WAR 04-27-2024-to-05-03-2024__****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

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(343) 04-13-2024-to-04-19-2024__****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(344) 04-20-2024-to-04-26-2024__****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****


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Macron ready to 'open debate' on nuclear European defence​

French President Emmanuel Macron is ready to “open the debate” about the role of nuclear weapons in a common European defence, he said in an interview published Saturday

Issued on: 27/04/2024 - 21:39
1 min

By:NEWS WIRES
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It was just the latest in a series of speeches in recent months in which he has stressed the need for a European-led defence strategy.

“I am ready to open this debate which must include anti-missile defence, long-range capabilities, and nuclear weapons for those who have them or who host American nuclear armaments,” the French president said in an interview with regional press group EBRA.

“Let us put it all on the table and see what really protects us in a credible manner,” he added.
France will “maintain its specificity but is ready to contribute more to the defence of Europe”.

The interview was carried out Friday during a visit to Strasbourg.

Following Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union, France is the only member of the bloc to possess its own nuclear weapons.

In a speech Thursday to students at Paris’ Sorbonne University, Macron warned that Europe faced an existential threat from Russian aggression.

He called on the continent to adopt a “credible” defence strategy less dependent on the United States.
“Being credible is also having long-range missiles to dissuade the Russians.

“And then there are nuclear weapons: France’s doctrine is that we can use them when our vital interests are threatened,” he added.

“I have already said there is a European dimension to these vital interests.”

Constructing a common European defence policy has long been a French objective, but it has faced opposition from other EU countries who consider NATO’s protection to be more reliable.

However, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the possible return of the isolationist Donald Trump as US president has given new life to calls for greater European defence autonomy.

(AFP)
 

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INSIDER

Putin is using 'nuclear blackmail' — and Russia defeating Ukraine could spark global chaos and economic disaster, Jamie Dimon warns​


Theron Mohamed
Sat, April 27, 2024 at 5:06 AM PDT·2 min read
219 Comments

  • Russia defeating Ukraine could spark chaos and slam the global economy, Jamie Dimon said.
  • The JPMorgan CEO said a Putin victory could fuel a nuclear arms race and trigger more battles.
  • Dimon warned US-China tensions and wars in Europe and the Middle East threaten the world order.
A Russian victory in Ukraine could throw the world into disarray, transform the global economy, and trigger nuclear proliferation and further conflicts, Jamie Dimon warned.

"It could be a potential disaster," the JPMorgan CEO told The Wall Street Journal this week.

Dimon emphasized that Russia has invaded a free, democratic nation and threatened nuclear war to deter resistance.

"We've never had nuclear blackmail before, which is also teaching the whole world that maybe having nuclear weapons is a pretty good thing because people will be afraid of you — you can abuse a neighbor if you feel like it," he said.

The boss of America's biggest bank cautioned that if Russia conquers Ukraine, other countries may question whether they can rely on the US to defend them from military assaults, or to have their back on the "economic battlefield," Dimon said.

Governments worldwide will reassess the security of their food, energy, and other critical resources, and might decide to partner with other countries, he added.

"I'm a little worried that if Russia wins that war, you're going to see the world enter a little bit of chaos as people realign alliances and economic relationships."

The billionaire banker has been sounding the alarm on the tumultuous global environment for a while.

"The geopolitical situation is probably the most complicated and dangerous since World War II," he told the Economic Club of New York this week, adding that the world order is being "challenged."

In his annual letter to JPMorgan shareholders this month, Dimon pointed to the wars raging in Ukraine and the Middle East, the US and China clashing over issues like trade, and the recent spike in terrorist attacks as evidence that a historically "treacherous" era may have begun.

In a September interview, Dimon flagged the Russia-Ukraine war as the greatest threat to the world, and said countries were worrying about relying on other countries for everything from food and energy to microchips and rare-earth metals.

He added that the battle could be an "inflection point for the free democratic world," and said there's "no playbook" for navigating the current geopolitical melee.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Housecarl

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GEOPOLITICS
NUCLEAR POWER

Why Macron Is Reminding The World About France's Nuclear Arsenal​

The French president has voiced France's readiness to “contribute more to the defense of Europe” through its nuclear arsenal. It's a message fro European allies and for Putin's Russia — and another reminder of how much hangs on November's U.S. elections.

FRANCE INTER
ENGLISH EDITION • WORLDCRUNCH
Pierre Haski
April 29, 2024



-Analysis-

PARIS — It's an old debate that gets revived regularly, and always with a level of controversy, as if it were being discussed for the first time. To sum up: in an interview published this weekend in regional daily newspapers, French President Emmanuel Macron raised the possibility that France's nuclear deterrent might, in his words: “contribute more to the defense of European soil.”



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At this stage, it is only a question of “opening up the debate,” but it is also the second time Macron has raised the subject in a span of just a few days: on Thursday, in his much anticipated speech about the future of Europe, he said that France’s nuclear arsenal is “in essence, an essential element in the defense of the European continent.”

Sharing nuclear weapons​

So what is all the fuss about? Let’s start with what it’s not: it’s not about sharing nuclear weapons. The decision to use nuclear weapons is, and will remain, that of the President of the French Republic. It would be unthinkable to convene a European Council before a nuclear strike, as this would be contrary to the spirit of this supreme weapon: deterrence only works if the man, or woman, who takes the decision is credible; an assembly of 27 Heads of State is not credible.
It's all a question of definition: does an attack on Germany constitute a “vital interest” for France?
French doctrine states that nuclear deterrence serves France's “vital interests.” So it's all a question of definition: does an attack on Germany constitute a “vital interest” for France? The answer is probably yes. Does the same apply to Poland? Or Lithuania?

