity but its significance shows how much dock infrastructure has impacted the readiness of the submarine force. At the time of writing, none of the Royal Navy’s Astute-class SSNs are at sea, and here we summarise the status of the fleet.
Philippines deploys US-made Triton naval drones in its western waters to scout for intruders
Defense News – The Philippine Navy is set to deploy four Triton autonomous underwater and surface drones as part of ongoing efforts to protect subsea cables and monitor incursions by Chinese vessels and maritime militia in disputed features within the West Philippine Sea.
Air Force Wants New 1,000-Nautical Mile Range Missile for Air, Sea Targets
USNI News – The Air Force wants a family of next-generation long-range missiles to strike targets out to ranges of at least 1,000 nautical miles to support the service’s plans to counter Chinese air and naval forces in a potential conflict.
Taiwan Budget Calls for $6.6B for Attack Drones, Unmanned Surface Vessels
USNI News – Taiwan’s executive branch pitched a $6.6 billion budget last week for the procurement of more than 200,000 domestically-made unmanned systems designed to defend the island’s shores.
Germany is cancelling the F126 frigate project and procuring eight MEKO frigates
Naval News – The German Ministry of Defense has decided to discontinue the construction of six F126-class frigates, as the ministry announced in a recent statement. The cancellation is attributed to significant project delays and the foreseeable cost increases and risks associated with changing the general contractor.
North Korea Commissions First-in-class Destroyer Choe Hyon
USNI News – North Korea commissioned its largest warship to date, the 5,000-ton destroyer Choe Hyon (51), in a ceremony Tuesday in the port city Nampho.
China Maritime Report #55: Loading the Well Deck: The PLA Navy’s Maturing Role in Projecting Joint Ground Forces
China Maritime Studies Institute – Since 2023, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has established an annualized rhythm of loading PLA Army (PLAA) combat, engineering, and support units onto PLA Navy (PLAN) amphibious ships for international exercises. This integration signals a maturation in Chinese expeditionary logistics, providing Beijing with the proven framework to project sustained, multi-domain combat mass well beyond its regional periphery.
The U.S. Navy’s Subsea Rare Earth Vulnerability
War on the Rocks – The Columbia-class ballistic missile submarine is the next generation of American nuclear deterrence. Twelve of these boats will replace the aging Ohio-class fleet, entering service over the 2030s and 2040s, each carrying 16 Trident IIs and driven by a ghost-quiet electric motor that renders them acoustically invisible to any adversary. What makes all of that possible — the propulsion, the stealth, the strike precision — depends almost entirely on rare earths refined in China. This is perhaps the Navy’s most consequential and least discussed vulnerability.
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