The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency helped develop some of the technologies that enabled the US to come out on top in the Cold War. Now, DARPA is in the middle of transitioning its effort to better match the “Long War,” the San Francisco Chronicle reports, helping to develop technologies that give US military forces the advantage in non-traditional and irregular combat. DARPA Director Anthony Tether told more than 3,000 scientists, businessmen, and military leaders gathered for the agency’s 50th anniversary conference in Anaheim, Calif., earlier this month that the agency needs to anticipate the challenges and develop the means to beat more adaptive and fluid enemies. Efforts being pushed include new aerial platforms that are designed not only to warn of threats but to destroy them by delivering what scientists called “ultra-precise effects” that could be launched from anywhere in the US with minimal harm to non combatants. (Readers may find copies of presentations here.)
How Miss America 2024 Took the Air Force Somewhere New
Dec. 20, 2024
When 2nd Lt. Madison Marsh became the first ever active service member crowned Miss America on Jan. 14, top Air Force officials recognized a rare opportunity to reach women and girls who otherwise might not consider military service as an option.