In October 2022, eight months after the start of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Macron said that a nuclear ballistic attack on Ukraine would not jeopardize France’s fundamental interests. This statement came as a surprise, because it was the opposite of the strategic ambiguity he now claims to have. Still, at least he was clear about the limits of the nation’s interests.

But what about the subject of the current debate: the entire territory of the European Union?

An old debate​

Why are we having this debate today? The topic is old, it's the context that is new. Most EU countries are protected by the American nuclear shield under NATO. Donald Trump's possible victory in November casts doubt on the validity of this “shield,” and worries European leaders.
Above all, how can we share what, by its very nature, cannot be shared?
So now is the time, just a few months before this decisive deadline, to put the terms of the debate on European defense on the table. All the terms: those of the anti-missile shield that 20 countries, led by Germany but without France, have launched; those of the defense industries that need to go further and faster; and finally the question of nuclear power, which is France’s specificity on the Continent.

The issue is terribly complex, because the political uncertainty in the United States could also affect France in 2027. Above all, how can we share what, by its very nature, cannot be shared? The debate is both public — and it would be preferable for it to take place outside election periods — and private between European states.

The only certainty? That you haven’t heard the last of it.


View article in original language
Written By:

Pierre Haski
Translated and Adapted by:

Ione Gildroy

You've reach




 

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READY TO BLOW

Europe planning new ‘nuclear umbrella’ with 300 French nuke missiles spread across continent for showdown with Russia​

Russia warned it would 'sink the British Isles' with its nuke arsenal
  • Published: 7:18 ET, Apr 29 2024
  • Updated: 7:23 ET, Apr 29 2024
EUROPE could be gearing up to forge a bubble of nuclear protection from Russia made up of 300 French ballistic missiles.

French president Macron has suggested the submarine-launched warheads are fanned across the continent to shore up collective defence.


8
His offer followed a German minister urging the UK and France to forge a "nuclear shield" to deter Russia.

Leaders in Europe are worried about the ramifications of a possible Donald Trump win in the November presidential election.

And nuclear threats are coming out of Russia thick and fast as Putin's illegal war in Ukraine drags on.

Macron said he wanted to open up conversations about "missile defence, long-range weapons and nuclear weapons" across Europe.

The French premier, who has been incredibly vocal about stepping up defence in the face of Putin, said we need a "credible European defence".

The current US-led Nato alliance, he believes, does not offer enough protection.

France, he says, "is ready to contribute more to the defence of European soil," independently from America, offering up the 300-ballistic and cruise missile store.

Trump warned just days ago that he will let Russia do "whatever the hell it wants" to Nato members who don't step up in giving 2 per cent of their GDP to defence.

German minister Lindner dubbed this: "a call to further rethink this element of European security under the umbrella of NATO".

The UK and France are Europe's primary nuclear powers and have independent control over their own significant weapons arsenals.

But Russia's nuclear stores dwarf their collective power, with the world's most extensive and varied collection by a considerable amount.

Even the US has fewer nukes.

FRESH NUKE THREAT​

Just this weekend, one of Putin's state TV propaganda puppets issued a fresh nuclear threat against the West.

Dmitry Kiselyov warned: "If NATO countries deploy their forces to Ukraine in order to deal strategic defeat to Russia, then that very moment will come of which Putin has spoken.

"In that case, we'll send everything flying everywhere! Sarmat, Yars and Avangard missiles.

"American decision-making centres and launch sites on land and sea are already in our crosshairs.

"France, as a nuclear power, will have to be disarmed in an instant.

"The British isles will simply go underwater. We have the technologies for this."

By referring to "American decision-making centres and launch sites", Kiselyov was referencing bases across Europe in allied countries.

Just days ago Moscow warned that Nato's nuclear weapons and facilities would be targeted if they are deployed in Poland.

Russia's most recent nuclear threat against Nato saw Poland dragged into the mix
8
Russia's most recent nuclear threat against Nato saw Poland dragged into the mix

A EUROPEAN DEFENCE FRAMEWORK​

Macron is suggesting France's nuclear arsenal of submarine-launched ballistic missiles and air-launched cruise missiles are shared around the continent.

He urged: "French doctrine is that we can use [nuclear arms] when our vital interests are at stake … There is a European dimension in these vital interests.

"I am in favour of opening this debate, which must therefore include missile defence, long-range weapons and nuclear weapons for those who have them or who have American nuclear weapons on their soil.

"France will keep its specificity, but it is ready to contribute more to the defence of European soil."

And last week he doubled down on a specifically European network of defence: "The European pillar of Nato that we are building is essential. But we should build a European defence framework.

"We have to … build a Europe able to show that it is never a vassal of the US."

FRENCH BALLISTIC MISSILES​

The French navy developed an impressive £4.2 billion submarine-launched ballistic missile, the M51 SLBM, likely the weapon Macron is referring to.

Each missile can carry six to ten thermonuclear warheads.

Like the formidable Trident, it uses a drag-reducing spike to shoot through the air.

They stretch 12 metres in length and are fuelled by an impressive three stage rocket.

Their estimated range is between 8,000 and 10,000 km.

Macron's reference to other countries with US nuclear weapons on their soil was likely directed at Germany, home to American warheads.

Britain is also home to US nuclear tech, but is no longer part of the European Union (EU).

France, which has its own nuclear strike force, is the EU's only nuclear power - i.e. possesses nuclear weapons not just reactors.

COLLECTIVE SECURITY​

Nato secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg has warned that such a nuclear umbrella could divide Europe from North America.

In February he said: "Nato has a nuclear deterrent, and this has worked for decades.


"We should not do anything to undermine that."

But as warnings continue to surface of war in Europe, leaders are worried about deterrence.

Germany's Lindner, for example, also pointed to "collective security".

He said: "The strategic nuclear forces of France and Great Britain are already making a contribution to the security of our alliance.

