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ShinyHunters claims to have stolen data from 400 firms via Salesforce portals and is threatening to leak the information unless ransom demands are paid.
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China-linked hackers targeted Qatar using fake war news lures to spread PlugX backdoor malware and spy on military and energy sectors.
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The Senate has confirmed President Donald Trump’s pick to lead Cyber Command and the National Security Agency in a dual-hatted capacity, giving the signals intelligence and hacking titans their first permanent leader in almost a year.
Gen. Joshua Rudd was confirmed in a 71-29 vote on Tuesday, three months after he was nominated to the position. NSA and Cyber Command have been without a permanent leader since far-right activist Laura Loomer pushed for the firing of the post’s previous occupant, Gen. Timothy Haugh, last April. Since then, Lt. Gen. William Hartman has led the agency in an acting capacity.
On Monday, the first procedural hurdle to Rudd’s confirmation cleared in a 68-28 vote. The nominee to lead Cyber Command and the NSA usually moves through the Senate without such a vote, but Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., bypassed a hold from Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., to confirm Rudd after Wyden pledged to block the nominee over concerns about his experience.
“The country needs an NSA director with experience in U.S. signals intelligence activities around the world. General Rudd does not have that experience,” Wyden’s written floor remarks said.
Rudd comes from a less traditional background than past military leaders who have led the two organizations. Up until now, he served as the deputy commander of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, and has spent his career largely in special operations and joint command roles. Some former officials and China analysts view Rudd’s Indo-Pacific background as relevant to U.S. cyber operations involving Beijing.
In his nomination hearings, he told senators that his experience consuming and acting on cyber intelligence qualifies him to serve in the position.
“I’m confident that the incredible talent at Cyber Com-NSA will provide great advice,” Rudd told the Senate Armed Services Committee in January. “I’m confident that, if confirmed, I can continue to lead and enable those two organizations to provide the best support to our combat commanders in the joint force, writ large.”
As director, he’ll be the face of some of the nation’s most secretive electronic spying activities. In April, a powerful foreign spying tool used often by NSA, Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, will expire unless renewed by lawmakers.
“What I’ve experienced in my career is that this provides the warfighter, the decision-maker, [with] the ability to have critical insight into threats that enables decision making,” Rudd told members of the Senate Intelligence Committee in a separate January hearing when asked about 702. He said he knows the law has “saved lives here in the homeland.”
The upcoming midterm elections are also top-of-mind for observers of the intelligence agency and digital combatant command. Both units have played a major role in protecting the nation from foreign interference attempts on election outcomes.
But over the last year, the Trump administration has closed or shrank many agencies and offices that track election threats, including the Office of the National Cyber Director’s Foreign Malign Influence Center and the FBI’s Foreign Influence Task Force. Trump has long been a skeptic of the intelligence community, especially due to its assessments that concluded Russia sought to help him win the 2016 election.
“The electoral process is fundamental to our democratic values, and Americans writ large, and I’ve committed throughout my career to serve to defend and uphold those values,” Rudd told the Senate intelligence panel. “Any foreign threat to the electoral process should be viewed as a national security concern.”
He will also have to contend with declining morale inside NSA, as well as workforce cuts that were influenced by Trump 2.0 efforts to shed government bloat and spending waste.
“General Rudd is a war hero with a lifetime of service to our nation. He is the right choice to lead the protection of our nation from cyberattacks by Iran, Russia, and China,” Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, said in a statement after Rudd was confirmed.
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Cybersecurity researchers are calling attention to a new campaign where threat actors are abusing FortiGate Next-Generation Firewall (NGFW) appliances as entry points to breach victim networks. The activity involves the exploitation of recently disclosed security vulnerabilities or weak credentials to extract configuration files containing service account credentials and network topology
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Apparent Russia-linked hacking collectives backing Iran have been observed joining the cyber activity unfolding alongside the U.S.-Israel war against Iran, though analysts have mixed views on whether their involvement represents a meaningful escalation or little more than online noise.
