Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

The war in Ukraine demonstrated that advanced U.S. munitions, such as GPS-guided Excalibur artillery shells, can be rendered ineffective by the electronic warfare capabilities of adversaries like Russia. This reveals a critical vulnerability in the U.S. arsenal, as many key systems rely heavily on GPS for guidance.

Related Insights

The Russia-Ukraine conflict demonstrates that the first move in modern warfare is often a cyberattack to disable critical systems like logistics and communication. This is a low-cost, high-impact method to immobilize an adversary before physical engagement.

While drones get the headlines, operators on the front lines in Ukraine identified Starlink as the most critical technology. This reveals that the foundational layer for future conflict is resilient, decentralized communication, which enables all other advanced systems to function in contested environments.

The shift to an electronic battlefield creates a "missing power layer." Traditional diesel generators produce detectable thermal and acoustic signatures, turning power sources into liabilities that can be targeted by the enemy, while fuel convoys present additional risks.

Iran's military is prioritizing attacks on radar infrastructure across the Middle East. This is a strategic move to neutralize the technological superiority of US and Israeli air defense systems like Iron Dome and THAAD. By blinding the enemy first, even less sophisticated attacks can successfully get through.

Contrary to fears of digital takeover, the US submarine-launched ballistic missile system is deliberately analog. Its primary navigation method is "star sighting"—an ancient technique—making it resilient to hacking and external digital control, a fusion of primitive and advanced technology for ultimate security.

The military is applying powerful AI software for intelligence and targeting, but the physical hardware—planes, missiles, and interceptors—was not designed for this new reality. This mismatch creates inefficiencies, such as using expensive Patriot missiles designed for jets to shoot down cheap drones, highlighting a hardware-software gap.

The intense signal jamming by Russia in Ukraine makes remotely piloted drones ineffective in the final phase of an attack. This has created a tactical necessity for drones that can autonomously complete their mission after losing their data link, accelerating the development of practical, on-board AI for target engagement.

Modern asymmetric warfare is less about ground skirmishes and more about economic attrition through missile technology. Adversaries use extremely cheap drones and mines to exhaust the multi-million-dollar missile defense systems of better-equipped powers, creating a lopsided cost exchange.

Ukraine is pioneering 'last mile autonomy' not as a strategic push for automation, but as a tactical necessity. When Russia jams the data link to a drone, the system can autonomously complete the final leg of its attack on a pre-identified target, countering electronic warfare.

Simulations of a conflict with China consistently show the US depleting its high-end munitions in about seven days. The industrial base then requires two to three years to replenish these stockpiles, revealing a massive gap between military strategy and production capacity that undermines deterrence.