"The question is: under what political and financial conditions would Paris and London be prepared to maintain or expand their own strategic capabilities for collective security?"

NATO is headed for a nuclear showdown with the rest as Nato could be considering moving nukes to Putin's doorstep.

Below is a timeline of some of the thinly veiled threats the Kremlin has made against the West since invading Ukraine two years ago.
Feb 24, 2022 - Vladimir Putin: “No matter who tries to stand in our way or all the more so create threats for our country and our people, they must know that Russia will respond immediately, and the consequences will be such as you have never seen in your entire history."
March 26, 2022 - Putin crony Dmitry Medvedev: “We have a special document on nuclear deterrence. This document clearly indicates the grounds on which the Russian Federation is entitled to use nuclear weapons. … [This includes] when an act of aggression is committed against Russia and its allies."
April 20, 2022 - Vladimir Putin: “[The new Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile capable of carrying nuclear warheads] will force all who are trying to threaten our country in the heat of frenzied, aggressive rhetoric to think twice."
Feb 29, 2024 - Vladimir Putin: “They must understand that we also have weapons that can hit targets on their territory... All this really threatens a conflict with the use of nuclear weapons and the destruction of civilization. Don’t they get that?”
March 12, 2024 - Vladimir Putin declared that weapons like nukes "exist in order to use them".
A chilling nuclear war simulator has also revealed how a Russian nuclear strike could trigger a global conflict - killing 35 million people in just a matter of hours.
The model predicts a catastrophic war escalating from an initial Russian nuclear strike, which quickly draws in other powers.
Known as "Plan A", the four-minute animation aims to highlight the horrific potential consequences of conflict between Russia and NATO countries as all nations would fire strikes against one another.
The model predicts that almost 35 million people would die within hours - many of those in the first 45 minutes.
The trigger-happy tyrant has even started talking about how he could deploy nukes in space, saying that Russia can be "proud" of its work on a "nuclear power plant... for operation in space".
A bombshell warning from US intelligence in February suggested Vlad could be hoping to arm his existing anti-satellite weapon with nukes and launch it into space.
Last year, Putin was said to be readying a deadly 20,000mph "meteorite" hypersonic missile for combat.
 

jward

passin' thru

Marines To More Than Triple Size Of Air Defense Forces By 2029​


Joseph Trevithick​


The U.S. Marine Corps is in the process of a major expansion of its organic ground-based air and missile defense forces. The total number of air defense batteries within the service is set to increase by more than two-thirds by the end of the decade. Starting just next year, those units will be equipped with a mixture of new medium and short-range capabilities, including a version of Israel's Iron Dome, with a particular focus on added defenses against drones and cruise missiles.
Marine Col. Mike McCarthy, who runs the aviation enablers branch within the office of the Deputy Commandant for Aviation, provided an update on the service's air and missile defense plans earlier today at the annual Modern Day Marine exposition.

"Just give you some perspective about kind of where we're going in ground-based air defense, in 2019, when Force Design [2030] started, we had four air defense batteries the Marine Corps armed with Stinger missiles and machine guns. That was it," McCarthy said.

Marines fire a Stinger short-range surface-to-air missile during training. USMC Marine Avenger short-range air defense systems. DOD
"As we approach 2029, we're going to have 15 batteries of air defense in the Marine Corps, to include the reserve component, and the weapon systems they're going to employ are night-and-day better than what we had three [to] four years ago," McCarthy continued.
"Next year, we're going to field the Medium-Range Intercept Capability [MRIC]" which is "a cruise missile defense system based on the Israeli Iron Dome," the Marine Colonel added.

MRIC is by far the most substantial forthcoming addition to the Marine Corps' air defense arsenal. As McCarthy said, it is derived from the Israeli Iron Dome system and utilizes a trailer-based road-mobile launcher. It also fires the same Tamir interceptors as Iron Dome, which use active radar seekers to zero in on their targets and have a very high degree of maneuverability. The missiles also have a two-way data link and proximity-fuzed warhead to improve accuracy and the overall probability of scoring a hit.
A Marine Corps MRIC Expeditionary Launcher. A total of 10 Tamir missile canisters are seen here loaded on the launcher, which can hold up to 20 at a time. USMC
While the Marine Corps is acquiring MRIC with a focus on defending against incoming cruise missiles, as an Iron Dome derivative, the system inherently has the ability to engage a broader array of other incoming indirect threats. This includes artillery rockets and shells, as well as drones. Significant upgrades have been made to Iron Dome over the years to expand the breadth of targets it can be employed against, and MRIC could further evolve into an even broader medium-range air defense system.

"Next year, we'll also see the initial fielding of the Marine Air Defense Integrated System [MADIS]," Col. McCarthy also highlighted today.

A complete Marine Air Defense Integrated System (MADIS) system. USMC
There is also the "Light" version of MADIS, or L-MADIS, which consists of 4x4 Polaris MRZR all-terrain vehicles equipped with a mix of sensors and electronic warfare jammers. The L-MADIS vehicles can be carried inside the main cabin of an MV-22 Osprey and Col. McCarthy highlighted how this system is ideally suited for supporting smaller echelons, including forces embarked on amphibious warfare ships.


L-MADISs have already been in use for years now and there are now multiple configurations of the system. An L-MADIS buggy, lashed to the deck of the Wasp class amphibious assault ship USS Boxer, was actually used to knock down an Iranian drone that came within "threatening range" of the ship as it transited through the Strait of Hormuz in 2019.

A view of the forward end of the USS Boxer's flight deck from around the time of the knocking down of the Iranian drone in 2019, with an L-MADIS system seen highlighted inside the red circle. USN
The Marine Corps also previously acquired a predecessor to the larger MADIS based on 4x4 M-ATV mine-resistant vehicles rather than the JLTV and armed with Miniguns mounted in remote weapon stations. Known as Ground Based Air Defense (GBAD) systems, these were deployed operationally on a limited basis in the past.