The outlook on such “hacktivist” groups — hackers who attempt to penetrate systems and steal information for political activism — comes days after The Washington Post reported that Russia is supplying Iran with intelligence to help target U.S. forces in the Middle East and adds another dimension to the already complex cyber and information environment surrounding the war.
One well-known pro-Russia group dubbed “NoName057(16)” recently claimed massive distributed denial-of-service attacks against Israeli defense contractors and also claimed to have gained full access to the human-machine interfaces of Israeli water management systems, said Kathryn Raines, a cyber threat intelligence team lead at cybersecurity firm Flashpoint. But company analysts have not verified these claims, she said.
Distributed denial-of-service hacks, known colloquially as “DDoS” attacks, overwhelm websites with large amounts of artificial internet traffic to stop legitimate users from accessing them.
CrowdStrike has similarly observed a surge in pro-Iran hacktivists with ties to Russia. In the first few days after the war broke out on Feb. 28, one Russia-aligned hacktivist group the company dubs “Z-Pentest” claimed responsibility for compromising several U.S.-based entities, said Adam Meyers, the company’s head of counter adversary operations.
Those claims are also unverified, though “Western organizations should continue to remain on high alert for potential cyber response as the conflict continues and activity may move beyond hacktivism and into destructive operations,” he said.
The United States has long supplied Ukraine with intelligence and equipment to strike Russian targets within its borders. Now, as the war unfolds in Iran, Moscow could be seizing its own opportunity for retaliation by aiding Tehran.
“Russia is comfortable providing some proxy support to Iran, or at least taking advantage of an unstable situation,” Cynthia Kaiser, a former deputy director at the FBI’s Cyber Division, said in a LinkedIn post this weekend. “Expect exaggeration, but don't dismiss the underlying access. These groups regularly inflate the impact of their attacks for media attention. But they have caused real physical damage to critical infrastructure. Calling their bluff shouldn't mean ignoring the threat.”
“Russia has a variety of partner engagements with Iran that could prompt Moscow to get involved in the conflict, particularly if Russia perceives that U.S. military operations dragging out would further pull the White House’s focus from Ukraine,” said Justin Sherman, founder and CEO of Global Cyber Strategies, a Washington, D.C.-based research and advisory firm.
The Kremlin’s vast and complex cyber ecosystem allows it to leverage state elements, hired or coerced cybercriminals and patriotic hackers encouraged by propaganda to pursue its goals, Sherman said, explaining that “one of the benefits of Russia’s cyber web for the state is how the Kremlin can pick and choose its actors and capability sets as it pleases, depending on its needs.”
In a recent case, Russian state-backed groups initiated a massive global campaign targeting the Signal and WhatsApp accounts of officials, military personnel and civil servants, Dutch intelligence said Monday.
But Sherman said that attributing Russian-origin cyber operations is complex, and that analysts should try to examine which parts of Vladimir Putin’s government may have authorized an operation to better understand how Moscow would be aiding Iran in cyberspace.
Some are skeptical that Russia sharing targeting intelligence would translate directly into cyber support for Tehran.
“Russia providing intelligence assistance to the Iranian government to support kinetic strikes, and the idea of Russian cyber actors as implied by the conventional use of the phrase — i.e., those with a nexus to the Russian state — ‘joining the cyber aspect of this conflict’ are two very different things,” said Alex Orleans, a former National Security Council contractor and head of threat intelligence at Sublime Security.
“I have not encountered Russian APTs inserting themselves into a conflict to support a third-party and I’d be surprised if they did now,” he said, referring to “advanced persistent threat” groups that are typically well-resourced, highly skilled and backed by a nation-state.
Other analysts have not publicly attributed any hacktivist activity to a particular nation.
“While we have observed some initial hacktivist groups supporting the Iranian regime, these activities are in the very early stages. There is currently no clear indication that this is being directed by a state actor like Russia or Iran, and it remains difficult to verify,” said John Fokker, vice president of threat intelligence at Trellix. “That said, in any geopolitical conflict, it is common practice for involved countries to provide aid in various forms.”
Iran’s cyber capabilities have likely diminished in recent days, said Dave DeWalt, CEO of NightDragon, a venture capital firm that manages a portfolio of cybersecurity companies.
