Defense and Space

Steven Pifer
Putin’s false pretext for war will stain Russia’s reputation for decades.
Missile Defense & Weapons

By Steve Trimble, Piotr Butowski
Russia's week-old war has been harder and costlier than Moscow expected, presaging a prolonged, brutal conflict in Ukraine.
Budget, Policy & Operations

By Brian Everstine
Fighters, tankers, intelligence and surveillance, and uncrewed aircraft are on high alert at 30 locations.
Budget, Policy & Operations

By Garrett Reim
The U.S. Space Force’s plan to replace its Space Based Infrared System of satellites took another step forward as prime contractors Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman selected payload providers for their next-generation satellites on March 1.
Space

By Thierry Dubois
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is forcing the French ministry of armed forces to rethink some plans, from a satellite launch to the use of large military transports.
Space

By Guy Norris
Long-running U.S. interest in the potential application of pressure-gain combustion to high-speed propulsion is stepping up to a new level with the award of a U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory contract to Pratt & Whitney for a rotating-detonating engine demonstrator.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Brian Everstine
U.S. Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall is confident one of his key priorities—the development of a UAS that will fly along with an advanced fighter—is realistic in the near term based on multiple efforts in the U.S. and Australia.
Budget, Policy & Operations

By Brian Everstine
The U.S. military on March 1 established a deconfliction line with the Russian Ministry of Defense aimed at avoiding incidents in the airspace over Eastern Europe amid Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine.
Budget, Policy & Operations

By Maxim Pyadushkin, Irene Klotz
Russia will stop supplying RD-181 engines, which are used on Northrop Grumman’s Antares rocket, to the U.S. in retaliation for economic sanctions imposed in response to the conflict in Ukraine.
Space

By Steve Trimble
A solicitation for a $334 million hypersonic demonstrator missile is now in industry hands, with responses due to the Air Force Research Laboratory in May and contract award in December.
Missile Defense & Weapons

By Brian Everstine
The first U.S. Air Force B-21 Raider test aircraft has started ground evaluations, and the sixth example of the next-generation bomber has started production, the service announced March 3.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Brian Everstine
The U.S. Air Force wants to make it easier to export some of its highest-end air-to-air weapons to ensure close partner nations can have the most advanced missiles so that their F-35s, for example, can be effective.
Missile Defense & Weapons

By Michael Bruno
Aerojet Rocketdyne CEO Eileen Drake has recruited several more industry and military luminaries in an effort to present a full board of directors who would push off Executive Chairman Warren Lichtenstein and his dissident slate of financial sponsors ahead of the embattled propulsion provider’s annual shareholder meeting.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Mark Carreau
NASA is partnering with HeroX crowdsources to seek proposals for implementing various aspects of the overall challenge of recycling and disposing of waste during deep-space missions.
Space

MAPP TECHNOLOGIES, MO signed a multi-year LTA with Collins Aerospace to supply F-35/F-22/T-7A and legacy military landing gear components.
Defense and Space

By Maxim Pyadushkin, Irene Klotz
OneWeb board members voted on March 3 to suspend launches of its broadband satellite constellation from the Russian-leased Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
Space

By Tony Osborne
New imagery from Ukraine suggests the only example of the world’s largest aircraft, the Antonov An-225, was badly damaged during fighting at the company’s airfield at Hostomel, near Kyiv.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Guy Norris
Boeing has confirmed that recent composite cryogenic tank tests that pave the way for future liquid-hydrogen-fueled aircraft used a reusable tank shell originally built as flight hardware for DARPA’s former Experimental Spaceplane Program.
Emerging Technologies

By Tony Osborne
Seven Romanian military personnel were killed during a search-and-rescue mission that was looking for the pilot of a MiG-21 fighter that had crashed.
Budget, Policy & Operations

Anatoly Zak
Yuzhmash survives Russia’s opening strikes, but the Ukrainian company’s business may be disrupted for the long term.
Space

By Tony Osborne
Russia’s actions appear to have healed NATO and EU rifts and roused German aims of becoming a pillar of European defense.
Budget, Policy & Operations

By Tony Osborne
Turkish Aerospace eyes “aggressive price policy” for international sales of indigenous Gokbey twin-engine medium rotorcraft.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Irene Klotz
The 15-nation partnership faces its strongest challenge amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Space

By Michael Bruno
Airbus Ventures, L3Harris Technologies and Heico have joined a group of venture capitalists to invest $60 million in CesiumAstro, a four-year-old active-phased-array startup, the companies announced March 2.
Manufacturing & Supply Chain

By Brian Everstine
Days after Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered his nuclear forces to be on a special alert, the Pentagon announced it has postponed a test of the Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile from this coming weekend to try to lower tensions.
Missile Defense & Weapons