GBAD vehicles. USMC
MADIS and L-MADIS are both primarily geared toward the counter-drone role. MADIS, with its Stinger missiles, also has the ability to be used for more general short-range point air defense. The U.S. Army is also now in the process of developing a more capable replacement for the venerable Stinger that will still be able to use existing launchers, and that could be of interest to the Marines in the future. Newer versions of Stinger have already been developed that are better optimized against drones.


New radars are another important component of the Marine Corps' future air and missile defense plans, especially when it comes to MRIC. Currently, the service plans to pair MRIC with its existing AN/TPS-80 Ground/Air Task-Oriented Radar (G/ATOR), which is a modern road-mobile multi-purpose AESA radar that can be used for air defense and more general air traffic control purposes. You can read more about G/ATOR here.


Last year, the Marine Corps also awarded a contract to Leidos for the delivery of four prototypes of a new air defense radar called the Medium Range Air Defense Radar (MRADR; pronounced 'marauder'). Leidos subsidiary Dynetics is leading the development of the MRADR. The Marines have also been exploring Humvee-based mobile radar systems.

The Marine Corps' focus on cruise missile and drone threats in its new air defense push is hardly surprising.

The threat posed by uncrewed aerial systems has also now fully exploded into the mainstream consciousness, thanks in large part to the conflict in Ukraine. However, as The War Zone has long pointed out, the drone threat, including when it comes to weaponized commercial types, is not new, and is becoming an increasing given in conflicts large and small. The Marines and the rest of the U.S. military continue to very much play catch-up when it comes to addressing this threat through the fielding of systems like MADIS and L-MADIS.

In a future high-end conflict, such as one in the Pacific against the Chinese armed forces, where relatively small groups of Marines may be scattered across a broad area, the need for various tiers of organic defenses against a bevy of air and missile threats will only be magnified. In this context, it is also worth pointing out that MRIC will give the Marine Corps its first medium-range air defense capability of any kind since the service retired its HAWK surface-to-air missiles in the 1990s.


These are all realities that the Marine Corps is not alone in facing. The U.S. Army is also in the process of a major expansion of its air and missile defense capacity in response to the same kinds of threats.

If the Marine Corps' current plans remain unchanged, the service will close out the decade with a major increase in its air and missile defense capabilities and a significantly enlarged force structure to match.
 

Housecarl

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Hummm........the article is very reminicent of ones from the late 1980's and 1990s....

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In deterrence we trust? Cold War nuclear questions make a comeback.​

May 2, 2024 | KIMBALL, NEB.

The Cold War never fully thawed in this single-stoplight town, nestled in a county of fewer than 4,000 people that seems built for a populace twice its size. Empty storefronts tell that story of six decades ago, when the nuclear missiles moved in.

The weapons lie scattered beneath the high plains here – some a few miles from a school. Up to 400 of these intercontinental ballistic missiles, or ICBMs, remain on alert in rural parts of the American West, ready to launch at the president’s call.

WHY WE WROTE THIS​

A story focused on
TRUST
The risks of nuclear weapons have reappeared in global headlines. Containing those risks may hinge on transparency and communication as well as a “peace through strength” tradition.

Some outsiders may see Kimball as a sacrifice. Rich Flores calls his community “patriotic.”

“The people here, in my opinion, believe that we have ‘peace through strength,’” says Mr. Flores, a county commissioner, echoing a line popularized by President Ronald Reagan. As he chats over coffee, an American flag pin glints from his chest.

“Who wants to attack a country that’s strong?”

This is the logic of deterrence in a nutshell. Though the staggering cost of an upcoming missile upgrade in this region has ignited discussion about the necessity of America’s vast nuclear arsenal, the fact that the nation hasn’t used these weapons since World War II seems to deepen, for many, trust in their necessity.

But as global conflicts involving nuclear powers escalate, this trust is being tested. In Kimball and beyond, questions about America’s nuclear strategy – and how people feel about it – are taking on more urgency as concern about the likelihood of a nuclear attack is on the rise.

Senior U.S. military officials describe the world’s nuclear landscape as “breathtaking” in its potential for escalation. The United States, they warn, is now on the verge of having not one but two nuclear “peer” adversaries, as the Department of Defense calls them. China’s rapid buildup of its nuclear forces means it could have at least as many ICBMs as either the U.S. or Russia by the decade’s end, analysts say. Russian President Vladimir Putin is expanding his nuclear arsenal and rattling these sabers toward the West in his war against Ukraine.

As a result, the U.S. now faces threats that it “did not anticipate and for which it is not prepared,” a bipartisan commission appointed by Congress concluded last autumn.

While risk of a “major nuclear conflict remains low,” the nation needs to “urgently” prepare to take on adversaries who want to impose undemocratic values on the free world, according to the report.

1173978_1_icbm_large.jpg

United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research, Federation of American Scientists | Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Part of that preparation will occur around Kimball, which is set to see nearby missile fields upgraded over the next decade with a new weapon system called Sentinel.

Advocates for nonproliferation say America has more than enough nuclear weapons to deter opponents. Their imperative, rather, is reopening communication lines – laying the groundwork for lapsing or nonexistent arms control agreements – to restore a sense of safety and trust in what can seem like a precarious time. And some see promising developments along these lines.

“One of the most important things that we can do is to head off unconstrained nuclear competition between the U.S., Russia, and China,” says Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association.

“Taboos against nuclear weapons still exist,” he adds, “and each generation needs to ensure they’re not broken.”

American trust in nuclear weapons​

In the nearly 80 years since the U.S. dropped the only two nuclear weapons ever used in war, movements to abolish or champion nukes have ebbed and flowed.

