• A new agentic-AI tool will continuously scan intelligence feeds and operational networks to provide U.S. military commanders with targeting options “within seconds,” the Pentagon announced Thursday.

    Dubbed Agent Network, the new tool will employ “agents”—artificial-intelligence entities that perform tasks on behalf of a user, such as running a scheduled search or executing an email campaign—to “continuously scan defense intelligence and operational systems, translating findings into clearly presented options,” said a press release, which added: “Agent Network does not autonomously select or strike targets; it ensures commanders remain in charge of every decision.”

    It is one of seven “pace-setting” projects originally unveiled in January along with a new Pentagon AI strategy. Key contractors in the Agent Network effort include Lumbra and Palantir, which already handles much targeting analysis through its Maven Smart Systems contract.

    But expectations for what agents can currently do may be running ahead of reality. “Tasks that AI agents are instructed to perform can clearly have computational complexity beyond” what current large language model architectures can handle, Vishal Sikka—a former CEO of SAP—wrote last July.

    Citing the seminal Time-Hierarchy Theorem, Sikka noted that transformer models approach difficult tasks and simple ones using the same mechanical formula. These models can only perform so many operations per “token,” which is the way large language models understand word concepts. Even dealing with seemingly simple concepts can require a large number of tokens. Because of this limitation, there is no way to get a transformer-based model to not hallucinate when the task that you give it is more complex than it has tokens to bring to that task.

    “Despite their obvious power and applicability in various domains, extreme care must be used before applying LLMs to problems or use cases that require accuracy, or solving problems of non-trivial complexity,” Sikka concluded.

    But Illia Pashkov, founder of SINT Labs and editor of The Agent Times, cautioned against underestimating agents’ potential. 

    “Agentic AI quietly stopped being a demo this year,” Pashkov said. “It's drafting code, clearing support queues, grinding through back-office work in finance and healthcare, and now it's reading intelligence. The speed is not hype. I've watched these systems compress weeks of analyst work into an afternoon.”

    But their capabilities also bring risks—more than people accustomed to working with common AI chatbots might realize. Private-sector companies that have rushed to put AI agents to work are already seeing problems, Pashkov said, pointing to a company whose agent wiped a live production database. Unless carefully implemented, agents can’t tell when they’re going wrong.

    “The danger was never a dumb agent; it's a confident one running without a leash, a logbook, or a human who owns the call,” he said. 

    A host of Defense Department offices and teams are beginning to deploy agent systems, said one DOD intelligence security official who is not directly affiliated with the Agent Network program. The official described an atmosphere of enthusiasm. 

    “There are so many opportunities to leverage the DOD Enterprise capabilities and allow people to build their own agents,” they said.

    But the official allowed that keeping track of how every agent is performing is a major challenge. Governing all of them will be nearly impossible.

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  • Subj: Systemic Vulnerabilities and Strategic Overextension: Takeaways from the Recent Western Asian Conflict

    Comrade, As requested urgently for your upcoming briefing to the Central Military Commission, I respectfully offer this preliminary strategic analysis regarding the ongoing military conflict involving the United States and Islamic Republic of Iran.

    While the current leader of the American Hegemon, President Donald Trump, has publicly expressed a desire to place this war in the "rearview mirror," our nation and the People's Liberation Army cannot afford such comforting illusions. Neither, in truth, can the Americans themselves. Grounded in dialectic principles and systems-confrontation analysis, this report distills five primary analytical breakthroughs from the conflict. 

    Together they validate our present strategy, while demonstrating growing—and exploitable—weaknesses and mistakes of the United States.

    1: Technical Masters, Strategic Amateurs

    Any rigorous analysis of American combat employment confirms that they remain shackled by ideological blindness and a cognitive flaw: the United States remains a master of the tactical, but an amateur at the strategic.

    Throughout the campaign, the U.S. military conducted complex operations of immense sophistication, scale, and diversity. These merit our respect and provide certain models for further study. 

    But as has been the case in multiple conflicts across multiple decades, the adversary conflates the kinetic with the realization of political objectives. U.S. leaders measure progress and now claim victory based on numeric localized indicators—the total number of sorties, or physical targets struck, or the death of specific high-value leaders. In reality, none of these tactical actions yielded an outcome in which the hegemon met their various stated political goals for initiating and then sustaining the conflict. 

    Moreover, this conflict has led to a net diminution of global American power, which is the only measure that truly matters. In each of the dimensions of our competition—political, economic, military, diplomatic, informational, and cultural power—the American leaders end the conflict with lesser freedom of decision, reduced resources, and new problems. Even the once-overwhelming personal influence of their leader is now openly challenged in new ways inside their political system—an asset to us in future diplomatic and trade negotiations. 

