[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 14 points 4 hours ago

has been the case for a while:

https://archive.ph/2pfy7 Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova’s article “Dead soil: Western depleted uranium munitions make Ukraine uninhabitable,” Komsomolskaya Pravda, August 25, 2023

https://archive.ph/SxBcw Ukraine war: UK defends sending depleted uranium shells after Putin warning, 21 March 2023

https://archive.ph/HSZ07 New $175 Million Security Assistance Package for Ukraine Includes Depleted Uranium Tank Ammo, September 6, 2023

it's widely used in armor-piercing ammunition, like for tank cannons, or the 25mm autocannon on the Bradley IFV which has been supplied to Ukraine

civilized countries would use tungsten for such tasks, but, well...

https://hexbear.net/post/506844/3892017

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 30 points 4 hours ago

https://archive.ph/7uQ1A

Poor B-52 Readiness Creating Testing Challenges For New AGM-181A Nuclear Cruise Missile

The B-52 fleet is in need of an upcoming upgrade and has been in high demand, as well as suffering a tragic loss.

more

The Government Accountability Office (GAO) says low availability of unnamed “legacy” aircraft has created hurdles for flight testing of the new AGM-181A Long-Range Standoff (LRSO) nuclear-armed cruise missile. The B-52 is the only platform known to be involved in this effort. The fleet of these bombers is highly in demand, underscored by heavy use in strikes on Iran earlier this year, and has also recently suffered a tragic loss. U.S. Air Force officials have previously highlighted how the relatively small number of B-52s in service and the heavy demands placed on them create challenges when it comes to modernizing the aircraft themselves. GAO, a Congressional watchdog, provided new details about flight testing plans and other aspects of the LRSO program in an annual report published last week. The AGM-181A has been in active development since 2020, when the Air Force chose Raytheon to be the prime contractor. “LRSO reported unfavorable cost and schedule changes over the past year,” GAO reported. “For example, flight testing challenges, largely due to the poor readiness rates of legacy aircraft supporting LRSO testing, resulted in a 4-month delay to its initial capability.” The Air Force is now aiming to reach initial operational capability with the AGM-181 in November 2030.

GAO says that there have been nine LRSO test flights since October 2024. That is when developmental testing of the missile began. Six of those flight tests, along with seven ground test events, occurred last year. In a report dated December 2022, the Pentagon had previously disclosed nine more test flights as part of earlier phases of the program. Whether additional test flights occurred between December 2022 and October 2024 is unclear. “Since our last assessment, program officials realigned the test schedule, leaving less time to complete the 27 remaining test flights before operational testing starts in September 2027,” the report GAO put out last week also notes. “However, they noted that some re-testing can still be accommodated.” As noted, the B-52 is the only aircraft known to be involved in LRSO flight testing, and certainly meets the definition of a “legacy” platform. The last of these bombers rolled off Boeing’s production line in 1962, though the remaining examples have been upgraded repeatedly since then. The sighting last year of a B-52 carrying a pair of AGM-181s, or relevant test articles, on a pylon under its right wing offered the first public glimpse of the missile. Spotters have caught these bombers supporting LRSO tests on several other occasions since then. The Air Force currently has 75 B-52H bombers in service, in total. The entire fleet is never available at any one time for taskings of any kind, due to routine maintenance and other factors. The mission-capable rate for the bombers has been hovering between 50 and 55 percent in recent years. In addition, only one of the bombers is explicitly set aside to support test and evaluation efforts. B-52s from operational units are also used to support research and development and test and evaluation work on a more ad hoc basis. This is on top of the heavy operational demands put on the fleet, both for conventional combat operations and as a key component of the air leg of America’s nuclear deterrent triad. As mentioned, B-52s were heavily utilized just earlier this year for conventional strikes on Iran, adding to these strains.

Last month, the Air Force also lost one of its B-52s in a fatal crash at Edwards Air Force Base in California, which tragically killed all eight individuals onboard at the time. The aircraft in question was headed out on a flight test in support of a critical radar modernization program for the bombers when it went down, as you can read more about here. The radar modernization effort is part of a slew of major upgrades for the B-52 fleet, which also includes all-new engines, improved communication suites, and more. The upgrades are so substantial that the bombers’ designations will change from B-52H to B-52J in the process. They are also in line to see their arsenals grow, including with the addition of the LRSO. The future B-52Js are set to continue serving through at least 2050. Other aspects of the B-52 modernization plan have also been beset by cost growth and delays. Air Force officials have said this has been compounded by the total size of the fleet and operational demands placed on it. “The challenge with B-52 that I think everybody forgets, it’s such a small fleet that has such a tremendous requirement in terms of readiness,” Air Force Gen. Dale White, the service’s Direct Reporting Portfolio Manager for Critical Major Weapon Systems, told TWZ and others at the Air & Space Forces Association’s (AFA) annual Warfare Symposium in February. “You’ve got to have a certain number on the ramp. That’s a requirement.” The question becomes “how do you get these through the depot while at the same time meeting the operational requirements?” Gen. White further explained at that time. “That choreography, I think, is going to be tough.”

