an hours drive north of montgomery, alabama. they say it started with an argument that turned into a gunfight at the mahogany master pissed dance studio during a sweet 16 party. so far though there is no word on the suspect or the suspect who did this. arthel: i m sorry eric, let s go to charles watson right now. he has live in dadeville with the very latest on this. what more can you tell us? good afternoon arthel and eric. not a lot of confirmed information to go off of from police. within 12 hours after this trip recorded mass shooting happened. still chasing down details as you can probably see behind me authorities are still out at the crime scene of the reported mass shooting take place. investigators have worked through the night and relate through the morning combing through evidence and trying to figure out what exactly hap happened. i stepped out of the shot you can see a lot of the focus has been on this brick building. in fact a few moments ago, less than an hou
Advances in technology have made aircraft carriers vulnerable to enemy fire once again. Anti-ship missiles can now reach and challenge the air defense of an aircraft carrier group. This development could change the face of war in a potential conflict between the U.S. and China in the Indo-Pacific.
China's People's Liberation Army Rocket Forces (PLARF) possess the DF-26B intermediate-range ballistic missile, known as the "Guam Killer," capable of reaching U.S. facilities on Guam.
The DF-26B allows China to target US Navy warships operating near regions China considers to be within its sphere of influence. This capability means that all those expensive US Navy warships notably aircraft carriers will be vulnerable to attack from the DF-26B. The DF-26B carries the nickname “carrier killer.”
Chinese military spokesmen have neither confirmed nor denied the expansion of the ICBM force, and the authors of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists chapter on China acknowledged the opacity of the PLARF: "Analyzing and estimating China s nuclear forces is a challenging endeavor, particularly given the relative lack of state-originating data and the tight control of messaging surrounding the country s nuclear arsenal and doctrine." Beijing has never officially revealed warhead numbers, and its opacity regarding its nuclear capability is legendary.