    In sum, American strategic culture continues to possess no coherent mechanism for translating explosive energy into strategic victory.

    2: America’s Growing Strategic Isolation

    The conflict showed the growing vulnerability within the enemy's coalition architecture, characterized by the hegemon’s disinterest in and inability to maintain genuine alliance harmony. The United States possesses allies, but its current leadership repeatedly and overtly demonstrates that it fundamentally does not value them. 

    This conflict extended a longstanding pattern of hegemonistic unilateralism. Washington failed to consult its regional client states before launching destabilizing actions, leaving those allies exposed to retaliatory strikes without adequate protective systems. This has led governments in the region, but also those beyond, to question the value of these client relationships. Furthermore, when many of the hegemon's most longstanding partners outside of the region exercised their sovereign judgment and declined to participate in what they correctly assessed as a strategic mistake, U.S. leaders repeatedly attacked them, politically and personally. Current American leadership seems more focused on manifesting itself as a security threat rather than friend and protector. 

    Each of these factors is now exploitable in our diplomacy and information operations, as further evidence of a broader trend of American unreliability and unpredictability. We no longer have to create disunity; they do so themselves. 

    The same failure to appreciate alliances was mirrored at the operational and even tactical military level. 

    Western military observers have rightly discussed the emergence of a “learning complex” that has been built between ourselves, Russia, Iran, and Democratic People's Republic of Korea, in which not just weapons, but intelligence, tactics, and doctrine lessons are exchanged. 

    The value of this approach was acutely demonstrated on the battlefield. Iranian forces operationalized the latest in Russian tactics and technology, imported from the Ukraine theater, and fused them with intelligence insights provided by our forces and deniable corporations. By using sophisticated, wave-saturated drone strikes paired with decoy systems, the Iranians on multiple occasions defeated or bypassed air-defense networks, causing massive damage to bases and critical infrastructure, each of which had strategic effect. 

    Many of these tactics and technologies had been exhibited in other conflicts for over a decade, most particularly in Ukraine. Yet the U.S. military demonstrated a profound lack of preparation for them, and their doctrinal rigidity and arrogance cost the lives of numerous American soldiers.

    The Americans’ failure to adapt is all the more striking because they have an extensive presence in each of these conflicts: military, intelligence, and defense industrial connections to one and sometimes both sides. This illustrates not just the American institutional inertia in adaptation, but also their failure to appreciate and use their relationships with other experienced militaries. The Americans often seemed to operate in a vacuum, as if contemporary lessons of conflict and the experiences and insights of their partners did not even exist.

    3: The New Math of War

    The adversary fails to comprehend the changing objective laws of modern informationized and increasingly intelligentized warfare, and their connection to the realities of modern defense-industrial supply chains. 

    The U.S. political and military apparatus boasts of hitting an astounding 13,000 targets. Yet the cost to do so, measured in munitions alone, averaged $4 million apiece. 

    Their defensive posture suffered from a similar, and fatal, structural cost asymmetry. The Americans routinely engaged mass-produced, low-cost assets, such as $20,000 drones, using multi-million-dollar interceptors designed for high-end fighters and even ballistic missiles. 

    The American way of war is unsustainable in not just cost but capability. The conflict showed that the adversary’s interceptor inventory is dangerously shallow and exposed. The United States expended an estimated 150 of its THAAD rounds, of which it is believed to have had 190 to 290. At their purchasing rate of 12 new THAAD interceptors per fiscal year, replacing a single month of conflict consumption will require more than 12.5 years of uninterrupted industrial output. Even before the conflict, these numbers were insufficient compared to the capability of the PLARF.

    This structural deficit is mirrored across their entire defensive apparatus. The Patriot system rests at a current inventory of 1,060 to 1,430 (against an objective of 2,330); each missile costs $3.9 million. The naval SM-6 is limited to 190 to 370 units (against an objective of 1,160); it costs $5.3 million apiece. The critical SM-3 theater interceptor is restricted to a mere 130 to 250 units (objective: 410), at a prohibitive unit price of $28.7 million. 

    U.S. leaders, who framed victory by offensive munitions fired, burned through their stockpiles of precision-guided munitions and advanced strike missiles. At current production rates, it will take them until 2030 to restore their pre-war inventory of Tomahawk cruise missiles. 

    The high expenditure rate is also another facet of their failure to appreciate their now-fraying alliance commitments. For instance, Japan's order of 400 Tomahawks will now be delayed, while Patriot missiles were moved away from defending allies and American bases in the Pacific. 

    There are two larger takeaways for our strategy from the American inability to keep pace with the appetite of their self-created demands.