Currently, Americans grapple with mixed views about the country’s nuclear weapons. A Chicago Council-Carnegie Corporation survey last year showed that 47% of U.S. adults believe the nuclear arsenal makes the U.S. safer. (Older adults are more likely than younger adults to say this.)

Moreover, China and Russia aren’t the only countries that worry Americans, who rank the development of nuclear programs in Iran and North Korea as two of the top three “critical threats” to the U.S., according to Gallup.

As U.S. leaders face a public that’s conflicted about trusting in deterrence, better communicating the country’s nuclear capabilities, some say, could help.

Nuclear nonchalance or confidence?​

Retired Gen. John Hyten, who had been serving as vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff since 2019, recalls receiving a July 2021 phone call “so important that I went running to” the chairman and the secretary of defense after hanging up.

It was top-secret news of “the most significant launch that had happened during my lifetime”: a Chinese hypersonic missile designed to elude U.S. detection systems and potentially be used as a first-strike weapon in a nuclear war.

It threatened the land-based leg of the U.S. nuclear triad, which is composed of ICBMs, like those kept around Kimball, as well as stealth bombers and nuclear-armed submarines.

General Hyten spent the last three months of his tenure working to get news of China’s hypersonic missile declassified, he said in a February discussion at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center.

In November 2021, he got the Pentagon green light to air his concerns on CBS News. The sense after the broadcast was that it was going to “create a ruckus in this country like nobody’s seen before,” he recalled. “And like three days later, it had disappeared from the news.”

He grapples with nuclear nonchalance in America, but admires the general trust that citizens seem to have in the government’s ability to keep them safe.

“You know, I actually want to be the citizen of a country where people ... don’t worry about this stuff. They go to bed at night, and they sleep like babies,” he said. “But somebody’s got to think about it.”

Feeling like a target​

As a high school social studies teacher in Kimball, Jeri Ferguson is one of those people who thinks about the question of trust in nuclear arms. She recalls safety-in-numbers logic that could evoke either confidence or unease during the Cold War.

“I was in my car, driving in college, and with the radio on: ‘Russia has enough nuclear weapons to kill us four times over. But we have enough to kill them 10 times over,’” she recalls. “I remember thinking, ‘Once is probably enough for me!’”

On a recent afternoon, Ms. Ferguson began a unit on that history with a class of seven juniors.

“What do you think the Cold War was about?” she asks the group. “Global warming?”

No, the class groans, and volleys back more jokes. It was about “power,” says a boy. “During the winter!”

The teacher turns the focus closer to home – the Sentinel upgrade that could swell the local population with workers. The class seems vaguely aware of the missile silos scattered across the county.

“If there’s a nuclear war, guess where the first bombs are coming?”

“Us,” a student says. The jokes hit pause.

Restoring transparency – and talking to each other​

The renewed conversation about nuclear arms in America points to a tension between the fear these devastating weapons inspire and the belief that the country wouldn’t be safe without them.

These are concerns that hint at the importance of bolstering transparency and communication to build trust not just in the weapons but among humans, too.

The global nuclear stockpile has declined significantly since the Cold War, from roughly 70,300 warheads in 1986 to some 12,100 in 2024, the Federation of American Scientists estimates. But most of these reductions happened in the 1990s. Since then, the pace has slowed.

Transparency is also on the decline. While the U.S. used to make its stockpile size public, this stopped under the Trump presidency. The Biden administration restored these disclosures at first, but then suspended them again.

While it’s difficult to know precise reasons the government is now refusing declassification requests, it may be that the transparency is politically difficult to justify given Russian and Chinese opacity, says Matt Korda, senior research fellow in the Nuclear Information Project at the federation.

The State Department, in a written response to the Monitor, said that declassification “does not occur on a planned calendar” and that the “value of transparency and its contributions to stability is increased when OTHER states take parallel steps.”

That said, a State Department official added on background that the U.S. “continues to view transparency among nuclear weapon states as extremely valuable for purposes of building confidence, avoiding misperception, and encouraging dialogue that can help mitigate the risk of costly arms competitions.”

Transparency, in other words, can be diplomatically productive. Exposing Chinese officials to complex internal U.S. policy debates could help catalyze China’s internal discussions, says Tong Zhao, senior fellow with the Nuclear Policy Program at Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

There are movements on this front. At a summit last November, U.S. and Chinese diplomats discussed whether states are at risk of ceding too much nuclear oversight to artificial intelligence systems. Though no agreements came of it, China’s willingness to discuss high-level principles of conduct could potentially be a productive wedge issue into other discussions, Dr. Zhao adds.

Russia for now appears to be stiff-arming the idea of nonproliferation talks with Washington, citing U.S. support for Ukraine, even as the sole remaining arms control agreement between the U.S. and Russia – the New START Treaty – will expire in February 2026.

The prospects for treaty renewal look remote for now, but surprising breakthroughs have emerged before. Even after President Reagan called the USSR an “evil empire,” for example, the two nations in 1985 agreed that “a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought,” notes Dan Smith, director of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

Though straightforward, this sentence was considered a landmark declaration, and Russia, China, the U.S., France, and the United Kingdom reaffirmed it in 2022. Beyond being a hopeful signal, these sorts of statements “actually inform the thinking” of governments, Mr. Smith adds.

“Keep engagement alive”​

At the same time, these governments are wrestling with the prospect of increasing U.S. isolationism, which many analysts point to as one of the most troubling deterrence trends.

The possibility of a Trump presidency, for example, is prompting European allies, who benefit from America’s nuclear umbrella, to question whether it will hold – or whether they should pursue their own nuclear programs.

It doesn’t help that Ukraine, which voluntarily gave up its nuclear weapons after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, is now bearing the brunt of as yet unsated Russian aggression.

Countering isolationist inclinations will mean renewed civic education, cultural dialogue of the sort that emerged in wake of the recent “Oppenheimer” film, and more, says William Hartung, senior research fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft.