“We’ve been monitoring almost every actor and every indicator of compromise that we possibly can, and we've seen next to zero activity … and that’s largely because we believe that most of their cyber operations have been dismantled physically,” he said in an interview.
Israel said last week it destroyed Iran’s cyberwarfare headquarters, though it’s not immediately clear how much effect that’s had on its cyber operations.
“We’ve seen little activity from [Iran] globally, that doesn’t mean that it’s completely dismantled,” DeWalt said. “I don’t have full confirmation, but I would tell you it certainly looks like no other case I've seen in 20 years, where we’ve seen such silence in the digital world from [Iran].”
Asked about whether China and Russia are sharing capabilities with Iran at this point, he said those nations may be keeping their distance, but there’s possible sharing of satellite, electronic warfare and radar-jamming services. “I would not be surprised at all,” he said.
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Cybersecurity researchers have discovered a new malware called KadNap that’s primarily targeting Asus routers to enlist them into a botnet for proxying malicious traffic. The malware, first detected in the wild in August 2025, has expanded to over 14,000 infected devices, with more than 60% of victims located in the U.S., according to the Black Lotus Labs team at Lumen. A lesser number of
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A year after Secretary Pete Hegseth launched a hasty effort to reduce the Defense Department’s civilian workforce by up to 61,000 people, employees are reporting gutted offices, lower productivity, and pervasive uncertainty.
“The climate, at least in my immediate organization, has shifted from fear to stress,” said an Air Force civilian who spoke with Defense One. “The fear of imminent [reductions-in-force] is not something we talk about much anymore because, while the threat of it persistently looms in the air, it is not in our best interest to constantly worry about it. Frankly, I'm too exhausted to keep thinking about it.”
All of the DoD civilians who shared their thoughts for this story requested anonymity to prevent retaliation by their employer.
Within weeks of taking office last January, Hegseth ordered voluntary and involuntary cuts, along with a partial hiring freeze that forced managers to rescind untold numbers of job offers—untold because Pentagon officials have refused to say how many of those positions disappeared in the process. The freeze has also blocked the movement of thousands of employees to new roles, although some are now moving via a cumbersome exemption process.
In total, nearly 110,000 of the department’s roughly 795,000 civilians departed last year, about 80 percent more than Hegseth’s goal. Some 30,000 jobs deemed essential to national security were subsequently re-filled.
Those numbers come from a Daily Wire story that Pentagon spokesman Jacob Bliss forwarded as a response to eight questions about the cuts and their effects. Bliss and other spokespeople did not respond to follow-up requests to answer the remaining questions.
The Office of Personnel Management’s workforce data confirms that DoD’s civilian workforce sits at just above 694,000.
Bliss declined to say whether there is a planned end to the hiring freeze; to provide examples of job titles that have been downgraded or merged in accordance with Hegseth’s March 28 directive; and to explain what, if anything, the department has done to address loss of productivity.
According to Pentagon data obtained by the Daily Wire, 14,606 of last year’s departures were involuntary. One of the department’s first moves was to dismiss 5,400 probationary employees—generally, people on the job for less than a year—for purported “performance issues.” Lawsuits delayed but ultimately did not block these firings, although a judge compelled Pentagon leaders to admit that the “performance” rationale was a lie.
In September, Hegseth signed another memo laying out a path for the quick firing of “low performers.” Bliss declined to say how many employees have been pushed out under that framework.
Then there were the voluntary resignations: 94,835 in total, according to the Daily Wire. That included 49,991 through the Deferred Resignation Program, which allowed employees to leave their jobs while being paid through the end of the fiscal year. This number is several thousand below the 55,000 figure provided to Defense One at the end of September.
Another 6,600 long-serving employees took an early-retirement offer: some 6,100 by August and the rest later in the year.
‘Beginning to drop primary functions’
“I would say overall the DoD civilian policies over the past year have resulted in degraded performance and capability downgrade overall due to the loss of critical skill sets,” one department civilian said of the resignations, adding that the vacated jobs in his shop have largely remained unfilled or been converted to dual-status Title 32 National Guard jobs.
