The Pentagon is Preparing for China’s ICBM Double Down
Tracking intercontinental ballistic missiles comes with its fair share of troubles.
The Pentagon wants to make sure it can track and take out enemy intercontinental ballistic missiles flying through space to the United States. This concern has been raised due to increasing global tension, the arrival of more low-yield tactical nuclear weapons, and the pace at which Russia and China are modernizing and expanding their respective nuclear arsenals.
The Pentagon is fast-tracking its new Next-Generation Interceptor (NGI) weapon intended to introduce a new paradigm for ICBM defense with advanced sensors able to better discern decoys and countermeasures from missiles and the possibility of firing multiple kill vehicles from a single interceptor. However, the new NGI is not slated to arrive until 2028 and the Missile Defense Agency needs to ensure that it can sustain a viable and highly effective Ground-Based Interceptor (GBI) for s
US Army finalises plans to decommission historic reactor : Waste & Recycling
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US Army prepares for IVAS operational testing
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Biden to return diverted border wall money, spend down rest
The new plan does not cancel the wall project outright, but it returns money the Trump administration diverted from the Pentagon budget to help pay for the wall. Author: BEN FOX (Associated Press) Published: 1:24 PM PDT June 11, 2021 Updated: 1:24 PM PDT June 11, 2021
WASHINGTON Former President Donald Trump’s signature border wall project would lose much of its funding as well as the fast-track status that enabled it to bypass environmental regulations under a Biden administration plan announced Friday.
President Joe Biden suspended construction of the wall upon taking office while his administration reviewed the project. That angered Republicans in Congress eager to see it go forward amid an increase in apprehensions of migrants along the southwest border.