In places like Kimball, there’s less opportunity for disengagement.

Student Jessica Terrill says she’s used to seeing missile silos, like one near her aunt’s house.

“That’s definitely kind of scary sometimes,” says the high school senior. “It’s like, oh man. If those go off, we’re going to know.”

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Naval

China launches Pakistan’s Hangor submarine, despite engine row with Germany​

By Usman Ansari
Apr 30, 12:30 PM

ISLAMABAD — The first of eight Hangor II submarines for Pakistan was recently launched at the Wuchang Shipbuilding yard in Wuhan, China, though it’s uncertain what could be powering the boat given Germany’s block on an engine export.

The initial Hangor II delivery timetable would have seen the four Chinese-built submarines delivered by 2023. But Germany had refused to approve export licenses for the MTU 396 diesel engine, which the submarine was designed to use.

The German government had also declined to grant export licenses for its engines in regard to Thailand’s order of the S-26T, a variant of the Chinese Type 039B submarine. The Thai deal eventually fell through.

Neither Germany nor Pakistan have confirmed whether export clearance was ultimately approved or denied.

The Pakistan Navy did not respond to Defense News’ inquiry about whether Pakistan had accepted China’s alternative proposal, which would see the locally made CHD620 engine power the Hangor II.

Still, Pakistan’s naval chief, Adm. Naveed Ashraf, attended the April 26 launch ceremony and “expressed satisfaction on the project progress,” according to a Navy news release.

The service is undergoing comprehensive modernization, having also acquired four Chinese-built Type 054A/P frigates — the most powerful and capable surface combatants it has ever operated.

But it’s the Hangor II submarines that will provide the Navy with a significant leap in capability, according to Tom Waldwyn, a naval analyst at the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies think tank.

“In terms of undersea capability, the eventual inclusion of eight Hangor-class submarines, based on China’s Type 039A/B Yuan-class boats, will enlarge the fleet and be a significant capability improvement, particularly if they are fitted with long-range cruise missiles,” Waldwyn told Defense News.

“Pakistan has reportedly tested sub-launched, nuclear-capable cruise missiles, and the introduction of these into service would be far more significant to the strategic balance than a handful of new frigates,” he added.

Waldwyn was unsure where Pakistan may have landed in regard to the engine. But another expert told Defense News that the Chinese alternative might negatively impact the operational effectiveness of the submarines.

Former U.S. Navy submariner Aaron Amick, who runs the website Sub Brief, said while China’s exportation of “unlicensed copies of naval technology has come to be expected,” it’s not necessarily a bargain. Though the Chinese engine is essentially a copy of Germany’s MTU 396, he added, it is made with “inferior cast and shaped materials, assembled with inconsistent quality control standards, and works great for a short period of time, then requires near continuous repair after a few hundred hours of operation.”

Pakistani naval officials had previously told Defense News the Hangor II is a Pakistan-specific variant of the Type 039B. It is equipped with a Stirling air-independent propulsion system to increase underwater endurance. It also features a Pakistani combat management system, a towed array sonar and weaponry.

About Usman Ansari
Usman Ansari is the Pakistan correspondent for Defense News.
 

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Harnessing Insurgent and Narco-Criminal Drone Tactics for Special Operations​

April 30, 2024 by Robert J. Bunker 1 Comment

Editor’s note: This article is part of Project Air Power, which explores and advocates for the totality of air, aviation, and space power in irregular, hybrid, and gray-zone environments. We invite you to contribute to the discussion, explore the difficult questions, and help influence the future of air and space power. Please contact us if you would like to propose an article, podcast, or event.

The US Army recently took the bold initial step to fund and field commercial drones in infantry units, something many experts have been urging for some time. In a sense, the Ukraine warfighting experience has finally shifted the Army’s perspective on the combat effectiveness of low-cost, advanced commercial drones compared to expensive aircraft and military-grade drones. This shift has led to soldiers being encouraged to freely experiment and innovate in addressing the challenges of modern warfare.

This is precisely what violent non-state actors and criminals have been doing for years. Taking a needed step back, this piece explores the benefits behind commercial drone exploitation, similar to the US Marine Corps’ study of how to capitalize on the logistical merits of drug-running narco subs. The latter entails experimenting with prototype logistics supply drones, whose low profile and wake make them rather stealthy for operating in sea lanes contested by great power naval forces.

Such “fighting fire with fire” approaches can readily be applied to insurgent and organized crime groups using air power based on relatively cheap consumer drones. Media attention related to these systems has increasingly been in the news—initially in fits and starts—over the last decade. Their pronounced use, first by the Islamic State as a surrogate air force and later by other terrorist groups, has steadily increased along with their ongoing fielding by Mexican cartels, initially to smuggle narcotics and later as weapon systems. Consumer drones carrying improvised explosive devices (IEDs), including modified RPG warheads, are now daily social media fare in the Russia-Ukraine War, with tens of thousands of these systems being deployed on the battlefield.

Non-state belligerents and criminals have been particularly creative with these platforms. They have utilized both rotary and fixed-wing drones in conflict. In addition to consumer models, they have fielded do-it-yourself kits, built-from-scratch drones, as well as hybrid systems merging commercial and military-grade components. The emergence of attempts to develop terrorist jet engine drones instead of electric motors has also taken place, along with the use of 3D computer printers to fabricate parts and bespoke drones. Kamikaze drones were an initial mainstay of criminal, terrorist, and insurgent “air forces,” which later transitioned to include aerial bombardment capabilities typically progressing from dropping a single bomblet to multiple small bombs on multiple targets. Production began in smaller numbers of artisanal devices and later swelled through more institutionalized (factory-like) processes.