That has increased wait times and decreased IT services to the Pentagon organizations that depend on his shop, the civilian said
With the hiring freeze now entering its second year, the civilian held out little hope that any of the lost capability will be restored.
“There are a lot of unfilled positions that will remain vacant for the foreseeable future. For the most part, managers know not to ask for new staff,” the civilian said. “I would not say processes are becoming more efficient. Probably the reverse, with a lot of offices reducing hours and services.”
The Air Force civilian described his office’s manning shortfall as “severe,” with just one in three civilian core-operations staff remaining.
“My small organization has been hit disproportionately hard and is beginning to drop primary functions because we can no longer support them,” he said.
His organization’s leaders have asked for exemptions to replace lost workers, but they’ve gone unanswered or been denied.
“Morale is as low as I can remember in the three-plus years that I've been there, primarily due to being overworked with just a 1 percent raise in salary for FY2026,” the civilian said. “The end-of-January bonuses announced by Hegseth have not materialized.”
Trapped overseas
For civilians working overseas, the ongoing hiring freeze has added another wrinkle: They largely can’t return to the U.S. unless they take a demotion or leave their jobs.
Every permanent change-of-station move, which is treated as a new hire, requires an exception-to-policy signed off by a military department head or equivalent leader, meaning that department civilians who may have signed on to take a promotion overseas with the intent to return stateside in a few years are effectively trapped.
The Pentagon is only hiring for specific positions, which include jobs related to public safety, immigration enforcement, and technicians at shipyards and depots. The department has hired 29,347 people who fall into those categories, according to the data provided to the Daily Wire, but an overseas civilian who wants to move back stateside for one of those exempted positions still has to have an exception-to-policy approved.
“I only know of one that was approved and it took nine months just to approve the ETP,” an Army civilian told Defense One.
The Army has created a sort of workaround for this problem. The Department of the Army Voluntary Reassignment Program is a repository of resumes posted by civilians who are interested in a transfer. Offices with open positions can search them for a possible candidate, but only if it would be a lateral move—no promotions are allowed, and they still require the Army secretary to approve an exception to policy.
The only other option is to exercise one’s return rights, an emergency out for employees who began their careers stateside before taking a position overseas. But that means reverting to their previous job, even if it’s a demotion and a lower pay grade.
“Part of Russ Vought's plan to make federal employees miserable as a whole, it seems,” the Army civilian said, alluding to the Office of Management and Budget director who, during the Biden administration, made speeches about his desire to put federal workers “in trauma.”
One in three federal employees works for the Defense Department—as of Thursday, 707,378 of the 2,074,649-strong federal workforce. Even so, DOD bore an outsized share of last year’s Trump-administration cuts, losing two of every five federal jobs eliminated, according to a recent Government Accountability Office report.
That means forty percent of the departed workers had been directly supporting the military.
“We are all collectively stereotyped as the proverbial lazy admin assistant at the local DMV, without realizing a large chunk of DOD civilians are in remote locations, in harm’s way, part of the intelligence apparatus—or in my case, 20 kilometers from the [Demilitarized Zone between North and South Korea] undergoing the exact same challenges and living conditions as our uniformed counterparts,” the Army civilian said.
Still, the Army civilian said, there is some optimism—that the Pentagon’s trajectory will become unsustainable and require a correction, whether it’s during this administration or the next.
“I believe in time the machine will break and then the situation will improve, but until then, we work with what we have and hope our servicemen and women do not pay the price because we cannot support them sufficiently,” he said.
The Trump administration has sent mixed signals. Continuing to reduce the size of the federal government and its workforce remains “priority number one,” Office of Management and Budget Deputy Director for Management Eric Ueland said March 5 at a government efficiency conference in Washington. But: “We probably have some skills that we now need to hire back, quite frankly,” Scott Kupor, the head of the Office of Personnel Management, told the Washington Post, which adds that the new hiring push “is unfolding under new rules designed to give the White House greater influence over the government’s 2 million-person civilian workforce.”
