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From drone swarms to exoskeletons, Army charts path for robotic future
Drone swarms, automated convoy operations and an exoskeleton to lighten the load are on the horizon.
By Todd South
Air Force eyes Legion of Merit for drone crews, and maybe someday the Distinguished Flying Cross
The Air Force is mulling whether to award the Legion of Merit to drone pilots and sensor operators for the first time.
By Kyle Rempfer
Bolton: US troops staying in Syria until Iran leaves
U.S. will keep a military presence in Syria until Iran withdraws its forces, says Trump national security advisor.
Bullet’s bold blueprint to save Navy aviation
Air Boss is committed to ending the era of the 'frankenfighter.'
T-6s resume flying at Randolph
The 12th Flying Training Wing at Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph resumed flying its T-6A Texan II trainers on Friday morning, three days after a crash prompted its fleet to be grounded.
Metal, the military, food and nerddom: A one-on-one chat with Trivium’s Matt Heafy
Growing up with a Marine father impacted the metal star's approach to music and every other facet of his life.
By Jon Simkins
The Big E keeps costing the Navy big bucks
Officials announced Monday that the Navy will pay an additional $34 million to the Huntington Ingalls Newport News shipyard to keep mothballing the world’s first nuclear carrier and prepare its hull for towing elsewhere.
By Mark D. Faram
Navy IDs sailor who died after being struck by a propeller on the aircraft carrier Bush
Navy officials have identified the sailor killed onboard the aircraft carrier George H.W. Bush on Monday.
By Mark D. Faram
Putin seeks to defuse downing of Russian plane off Syria
A Russian reconnaissance aircraft was shot down by Syrian forces responding to an Israeli airstrike, killing all 15 people aboard, in what President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday was “a chain of tragic accidental circumstances.”
Fashionably late, Queen Elizabeth arrives in Norfolk
Sporting her distinctive twin islands on the flight deck, “Big Lizzie” arrived a bit late but had a good excuse — the flattop was dodging Hurricane Florence.
By Mark D. Faram
Air Force chief: Light attack is about more than hardware, it’s a boon for intelligence networks
When a nation wants to join the United States in operations against insurgent forces, a light-attack plane — coupled with an information networking package — is what the U.S. Air Force can offer them.
By Kyle Rempfer