The Marines and Army are increasingly using tactical drones, and some observers suggest the Air Force do the same. However, another group could dramatically benefit from this capacity: special operations forces (SOF). Given SOF’s entrepreneurial ethos and decentralized approach to operations, they are ideally suited to adopt commercial drone strategies from armed non-state actors. What follows is a short list of some of the capabilities these systems can offer US Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) and US Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC) in the form of new technologies and operational concepts.

Close Air Support (CAS)
Historically, gaining a close air support capability has been expensive and has significant logistical, maintenance, and training requirements. SOF can now field its own drone air force at a fraction of the cost of a traditional one. As a result, forces can readily exploit the direct attack and aerial bombardment capabilities of relatively inexpensive and commercially available drones in coordination with their ground teams and local allied forces. This would allow for an organic capability that can immediately respond to changing battlefield threats and pop-up targets of opportunity. Further, once acquired, these capabilities naturally lead to extending and broadening their use to achieve local air superiority.

Several insurgent and criminal forces have rudimentarily used drones for aerial attacks, yet few have significantly advanced their tactics. With its recent assault on Israel, Hamas might be an exception. Achieving greater impact would likely involve more semi-autonomous, AI-based systems, shifting to humans “on-the-loop” (vs. in-the-loop) command and control for quicker decision-making. Further borrowing a page from terrorist tactics directed at commercial airliners, these early AI mesh networks could coordinate drones to disrupt enemy aircraft by targeting engines or rotors. For example, SOF teams facing hostile gunships might deploy a drone swarm to target the enemy’s engines or tail rotors, causing damage through direct collision with the airframe or entangling wires or nets in the rotor systems.

Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR)
Reusable drones used for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) present a lower risk of being targeted and destroyed. Notably, non-state actors in some conflicts have leveraged commercial drones to achieve superior tactical and operational ISR capabilities compared to state adversaries. Both the Islamic State and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel developed specialized drone units ahead of the Iraqi and Mexican militaries they were (and are) fighting. Multiple cartels and even some vigilante groups are now using drones for reconnaissance, ambushes, and real-time surveillance during assaults.

While SOF teams and some larger units already access diverse ISR tools, adopting commercially available drones hardened for datalink security would extend this capability down to the lowest operational elements. Furthermore, hybrid drones offer plausible deniability in sensitive environments and can operate on unconventional frequencies like cell phone bands, reducing detectability. Over the long term, military-grade drones will, given their cost points, be unable to fulfill the growing ISR needs of SOF teams on increasingly contested battlefields. No choice will exist but to deploy cheaper systems that will be good enough to meet mission requirements.

Winning the Narrative Fight
Criminal, terrorist, and insurgent groups have long recognized the propaganda and psychological advantages of using imagery to influence opinions and behavior. Consumer drones and modern cameras now enable them to create videos and photographs from previously inaccessible vantage points and across nearly all light levels. Some of the earliest adopters were US anarchists engaging in questionable, and occasionally illegal, street activities and protesters who had live-streaming broadcast capability as early as 2011. The Islamic State was acutely aware of the value of drone imagery for its propaganda value, which bolstered perceptions of the group asserting national sovereignty in the airspace above their claimed caliphate. This group also pioneered combat imagery filmed by drones flying over Syrian bases, suicide attacks, and aerial bombardment of Iraqi soldiers and materiel—visuals that are now commonplace in the Ukraine conflict. Even the Mexican cartels have employed drone imagery to promote their battlefield successes and humanitarian activities. During the COVID pandemic, one cartel filmed aid distribution in a village under its control with overhead drone videos set to folk music.

SOF could also utilize drone videography for both offensive and defensive narrative production. They can highlight the success of their activities and provide forensic evidence of the operational ground truth to set the record straight. This will become increasingly vital as Russian, Chinese, and other state-based disinformation agencies refine their use of advanced deep fake AI technologies. Imagine, for example, that China attempted to create a fictitious international incident over a contested atoll in the South China Sea with an allied government. A counter narrative forensically validated via drone imagery would help shut down such propaganda gambits.

Continued.....
 

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Just-In-Time Logistics
Criminals and cartels use small drones to smuggle items like cigarettes, cell phones, and narcotics into prisons and across borders, setting a precedent for logistical exploitation. This method can transport nearly any small item on demand – ammunition, medical supplies, batteries, or food and water. Such tactics align with Amazon’s ongoing tests for home delivery services. Similarly, drones could resupply SOF teams from forward operating bases, riverine craft, or even transport aircraft, providing essential items stealthily and efficiently during missions. This approach would immediately remove human personnel from harm’s way for basic resupply tasks and free them up for more important tip-of-the-spear actions. Conversely, drones can expedite the secure extraction of high-value assets or individuals to controlled areas. Although the technology for transporting people via aerial drone is still developing, it has been making slow progress since 2016.

Shaping the Operational Environment
Drones can be used to shape the operational environment. Non-state groups seem to have taken a lesson from what the major powers achieved using medium altitude endurance drones against al Qaeda and Islamic State and applied them to small, commercially available systems. Insurgent groups and criminals have adopted tactics and operations to avoid the sensors of MQ-1 Predators and MQ-9 Reapers. In a reversal of roles, cartels and terrorists now use small drones to influence military operations and intimidate civilian populations. Just the presence of an unrecognized drone causes changes in behavior. Soldiers and civilians have no way of knowing if the drone is friend or foe and, therefore, must treat each instance as a potential risk to the mission or a risk to the force.

USSOCOM and AFSOC have the resources, expertise, and potential to take these technologies and operational concepts much further in scale and scope than non-state groups. SOF has been lacking the freedom and will to do so, much of which can be attributed to past bureaucratic inertia. In addition to the preplanned shaping capability, drones can also provide impromptu support functions as dynamic operations unfold, such as dropping anti-vehicular mines to help channel opposing forces, providing pop-up barriers like minefields to protect SOF raids, or laying acoustic and other sensory devices for flank security or early warning.