The question also remains whether Hegseth’s cuts have actually streamlined department processes. Pentagon officials have declined to say what came out of the secretary’s March order giving his senior leaders less than two weeks to submit proposals to shrink and reorganize their commands, agencies, and departments.
And last May, when the acting Pentagon personnel chief withdrew the much-derided requirement that civilian employees submit a weekly list of five things they did, he told everyone to send him a suggestion to “improve Department efficiency or root out waste.”
Bliss declined to say which, if any, of those suggestions have been implemented.
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US-Israeli war on Iran, day 11: Trump, Hegseth send conflicting messages to the world about the end of war on Iran. In a press conference after markets closed Monday, President Donald Trump told reporters at times contradictory information about the future of his joint war with Israel against Iran that has rattled the global economy and sent oil prices soaring.Latest: “Today will be yet again our most intense day of strikes inside Iran,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Tuesday at the Pentagon.
“We've already won in many ways, but we haven't won enough,” Trump said to Republican lawmakers Monday in Florida. “We're achieving major strides toward completing our military objective,” he told reporters later in the day. “And some people could say they're pretty well complete. We've wiped every single force in Iran out, very completely.”
Shortly before those remarks and while the markets were still open, Trump told CBS News, “I think the war is very complete, pretty much…If you look, they have nothing left. There's nothing left in a military sense.” U.S. stock indexes climbed sharply after his remarks, and the price of oil eventually fell to around $92 per barrel by Tuesday morning after reaching a high of $119 on Monday.
Rewind: On Sunday evening, Hegseth said, “This is only just the beginning,” in an interview with “60 Minutes” of CBS News. “But this is not a remaking of the Iranian society from an American perspective,” Hegseth said. In Iraq and Afghanistan,” “a lot of foolish approaches were used. This is war. This is conflict. This is bringing your enemy to their knees. Now, whether they will have a ceremony in—in—in Tehran Square and—and—and surrender, that's up to them.”
Hegesth’s Defense Department sent a similar message to the world on Monday afternoon, declaring on Twitter, “We have Only Just Begun to Fight.”
Trump was asked about the two different answers Monday evening. “You said the war is ‘very complete.’ But your defense secretary says ‘this is just the beginning.’ So which is it?”
Trump replied: “You could say both. The beginning. It's the beginning of building a new country,” he said, and noted, “As we speak, they're being hit.” He then noted three developments administration officials have begun emphasizing this week amid allegations of strategic incoherence. “When you think about it, it's incredible. We wiped out a big navy, very powerful navy,” Trump said Monday. “The Air Force is gone, everything's gone. The missiles are down to a trickle. The drones are down to probably 25 percent and they'll soon be down to nothing. We'll have the—where they manufacture the drones are under fire.”
After a week in which White House officials gave at least 10 different reasons for going to war against Iran, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, like Trump, listed three objectives on Monday as well. “The goals of this mission are clear,” he said, “and it’s important to continue to remind the American people of why it is that the greatest military in the history of the world is engaged in this operation: It is to destroy the ability of this regime to launch missiles, both by destroying their missiles and their launchers; destroy the factories that make these missiles; and destroy their navy.”
On Tuesday morning, Hegseth added his own, slightly different take: the U.S. is fighting to destroy Iranian missile capabilities, destroy the Iranian navy and “permanently deny Iran nuclear weapons forever,” he said at a Pentagon press conference. Defense One’s Meghann Myers has more from that, here.
Tehran’s response to the conflicting U.S. messaging: “Iran will determine when the war ends,” a spokesman for the Revolutionary Guards said Monday. Another Iranian general claimed, “We are prepared for ten years of war with the United States. At least ten years.” And the country’s deputy foreign minister alleged, “Iran has upper hand in war [and] will decide when it ends.”
Related reading: “Iran Isn’t Winning This War,” But it might if the U.S. stops the bombing due to higher oil prices, the Wall Street Journal’s editorial board argued in a commentary Monday.