It’s worth pointing out here that both the war with Iran and the crash at Edwards came after the cutoff date for GAO’s report, and further impacts on the LRSO flight test schedule would not have been recorded therein. There has also been a broader surge in demand across the U.S. military for flight test assets. This is being driven by the needs of modernization efforts for several aircraft beyond the B-52, including the F-22 Raptor, as well as next-generation developments, like the F-47 sixth-generation fighter. Going back to LRSO, GAO’s latest assessment also highlights other challenges that the program has been facing that are unrelated to flight testing. “Program officials stated that 12 of 14 software releases are delivered, with the final delivery planned for March 2026. According to program officials, nuclear certification of LRSO software continues to be a risk that they expect to fully address by November 2026. As we reported last year, the program risks delays if additional LRSO software development is needed to satisfy this certification requirement,” per the report. “LRSO cybersecurity testing continues with some delays reported during the past year. Program officials stated these delays did not bring about any cost or schedule changes, with the final cybersecurity assessment still planned for September 2027.” “The missile’s technology maturity has advanced since our last assessment, with only two out of the six critical technologies still approaching maturity. They are both expected to be fully mature in fiscal year 2026, about 5 years after development start. DOE [Department of Energy] also identified critical technologies for the warhead, of which 80 percent are considered mature, more than double the percentage reported last year,” the report adds. “However, DOE may not mature all the remaining warhead technologies until the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2026. As we previously reported, both the missile and warhead started development with immature technologies, requiring parallel technology and design maturity efforts. This method falls short of the best practice to start with mature technologies and would have minimized the risks of future cost increases and schedule delays associated with concurrency during system development.”

There is also cost growth, as well as cost discrepancies. “Program costs increased by $347 million after Air Force leadership directed a 1-year extension to LRSO production due to near-term budget constraints,” according to GAO. “As we previously reported, Office of the Secretary of Defense and Air Force officials continue to work together to resolve a $1.9 billion difference between their production cost estimates for future LRSO production,” the report also says. “While a fully updated estimate is not expected until later in 2026, program officials now agree that OSD’s higher cost estimate provides an appropriate basis for the program’s fiscal year 2027 budget request and future year procurement funding needs.” Buoyed in part by the successful flight testing it has conducted to date, GAO says the Air Force remains confident that it can meet its goal of starting low-rate initial production of the LRSO next year. Hitting that milestone will be key to staying on schedule to start fielding the missiles in 2030.

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 43 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago)

https://xcancel.com/OlgaBazova/status/2074713843914183024

The CBC is about to get in trouble. If there are 70,000 - 90,000 people missing from the International Legion then how many are missing from the Ukrainian units? If it’s not a typo, someone needs to start explaining.

"70 000 - 90 000 from the International Legion are missing in Ukraine." If true, imagine the number of foreigners fighting for Ukraine, but most importantly how many Ukrainians are missing from the regular army units then. 😳

https://lostarmour.info/mercenaries is only up to about 1.5k actually confirmed mercenary deaths, but that is of course an undercount, not all deaths can be easily confirmed, and such confirmations will lag behind actual casualties. But given the scale of Ukrainian losses, tens of thousands of mercs isn't necessarily inconceivable (admittedly, a bunch of the "missing" personnel may simply be deserters, although I'm not sure how feasible it is to actually manage to survive like that, locals might at least have some family members to hide out with or help them flee the country, but as a merc what are you going to do?)

Also, given the confirmed Colombians are only 650, I wonder what the true scale of their involvement really is. The Americans may well have shipped basically all of their Colombian ghouls off to die. May all the world's far-right paramilitaries meet the same fate.