Suicide Fighters
First-person view (FPV) drones can exploit a fast and nimble platform with deadly tactical capabilities. Videos of French racing drones competing in forested areas, reminiscent of miniaturized Star Wars pod racers, debuted a decade ago. These drones inspired an early concept of virtual martyrdom – explosive-laden, one-way drones that functioned as unmanned kamikazes. There were speculations that Islamic State developed inghima drones equipped with small arms, such as pistols or other light weaponry, that could later detonate their onboard explosives after expending their ammunition. Although this has yet to materialize, it seems inevitable that either a non-state group or a state will soon refine this tactic, potentially deploying it in either a remote hunter-killer role or integrating it directly into combat units to provide armed overwatch.

FPV drones could also function as a unique form of suicide fighter, one that first launches its weapons at the intended target and then detonates among them. While this scenario once belonged to the realm of science fiction, advances in artificial intelligence have simplified the integration of facial recognition technology, enabling these systems to operate autonomously. However, the identification of friend or foe, as well as the implementation of non-combatant protection protocols, still require further development.

Conclusion
USSOCOM and AFSOC should not underestimate the expanding role of drone capabilities, increasingly employed by violent non-state actors, criminals, and state adversaries. The deadly realities of the Russo-Ukrainian War, as well as what the cartels are doing along the United States’ southern border, reinforce this. The traditional model of deploying a single or a few Reaper drones for targeting strikes is rapidly becoming economically and strategically outdated. Instead, US SOF should focus on scaling up both the quality and quantity of consumer and hybrid drones. Describing these systems as merely disruptive would be an understatement; their impact is revolutionary, driven by these drones’ mass deployment and sophisticated networking.

Criminals and violent non-state actors have quickly recognized and exploited the potential of these systems, often using basic technology in innovative ways and prioritizing outcomes over procedural adherence. SOF can adopt a similar approach by leveraging the narco-trafficking model for rapid-cost effective prototyping – a strategy already aligned with SOF’s acquisition philosophy. As major global powers continue incorporating commercial technologies into their militaries, the United States must also explore, experiment with, and develop capabilities to deploy, manage, and sustain these unconventional technologies. Given the benefits of drone technology, SOF appears ideally positioned to capitalize on the creativity and ingenuity initiated by insurgents and criminals.

Dr. Robert J. Bunker is currently a senior fellow with Small Wars Journal-El Centro, an instructor with the Safe Communities Institute at the Sol Price School of Public Policy of the University of Southern California, and a managing partner at C/O Futures, LLC. Dr. Bunker is an expert on Mexican cartel, insurgent, and terrorist weaponized drone use and has written extensively on future war and conflict. He has over 700 publications and has been involved in the writing and/or editing of fifty books and reports, including Terrorist and Insurgent Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Use, Potentials, and Military Implications.

Main image: A quad copter drone flying over the road with a car in the background (Photo by Matthew Henry from Freerange Stock)

The views expressed are those of the author(s) and do not reflect the official position of the Irregular Warfare Initiative, Princeton University’s Empirical Studies of Conflict Project, the Modern War Institute at West Point, or the United States Government.
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ESG Bully BlackRock Is Funding China’s Nuclear Weapons, Forced Labor, Report Finds​

CRAIG BANNISTER | MAY 3, 2024

Despite boycotting U.S. energy firms in the name of its Environment, Social, and Governance (ESG) ideology, BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, is funding China’s U.S.-sanctioned military companies, producers of nuclear weapons and forced-labor enterprises, a new report reveals.

In the U.S., BlackRock discriminates against companies that don’t comply with the radical left’s ESG agenda, which it claims promotes social good.

But, in reality, the multinational corporation managing $10 trillion across five continents funds companies in China that build up the hostile communist regime’s nuclear weapons arsenal and those that enslave and abuse workers, according to a Coalition for a Prosperous America (CPA) “Case study for Congress” detailing how Wall Street’s offshore companies fund the Communist Chinese Party (CCP) and People’s Liberation Army (PLA).

By the numbers, the report quantifies BlackRock’s investments in military aggression and social-rights abuses:

  • BlackRock invests in 29 subsidiaries of Chinese Military-Industrial Complex (CMIC) companies presently under Treasury Department sanctions.
  • BlackRock’s subsidiary in Hong Kong (an administrative region of the People’s Republic of China) holds $130 million of stock in 14 Chinese Military-Industrial Complex companies that U.S. investors are prohibited from trading.
  • BlackRock funds own 18 Chinese companies on the Commerce Department’s Military-End User List or Entity List.
  • BlackRock has invested more than $50 million invested across four companies sanctioned under the bipartisan Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA) combating the systematic abuse and genocide of ethnic minorities in Xinjiang Province.
  • BlackRock has nearly $200 million dollars invested in two companies (China National Nuclear Power and CGN Power) that help produce nuclear warheads capable of striking the continental United States.


The report calls out BlackRock for its ESG “double standard,” noting that the mammoth multinational asset manager claims to support social justice and denies contributing to the proliferation of nuclear weapons:

“BlackRock states that social issues cover human capital management and impacts on the communities in which a company operates, yet it ignores forced labor and genocide in northwestern China by funding business entities sanctioned under the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act.”

“BlackRock says it excludes companies involved in the production of nuclear weapons and related delivery systems pursuant to its “environmental, social, governance” (ESG) standards. The reality is that BlackRock holds stock in Chinese companies pursuing an aggressive buildup of nuclear warheads meant to hold United States territory at risk.”
BlackRock’s ties to China have intensified ever since CEO Larry Fink visited China and met with the communist country’s government officials, after which BlackRock has increasing advised and supported the authoritarian regime’s initiatives, the report explains.

Read CAP’s full report here.

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