Castelion confirmed plans to flight test the Blackbeard hypersonic missile from an F/A-18 fighter jet, following a US Navy contract awarded in February 2026.
The development program, managed by the Naval Air Warfare Center, aims to create an air-launched hypersonic missile exceeding Mach 5 to reduce the time available for enemy air defense systems to detect and intercept incoming strikes.
A Blackbeard hypersonic missile carried by the F/A-18 would introduce a strike capability with significantly higher speed and potentially longer reach than most munitions currently carried, reducing the reaction time available to defensive systems. (Picture source: Castelion)
U.S. Army Green Berets from 3rd Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne) recently demonstrated advanced reconnaissance, electronic warfare, and precision targeting capabilities during the Joint Pacific Multinational Readiness Center (JPMRC) 26-02 exercise across central and southern Alaska. Operating in extreme cold-weather conditions, the Special Forces teams worked alongside elements of the 11th Airborne Division to shape the battlefield for simulated large-scale combat operations. The exercise tested how small U.S. Special Forces detachments can locate enemy forces, disrupt communications, and provide targeting data for conventional units in Arctic terrain. U.S.
U.S. Army Green Berets assigned to the 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne) have completed an intensive three-week advanced drone training course at Fort Carson, Colorado, aimed at embedding small unmanned aerial systems directly into special operations tactics.
The program trained operators to build, modify, repair, and deploy tactical UASs (Unmanned Aerial Systems) while conducting reconnaissance and precision targeting in contested environments.
U.S. Army officials say the initiative reflects growing demand for highly adaptable drone capabilities within U.S. Special Forces teams operating in complex modern battlefields where real-time intelligence and low signature surveillance are critical.
A Green Beret from the U.S. Army’s 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne) performs pre-flight inspections on a small unmanned aerial system during the Advanced Drone Course at Fort Carson, Colorado, on February 19, 2026. (Picture source: U.S. Department of War) Read More
At Enforce Tac 2026 in Germany, Türkiye’s Archon Defense presented the Bullet modular tactical UAV developed by the Ukrainian company Degree Trans LLC.
The UAV is designed for interception, strike, and reconnaissance missions in contested environments.
Development reflects operational feedback from combat use in Ukraine and includes plans for joint production targeting NATO and allied defense procurement.
The Bullet drone can engage aerial targets, including reconnaissance drones, Shahed-type loitering munitions, as well as ground targets such as radar systems, air defense systems, rocket launchers, transport vehicles, and fuel storage infrastructure. (Picture source: Army Recognition)
A NATO E-3A Sentry airborne warning and control system (AWACS) aircraft has completed its first operational mission over Finland, escorted by three Finnish Air Force F/A-18 Hornets. The mission, announced on 3 March 2026, signaled a major step in Finland’s integration into NATO’s air defense and surveillance framework.
North American Aerospace Defense Command is using paired Canadian CF-18 fighters and U.S. Air Force F-35s in Alaska to rehearse cruise missile defense, a mission set that directly underpins North America’s ability to detect and defeat low-flying, long-range threats approaching through the Arctic.
On March 5, 2026, imagery released by U.S. Central Command on its official X account showed U.S. Air Force F-15 strike fighters loaded with four GBU-31(V)3/B JDAM bunker-busting bombs and an AIM-120 AMRAAM during ongoing sorties over Iran as part of Operation Epic Fury. In the accompanying message, CENTCOM stressed that “the U.S. Air Force continues to execute a high volume of airstrikes into Iran” and highlighted that the U.S. and Israel are dominating the skies of Iran.
U.S. Central Command confirmed on March 3 that U.S. Air Force B-1B Lancer bombers conducted long-range strikes deep inside Iranian territory the previous night as part of Operation Epic Fury, targeting ballistic missile facilities and command-and-control nodes linked to Iran’s missile forces. The strikes were supported by declassified operational footage showing bomber preparations and in-flight activity.
U.S. Southern Command has begun joint operations with Ecuador’s armed forces to dismantle cartel-linked “designated terrorist organizations,” injecting U.S.-grade intelligence fusion, aerial persistence, and precision-enabling support into Ecuador’s fight to regain control of critical ports, road corridors, and gang-dominated urban terrain. The move matters less for the small number of U.S.
Here's a snippet: [. . .] "The smartest trades of all came from a guy named Mike Wilson, who, along
with his assistant at Morgan Stanley, put order recommendations into
the chat.
When he did, folks would flood the group with screenshots of
their Wilson-directed wins and occasionally post their Wilson-advised
losses.
Wilson’s assistant would aid people in making their trades,
encouraging them to hold steady through the inevitable market
fluctuations.
Start-up capital is relatively low for those interested
in participating,” she wrote. “Stay tuned.”
Illustration by The Atlantic. Source: Sergei Supinsky / AFP / Getty.
The United States and Israel
took at least a month to prepare their attack on Iran, assembling the
largest arsenal of aircraft carriers and fighter jets that the Middle
East has seen in decades. But one gap in their planning became clear
during the first days of the war, as the U.S. and its allies used their
most advanced anti-aircraft systems to shoot down swarms of cheap,
easily replaceable Iranian drones.
The
flaws in that approach have seemed particularly obvious to the leaders
of Ukraine, who have more experience countering these drones than any
other country. In the fall of 2022, Iran sold the Kremlin designs for a
drone known as the Shahed-136, and Russia has since produced and
launched tens of thousands of them in its war with Ukraine.
An Ongoing Tradition
Since 1857, The Atlantic has been challenging assumptions and pursuing truth.
When the founders of The Atlantic gathered in Boston in the
spring of 1857, they wanted to create a magazine that would be
indispensable for the kind of reader who was deeply engaged with the
most consequential issues of the day. The men and women who created this
magazine had an overarching, prophetic vision—they were fierce
opponents of slavery—but they were also moved to overcome what they saw
as the limits of partisanship, believing that the free exchange of ideas
across ideological lines was crucial to the great American experiment.
Their goal was to publish the most urgent essays, the most vital
literature; they wanted to pursue truth and disrupt consensus without
regard for party or clique.
Why it matters: Trump has been pushing for a Netanyahu pardon
since last June, arguing that his trial on corruption charges — ongoing
since 2020 — is a "witch hunt" akin to the U.S. president's own legal
troubles.
President
Trump with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President
Isaac Herzog (left) at Ben Gurion International Airport near Tel Aviv in
October. Photo: Evan Vucci/AP
President Trump told Axios on Thursday that Israeli President Isaac Herzog must pardon Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu "today" — calling Herzog "a disgrace" for failing to act over the last year.
"Every
day I talk to Bibi about the war. I want him to focus on the war and
not on the f*cking court case. I want the only pressure on Bibi to be
the fighting against Iran," Trump said in a phone interview.
Why it matters: Trump has been pushing for a Netanyahu pardon
since last June, arguing that his trial on corruption charges — ongoing
since 2020 — is a "witch hunt" akin to the U.S. president's own legal
troubles.