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 34 points 7 hours ago* (last edited 7 hours ago)

https://xcancel.com/OlgaBazova/status/2074492342753530090

Former Ukrainian Rada deputy Igor Mosiychuk:

“There’s a real hell in Vishneve! A Russian missile hit a munitions depot! Among the other munitions, there were cluster munitions and depleted uranium rounds.” He accuses Zelensky of disregard for human life, placing an ammo depot right in the middle of civilian neighborhoods and is demanding the resignation of the Ukrainian Defense Minister Fedorov. Interesting point he makes at the end is that Ukraine is hiding the real number of casualties in Vishneve. This, of course, makes sense, because they can't blame this criminal negligence on Russia, otherwise this would be plastered all over the Western corporate client war media.

(there's a video in the tweet, but xcancel is refusing to open for me so I can't link it for now)


https://xcancel.com/OlgaBazova/status/2074570468389241039

The Armed Forces of Ukraine do not know whose cassette ordinance and depleted Uranium shells exploded in Vishneve near Kiev after the Russian missile strike. "The object where the detonation occurred is not under the control of the Armed Forces of Ukraine and does not fall within their sphere of management. The order of the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine prohibiting the placement of ammunition depots and other similar objects near civilian buildings remains in force," said Dmytro Likhovoi, a spokesperson for the Ukrainian General Staff, to local media. Unbelievable. Image

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 59 points 23 hours ago

https://xcancel.com/MenchOsint/status/2074506031007199235

Guys, another Oil Tanker was hit on July 5-6 night (so a 5th one) but it was not reported by UKMTO or anyone else. I reported last night’s attacks a full 30 minutes before UKMTO. This is making me suspect they only issue statements once the information is already public...

https://xcancel.com/myjocica/status/2074509052734767414

How many does that make without a US response?

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https://xcancel.com/bonzerbarry/status/2074468049533510127

Reuters reports that this Qatari LNG tanker is at risk of exploding after a missile impact. A second Saudi crude tanker was also struck by a missile this morning. We should probably anticipate a renewed exchange of fire before the end of the day.

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[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 88 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

https://xcancel.com/Gaurab/status/2074288901947318758

The United States has roughly two dozen people who know how to run rare earth solvent extraction at commercial scale. The Chinese Society of Rare Earths has over 100,000 members. In 2023, American mining engineering programs graduated 162 students. China graduated about 3,000 from 45 programs. Twelve US universities have shut down their mining engineering departments, including UC Berkeley and Ohio State. The Bureau of Mines, the federal agency responsible for mining research and training, was dissolved in 1996. Chinese pricing drove Western rare earth operations out of business through the 1990s and 2000s. The people who knew how to run those plants retired, changed industries, or died. Rare earth separation requires understanding how 17 chemically similar elements behave across hundreds of interconnected mixer-settler stages over months of continuous operation. That knowledge is accumulated through years of hands-on work in facilities the West stopped running. The average US mine worker is 46. 221,000 are expected to retire by 2029. Building an entirely new critical minerals supply chain means rebuilding the workforce that was eliminated a generation ago. The operational knowledge only comes back by running real plants.

https://xcancel.com/sephardi_genius/status/2074319635168604361

Imagine how good it feels to be a card carrying member of the Chinese Society of Rare Earths

sicko-wistful im thinking about thos minerals...

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 32 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

color baaaaad

grey desaturated slurry gooood, it's "realistic" (pls don't ever look outside, believe me, the real world has no such thing as "colors") and "serious" and "gritty" (which is a good thing, because as we all know art that is not gritty and serious is inherently lesser)

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[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 71 points 1 day ago

https://xcancel.com/HormuzLetter/status/2074078109121351880

The largest single flotilla of oil tankers and other vessels since the war began is now leaving the Strait of Hormuz via Iran's shipping lane, with 10 Japan-linked vessels including 6 VLCCs carrying ~12 million barrels of Saudi, UAE, and Qatari crude after being trapped for ~100 days, per LSEG data via Reuters. This is the first major Japan-related crude flow since the war began, with the vessels explicitly using Iran's approved corridor after Iran's IRGC shut down the US-backed Omani corridor on Saturday, which now sees only very limited vessel transit.

