Allies key to Pentagon Arctic strategy
Top Pentagon brass asserted that allies are the key to the country’s Arctic military strategy just less than 24 hours after US President Donald Trump announced the country would pull out of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with Iran.
During a 9 May Senate Appropriations subcommittee hearing, defense secretary Jim Mattis and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen Joseph Dunford fielded questions about Russian and Chinese efforts to widen their footprint in the Arctic region and how the US wants to proceed.
Sen Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) noted that even though the US views Russia as a
Our news & analysis is now part of Defence Insight®
A Basic-level or higher Defence Insight subscription is now required to view this content.
More from Defence Notes
-
Agile, sovereign, edge-ready: rewiring defence IT for a contested decade
Today's rapidly changing security landscape means that armed forces can no longer treat their data in the same way as in the past. What are the key challenges they face, and how can industry help them?
-
Six critical capability gaps shaping the US Golden Dome implementation
How emerging technologies and capability priorities will shape America’s next-generation missile defence system.
-
“The challenge is not demand, but delivery”: why rapid building of industrial capability is key to Europe’s future defence
In today’s complex security landscape, military requirements are rapidly evolving across all domains. As European defence spending rises, industry is under growing pressure to expand production capacity, strengthen supply chains and accelerate delivery timelines to meet operational demand.
-
How US Special Operations Forces are using AI to transform modern warfare
USSOCOM is expanding the use of artificial intelligence, autonomous systems and human-machine teaming to improve decision-making, survivability and operational reach in contested environments.
-
DARPA, Raytheon and Northrop Grumman join forces to improve missile production
Working together with DARPA in the Burn n’ Go programme, Northrop Grumman and Raytheon are supporting the development of a common, single-use solid rocket motor design to equip diverse weapon systems.