    First, while they trumpet a revitalized defense industrial base, now driven by social-media-technology oligarchs, their defense industrial complex still remains fundamentally beholden to the forces of short-term market profit rather than comprehensive national power and state resilience. They simply lack the surge production capacity to sustain the high-intensity consumption their way of war requires. 

    But even more, by forcing their system into an early war of attrition against a secondary power, the Americans have severely compromised their strategic depth and readiness for any future high-intensity confrontation elsewhere, for at least a half decade. 

    Both points validate the correctness of our Rocket Force’s doctrine of saturated strike capabilities designed to comprehensively paralyze the Americans’ and their client states’ defensive architectures.

    4: Self-Inflicted Cognitive Warfare 

    The conflict reinforced other areas of our theory of victory in any confrontation with America. Most notably, it revealed that the U.S. is uniquely vulnerable to cognitive warfare. In fact, America now appears to specialize in conducting these psychological and information operations against itself.

    The rationale behind the Iran conflict remains in great dispute across the American political system and society, with equal confusion and debate about its starting goals and even its termination point. For-profit social-media companies and the American political media apparatus have constructed insulated information bubbles that feed their audiences whatever outcome they most want to be validated by. To different audiences, the conflict is simultaneously a historic triumph and a glaring disaster. 

    Exacerbating these internal contradictions is a growing preoccupation with domestic culture wars at the expense of coherent strategic execution of real wars. Nor has this phenomenon been mitigated by various attempts at providing a circus of public entertainments that do not seem to be providing either unity or distraction. 

    In a parallel to the dynamics of U.S alliances, we no longer need to create disunity. While U.S. actions validate our investments in cognitive warfare, they may render them less necessary than when first envisioned, as none of the above was achieved through Iranian or our own cognitive-warfare operations during the recent conflict. The American’s own internal information and ideological fracturing severely degrades their strategic willpower and opens them to further exploitation.

    5: Strategic Pressure Points 

    Nothing highlights this more than what the American political-military-media-entertainment complex chose to celebrate as the war’s greatest triumph: not battles won or geopolitical repositioning, but the rescue of a single pilot

    To review the operational facts, a mythologized, vanguard American asset was easily ambushed and neutralized by Iranian air defenses, which had supposedly already been defeated, in part due to our learning complex. The downed American pilot was then extracted via a massive, exorbitantly expensive rescue operation. A force of 155 aircraft, including 64 fighters, 48 refueling tankers, 13 rescue aircraft, and four nuclear-capable strategic bombers, as well over 100 of the most elite of US special operators were put at risk. Multiple helicopters and drones were then damaged or lost. The fiasco concluded with American forces being compelled to abandon and destroy two of their exorbitantly expensive, rare special-operations aircraft. In a striking display of strategic hubris meeting reality, these $130 million symbols of imperialist intervention ended up hopelessly mired in the mud of Iran.

    Unimaginable in our system, the fate of this lone pilot personally occupied the attention of every single member of the American national senior leadership for an entire day. In a world where leader time is the most finite of resources, perhaps this is an even more condemnable use of resources amid a war. This stems from their anxiety that the fate of a single nameless individual would entirely shatter their domestic illusion of absolute military supremacy and determine their nation’s perceptions of overall victory or defeat. Based on their behavior and how their political system operates, they were correct in this judgement.  

    The recovery of the pilot subsequently extolled by their national media and claimed as a both great and personal victory by President Trump. He claimed the chain of tactical losses, operational waste, and strategic misattention showed the U.S. to have “the best, most professional, and lethal Military in the History of the World.” Extending their cognitive campaign into the long term, it was then announced a few days later that it will be made into a Hollywood movie. It is no coincidence that it will have the same director as the movies Pearl Harbor and 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi, both of which similarly sought to rewrite embarrassing American defeats as stories of heroic success and moral superiority.  

    The episode is instructive, and not just in how Americans reframed what any other nation would view as a tactical defeat into a strategic and “historic” victory. It illustrates a critical dialectic in American political and military culture. While callous about a conflict that saw thousands killed across the region, they care about their own people to the point of desperation, treating the survival of individual personnel as a metric of absolute strategic value. 

    To CCP leadership, the situation reveals clear strategic pressure points for future crisis behavior, treatment of allied populations, and likelihood of accepting high-intensity conflict. For PLA operational planning, the adversary's extreme aversion to casualties and their obsession with personnel recovery can be easily weaponized, so as to paralyze their tactical, theater-level, and national command decision-making. It can also be a means to deter or draw out and destroy high-value enemy assets.

    CONCLUSION

    The results of the American conflict against Iran do not mean that we would inevitably win a war against them. But they do demonstrate that we are winning the war for the future itself.  