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 66 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

https://xcancel.com/MilitarySummary/status/2074019159868854664

Last night, in response to the Kyiv regime's terrorist attacks on civilian infrastructure in Russia, the Russian Armed Forces launched a massive strike using long-range precision weapons from land, air, and sea, as well as attack drones. These strikes hit military industry facilities, fuel and energy complex facilities in Kyiv and the Kyiv region, and military airfield infrastructure in the Dnipropetrovsk, Poltava, Cherkasy, Chernihiv, and Kyiv regions. The following were struck in the city of Kiev:

  • the Kiev-71 industrial enterprise (Abris PT association), a key enterprise in the Ukrainian military-industrial complex specializing in the development and production of long- and medium-range reconnaissance unmanned aerial vehicles such as Strela, Mara, Sirko, Avenger, Elf-K, Flight Arrow, and Shrike-10 FPV drones, as well as telemetry, electronic, and optical equipment;
  • the Kiev-1 electronic industry assembly plant (the Kyiv Burevestnik plant state enterprise), which produces long- and medium-range unmanned aerial vehicles, and develops and produces radar equipment for the Ukrainian Armed Forces;
  • the Kiev-79 industrial enterprise (UKR ARMO TECH LLC), a key manufacturer and supplier of armored vehicles and armor protection elements for the Ukrainian Armed Forces, as well as warheads (ammunition) for various types of missiles and UAVs;
  • the Kiev shipyard (Kuznytsiana Rybalskom PJSC), a major mechanical engineering enterprise, producing Project 58155 Gyurza-M artillery boats and producing and repairing unmanned attack boats;
  • the Kyiv-1 Instrument-Making Plant (Kvant Plant) is a key research and production base producing fire control systems, optical-electronic countermeasure systems, navigation and automation equipment for the Ukrainian Air Force and Navy, including the Neptune-MD guided missile.

The following facilities were hit in the Kyiv region:

  • the Zhulyany Missile Assembly and Components Plant (Zhulyany Machine-Building Plant Vizar LLC), a state-owned military-industrial complex enterprise engaged in the production, maintenance, and repair of anti-aircraft missile systems, components for aircraft and air defense systems, and long-range aircraft-type unmanned aerial vehicles. The strike resulted in a secondary, extensive detonation;
  • the Vyshneve Fuel and Lubricant Warehouse (Nefteyeksperimentalnoye KP), a key experimental production and engineering base specializing in the design, calibration, and maintenance of gas station tank farms. The gasoline and diesel fuel reserves stored at the facility are used for emergency fuel deliveries to the combat zone.
[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 54 points 1 day ago

https://archive.ph/OAC4y

U.S. Pulls Most Troops Out of Estonia, No Military Presence Planned Beyond 2027

Most of the U.S. troops stationed in Estonia on a rotational deployment have left the country.

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According to Estonian Defence Minister Hanno Pevkur, a new rotation of U.S. forces is expected to arrive this summer and remain until the end of the year. However, there are currently no confirmed plans for a continued U.S. military presence in Estonia beyond 2026, Estonian broadcaster ETV reported. Until recently, the U.S. contingent in Estonia numbered between 500 and 700 troops, stationed at Tapa, in southern Estonia, and at other military sites across the country. That number has now fallen to fewer than 100 personnel. Officials have not disclosed any information about future troop movements or the deployment of additional U.S. forces to Europe. The deployment of U.S. forces to Estonia is governed by a bilateral defense agreement between the two countries, and the terms of that agreement remain unchanged.

Defence Minister Hanno Pevkur said he learned about the next U.S. troop rotation, scheduled to arrive this summer, during talks with NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander Europe and the Commander of U.S. Army Europe and Africa. The size of the upcoming rotation and the long-term future of the U.S. military presence in Estonia remain undecided. A final decision is expected to depend on the outcome of the Pentagon’s ongoing six-month review of U.S. defense policy. Previous U.S. troop rotations to Estonia were drawn from American brigades deployed in Poland and Romania. Sending a new 4,000-strong U.S. brigade to Poland — and potentially assigning part of it to Estonia — is a lengthy process that is expected to take years. Kalev Stoicescu, chairman of the Estonian Parliament’s National Defence Committee, said the United States has effectively placed Estonia and other NATO eastern flank countries in a holding pattern. He added that this is happening regardless of how much the Baltic states spend on defense as a share of their GDP.

Stoicescu added that the final decisions are made by the White House and the U.S. administration based solely on America’s own interests and strategic priorities.

dang, almost as if you're just vassals or something... phoenix-think

In his view, if U.S. troops are to remain in Europe, they should be stationed on the continent’s eastern flank. Defence Minister Hanno Pevkur also said no announcements about the future of the U.S. military presence in Estonia are expected at the upcoming NATO summit in Ankara. He said Estonia will have to rely on its own armed forces and the NATO battlegroups that continue to rotate through the Baltic region. The rotational deployment of U.S. military units in Estonia began in 2014, following Russia’s annexation of Crimea and the outbreak of fighting in eastern Ukraine. Those events prompted NATO to strengthen its defense posture and reassess security along its Baltic flank. Earlier this month, Lithuania began the withdrawal of more than 1,000 U.S. troops and their equipment after the completion of a routine rotational deployment. The unit had been stationed in Lithuania as part of NATO’s efforts to reinforce its eastern flank. The United States is also planning to withdraw around 5,000 troops from Germany over the next six to 12 months. The planned drawdown is expected to include a U.S. Army combat brigade, as well as a missile unit that had previously been slated for deployment in Europe.

