News

Though each crisis is driven by different, home-grown causes, “the question of who controls the Red Sea and who will ...
A French Navy frigate shoots down a Houthi drone in the Red Sea, showcasing military response amid escalating tensions.- ...
Adm. James Kilby says expensive Red Sea missile defenses are not sustainable and calls on the military-industrial base to ...
Earlier this spring, the Navy unit launched a handful of unmanned vessels from Aqaba, Jordan, into the Red Sea with a ...
Sustaining high-tempo US Navy (USN) surface-ship combat operations in the Red Sea depends on proper maintenance of the ...
The French Navy ship used its 76mm main gun to neutralize an aerial threat coming from Yemen ...
Sailors with the Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group are celebrating an ancient story of liberation this week as they battle ...
Hostilities in the Red Sea underscore a serious problem facing the U.S. Navy: it’s burning through missiles faster than it can replace them.
James Kilby said he regrets the Navy’s reliance on expensive, high-powered missile interceptors to counter the Houthi threat in the Red Sea and pledged to push for cheaper, more efficient solutions.
A year-old Navy task group assigned to stress-test unmanned surface vessels in the forbidding heat of the Middle East is making breakthroughs — despite interference from hostile actors ...
The vessels deployed in the Red Sea, for example, are most likely variants of the Saildrone Voyager USV, a platform that has participated in Navy testing for several years. “Saildrone’s ...