    ==============

    Addendum: After this memo was reprinted in the American media, Pentagon leadership issued a response:

    "This memo supposedly from Beijing is exactly the kind of over-intellectualized, administrative trash we are actively scrubbing out of the Department of War. Some armchair theorist wants to lecture us on 'the dialectic' and 'cognitive traps' while his own state-controlled echo chamber ignores reality. Let me make one thing crystal clear to the communists in Beijing: we do not measure the success of an American combat operation by spreadsheet metrics or the profit margins of globalist supply chains. We decimated 13,000 threats, neutralized their command nodes, and we did it with the most lethal, unapologetic display of raw power the world has seen in a generation.

    "The bean-counters trying to use inventory arithmetic as an excuse for strategic timidity are fundamentally miscalculating how a superpower fights and wins. We did this from a position of absolute strength, leading with unmatched military might. Any suggestion that our defense industrial base is too fragile to sustain high-intensity operations is unhelpful, foolishly overstated, and fails to appreciate the sheer, adaptive scale of American manufacturing when it is fully unleashed. 

    "If anyone thinks he found a 'strategic pressure point' because we executed a massive, high-risk mission to rescue our downed pilots, he is a fool. He calls it a weakness that we blew up our own gear to protect our people. That isn’t a flaw—that is the sacred bond of the American warrior ethos, and it’s something a communist bureaucrat who views his own soldiers as expendable state property will never understand. We will spend whatever it takes, fire whatever interceptor is required, and push forward with absolutely no quarter and no mercy to bring our boys home. 

    "As for his pathetic attempt to lecture us on internal 'culture wars,' he's late to the punch. The days of a woke, risk-averse Pentagon distracted by bureaucratic summits and diversity seminars are over; under this administration, we have systematically re-centered our entire military apparatus around a singular, deadly purpose: winning wars. While China and its buddies in Russia try to build an 'authoritarian learning bloc' out of cheap, attritable drones, they are fundamentally miscalculating the sleeping giant they are poking. We are rebuilding our defense industrial stockpiles with pure, unadulterated American manufacturing scale. Beijing can keep writing its comfortable memos and analyzing our internal politics all they want, but the moment they try to step into the breach, they will find out exactly what happens when the full, unfiltered power of the American war machine, led by our greatest President, is unleashed on them."

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  • The Security Service of Ukraine (SSU) said it, together with the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), uncovered a long-running campaign orchestrated by Russian intelligence services to break into the messaging accounts of government officials, military personnel, politicians, and activists in Ukraine, Europe, and the U.S. The systematic cyber attacks aimed at stealing sensitive

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  • OpenAI on Friday released three versions of GPT-5.6, called Sol, Terra, and Luna, as a limited preview to a small number of companies as part of an ongoing engagement with the U.S. government. While Sol is the latest flagship model and the most powerful, Terra strikes a balance between efficiency and power, and Luna is fine-tuned for speed and affordability. “GPT‑5.6 Sol launches with our most

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  • Anthropic has officially restored access to its Claude Mythos 5 artificial intelligence model for a select group of U.S. organizations tasked with defending critical national infrastructure. This reinstatement ends a two-week suspension that began on June 12, 2026, which prompted direct, high-level engagement between the AI developer and federal authorities. Access to both Claude Mythos […]

    The post Claude Mythos 5 Redeployed to Help U.S. Organizations Strengthen Cyber Defense appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.

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  • A critical cloud storage attack technique that exploits a fundamental architectural vulnerability shared across all major cloud service providers. The technique, dubbed cloud bucket hijacking, allows attackers to silently redirect active data streams, including audit logs, telemetry pipelines, and sensitive objects, to attacker-controlled storage environments with minimal risk of detection. Discovered by security researchers at […]

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  • A critical Local Privilege Escalation flaw has been uncovered within the Linux kernel, allowing unprivileged local users to seamlessly gain root access by manipulating the system’s page cache. This vulnerability, designated as CVE-2026-43503, represents a severe gap in the XFRM/IPsec subsystem’s packet-processing path that bypasses earlier mitigations. By exploiting this flaw, attackers can execute a […]

    The post Linux Kernel DirtyClone Vulnerability Lets Local Attackers Gain Root Privileges appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.

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  • A critical security flaw discovered in the Amazon Q Developer Extension for Visual Studio Code (VS Code) left developers vulnerable to arbitrary code execution and cloud credential theft. Tracked as CVE-2026-12957 and CVE-2026-12958, these high-severity vulnerabilities highlight significant risks in how AI coding assistants manage trust boundaries. The root cause of this vulnerability lies in […]

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  • Compare 8 top SAST tools for polyglot monorepos, covering incremental scans, ownership, custom rules and platform engineering at scale 2026.

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