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 57 points 1 day ago

https://archive.ph/PNW3s

Pentagon continues to ‘struggle’ with key weapons development timelines: GAO

The watchdog's annual weapons systems assessment revealed new details about high-profile programs, from Air Force One to Army missiles.

more

Pentagon leaders are still struggling to meet weapons delivery timelines despite their frequent pledges to get new equipment into troops’ hands more quickly, according to a new government watchdog report. “The overall average time frame to deliver a capability increased this year to over 12 years,” the Government Accountability Office (GAO) wrote in a report released today. “Further, several MDAPs [major defense acquisition programs] have not set new delivery dates or are delaying critical interim milestones.” Essentially, that 12-year average may even be optimistic since program officials are not updating the delivery timelines to account for those delays, GAO added. And when it comes to the use of rapid prototyping and fielding pathways — made possible under the Middle Tier Acquisition (MTA) authorities created to either design or field weapons within a five-year timeline — those efforts are also continuing to exceed their deadlines and require more time to develop “immature technologies,” the office added, using an industry phrase for programs that are not yet proven, reliable and ready for broad deployment. GAO’s findings are part of an annual report to Congress assessing the state of weapons systems. This year’s report covers dozens of programs and associated delays. While each development program is unique, GAO made one overarching recommendation this year: the Pentagon should require programs to start with mature technologies and/or develop those immature technologies separately. The department agreed. Here is a look at some of the programs facing delays and cost growth, according to GAO.

Air Force

GAO called out “significant delays” for the Air Force’s T-7 program, echoing a list of problems laid out in a recent Breaking Defense investigation of the new jet trainer. Although the service made the decision to begin production on the T-7 in April, the majority of developmental testing won’t be done until April 2028, with lower-priority requirements wrapping up even later, in May 2029, the report said. GAO stated the T-7’s delays are “largely a result” of the need to complete additional engineering analysis, “lower than anticipated aircraft availability due to maintenance personnel issues and lack of spare parts,” and longer timelines needed to finalize software. “As a result, program officials stated the developmental program underwent a replan to provide a meaningful training capability to the user,” the report said. On one of the Air Force’s most secretive development efforts — the VC-25B, known colloquially as Air Force One when the president is onboard — GAO noted that the troubled program made some strides, having completed its final configuration design in October. It also resolved several “schedule risks” ranging from resolving cabin pressure issues to hiring more skilled mechanics to build the plane. However, “other schedule risks remain, including the detailed designs for the aircraft interiors, fabrication of the wire bundles, and rework to correct defects in structural modifications,” GAO said. The program office is also revising the VC-25B test plan so the Air Force can take over airworthiness certification duties from the Federal Aviation Administration, GAO noted. Program officials told the agency the transition would increase flexibility to address technical issues, noting that “the compressed time frame for testing continues to be the biggest risk for the program moving forward.” As of October, the Air Force has approved only seven of about 80 certification plans for the aircraft, and has not determined when operational testing will begin.

The report also laid out concerns about the service’s Hypersonic Attack Cruise Missile (HACM) effort, which was set to conduct its first flight test in the second quarter of fiscal 2026. However, program officials warned GAO that “there is effectively zero margin left in the schedule for the rapid prototyping effort” despite the Air Force having reduced the test program from seven to five planned test flights. “If a significant flight test failure occurs, it is likely that the program will not be able to complete all five tests within the 5-year rapid prototyping timeframe,” the report states. “According to the program, completing at least the first three flight tests is critical for informing the Air Force’s decision to initiate a rapid fielding effort and procure HACM in fiscal year 2027.”

Army

GAO revealed the second battery as part of the Army’s Long Range Hypersonic Weapon (LRHW), an MTA program, will be fielded “at least” six months later than it was originally scheduled to due to “missing, inconsistent, and unclear work standards for missile production.” The Army’s LRHW program consists of a ground-launched hypersonic missile, called the Dark Eagle, which is designed to provide the service with a long-range precision strike capability for contested environments. As Breaking Defense previously reported, the Army and Navy are working together on the program in hopes that the missiles can be launched from both land and sea. The second battery was originally scheduled to be fielded in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2027. However, this is now pushed back to fiscal 2028, per the report. The change is in part due to production challenges that delayed testing of a new variant of the Dark Eagle that will be delivered with the second battery, which could also delay the delivery of the third battery, the report stated.

The Army’s Maneuver Short-Range Air Defense (M-SHORAD) Increment 3 program is also facing delays, according to GAO, as “none of its critical technologies are fully mature.” GAO said there was a discrepancy regarding readiness levels between the program office and the contractors — Raytheon and Lockheed Martin — but the watchdog did not elaborate. “The program found through its own assessment that some critical technologies are less mature than the contractors reported. Program officials told us that they have independently assessed all critical technologies,” the report read. GAO added that program officials “could not definitively state why there was a discrepancy.” However, the officials noted that it could be due to the contractors “interpreting technology maturity in less restrictive terms than the program office.” The M-SHORAD Increment 3 is the service’s effort to replace the Stinger missile on Increment 1 of the M-SHORAD with a next generation short range interceptor. It is scheduled to start production in the second quarter of fiscal 2028. However, GAO stated that “prior work has shown that increasing even one maturity level can take multiple years and becomes more challenging as the technology approaches maturity,” adding that any delays to future development “could affect the planned production start.”

Navy

GAO also found the first 13 follow-on DDG 51 Flight III destroyers are now 55 months behind schedule – up from 41 months in last year’s GAO report. The delays are due to issues hiring a “robust” workforce amid the current wages, supply chain issues, and frequent design changes, GAO said. The watchdog noted that these challenges are “not unique” to the DDG 51 program. Still, GAO determined the program is slated to reach initial operating capability by the end of fiscal 2027, roughly three years after it was initially scheduled to hit that milestone due to changes in operational test plans, the report said. Likewise, GAO determined the DDG 1000 program suffered delays integrating the Conventional Prompt Strike (CPS) hypersonic weapon system onto the initial ship since the watchdog’s previous assessment. Specifically, the report said program officials estimated that CPS integration was approximately nine months behind schedule, stemming from “unforeseen testing and production challenges.” However, a live-fire demonstration remains on track for next year, which is “consistent with expectations from our last assessment and about 2 years later than previously planned,” GAO added. Additionally, GAO found that the Navy’s ORCA Extra Large Unmanned Undersea Vehicle (XLUUV) program also encountered some delays. The first prototype for the program, which got underway in 2017, was delivered in September 2025. However, the four remaining prototypes are expected for delivery in January 2027 – more than a year later than the watchdog reported last year, according to the GAO.

cont'd in response

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 62 points 2 days ago

https://xcancel.com/agent_of_change/status/2073893821109190692

“Daddy” knows best: Mark Rutte and the economics of vassalage

NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte makes “the economic case” for Donald Trump to stay committed to NATO. And what is that case? That Europe’s frantic rearmament is now sustaining nearly 200,000 US jobs, through a $300 billion order book of European and Canadian purchases from the US arms industry. So he is saying the quiet part out loud: European militarisation is a jobs programme for the US military-industrial complex. Europe taxes its citizens, guts its public services, and ships the proceeds across the Atlantic to Lockheed, Raytheon and Boeing – and Rutte offers this up as his proudest achievement, a gift to be laid at Trump’s feet. This is the man who last year called the US President “daddy”, and who now, asked about it, insists “praise is warranted”. He describes Europe, approvingly, as “one big platform of power projection for the United States”. He travelled to the White House to apologise for European countries that hadn’t done enough to help America’s illegal war on Iran – a war most of humanity condemned – reassuring Trump that European bases had still been used to launch some 5,000 US flights. This is not diplomacy. It is the psychology of the vassal. A sensible European strategy would ask what serves the people of Europe: peace with their largest neighbour, affordable energy, investment in homes and hospitals. Rutte’s NATO asks only what pleases Washington and enriches its arms merchants. Across Europe, governments are pleading poverty: no money for health services, for pensions, for housing, for the green transition. Yet suddenly there are hundreds of billions for weapons, most of it flowing straight to US corporations, justified by the ever-useful spectre of Russian aggression. The war economy has a purpose, and it isn’t defending Europeans. It’s transferring their wealth upward and westward. Rutte calls this “a great success”. For the shareholders of the US arms industry, it certainly is. For everyone else, it is the sound of a continent being asked to pay for its own subordination, and to thank “daddy” for the privilege.

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Tervell

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