Update: The first two days of the Pentagon’s Iran strikes cost $5.6 billion in munitions, the Washington Post reported Monday, citing three U.S. officials. “The estimate, shared with Congress on Monday, raises new questions about the Trump administration’s broad dismissal of lawmakers’ concerns that the Iran operation is quickly eroding the U.S. military’s readiness,” Noah Robertson writes.
Two more media outlets report video evidence strongly suggests the U.S. military attacked an elementary school on the war’s first day, killing more than 150 people, including children: The New York Times and the Associated Press joined earlier reporting from Bellingcat and Reuters, which arrived at a similar likelihood after consulting video forensics and—in the case of Reuters—preliminary results of an internal Defense Department investigation of the incident. The school was located beside an Iranian military base in southern Iran, and that base was one of the earliest targets in the war beginning Saturday, Feb. 28.
- Here is what is reportedly the last photo of Mikaeil Mirdoraghi, a third-grade student killed in the airstrike.
- “UN experts strongly condemn deadly missile strike on girls’ school in Iran, call for independent investigation,” the United Nations announced Friday;
- “US/Israel: Investigate Iran School Attack as a War Crime,” Human Rights Watch said in a statement Saturday;
- See also: “The Pentagon Cut Its Civilian Safeguards Before the Iran War,” via Missy Ryan, writing Monday for The Atlantic.
Trump was asked about the school attack Monday, and even though the U.S. military is the only one in the conflict deploying Tomahawk missiles, the president seemed to suggest Iran may have used the missile observed moments before impact. “Whether it's Iran or somebody else, the fact that a tomahawk, a tomahawk is very generic. It's sold to other countries. But that's being investigated right now,” Trump said. AP called his allegation of Iran’s use of Tomahawks “erroneous.”
“We take things very, very seriously and investigate them thoroughly,” Defense Secretary Hegseth told reporters Tuesday when asked about the school strike.
Survey says: Most Americans still oppose the Iran war. “Even the highest level of public support for this conflict falls far lower than that at the start of most other conflicts, including World War II, the Korean War and the Iraq War,” the New York Times reported Tuesday. The gist: “So far, polls have found that most Americans oppose the Iran attacks. Support ranges from 27 percent in a Reuters/Ipsos poll to 50 percent in a Fox News poll. The wide variation suggests that public opinion is still taking shape as more Americans learn details of the attacks and the aftermath.”
Investor reax: “The risk of a 1970s scenario is rising,” one portfolio manager told Reuters Monday in an economic report on the risks of stagflation similar to the energy crisis that affected the U.S. and allies after Israel’s 1973 Yom Kippur war.
Latest: Saudi Arabia's Aramco warned of “catastrophic consequences” if oil shipping through the Strait of Hormuz is paused much longer. “While we have faced disruptions in the past, this one by far is the biggest crisis the region's oil and gas industry has faced,” CEO Amin Nasser said in an earnings call Tuesday, according to Reuters.
Analysis: Hormuz is unusually hard to defend, Axios reported Monday. “The Strait, which carries roughly 25% of the world's seaborne oil supply, is approximately 21 nautical miles wide at its narrowest point, but the designated shipping lanes are far smaller—concentrating traffic into predictable corridors for Iran to monitor and target adversaries.”
Commentary: “Take the win. Stop the war,” argues Will Walldorf, Wake Forest University professor and senior fellow at Defense Priorities, writing Monday in Defense One. “The American experience in Iraq, Libya, and Afghanistan have shown that taking out leaders is the easy part; it’s what follows that turns into a disaster,” he says.
Additional reading:
- “Markets bet that Trump will end Iran war soon despite threats from both sides,” Reuters reported Tuesday morning for its top story
- “Sinking Iran’s Frigate IRIS Dena and the Law of Naval Warfare,” which is a legal consideration of the March 4 Navy submarine attack on an Iranian ship, via Just Security writing Sunday;
- “Trump’s Iran options include special operations raid on nuclear sites,” Semafor reported Tuesday;
- “Drones hit the UAE as the country reports 2 new deaths,” AP reported Tuesday;
- “Gas price spikes are slamming Senate battleground states,” Axios reported Tuesday;
- “Trump Advisers Urge Him to Find Iran Exit Ramp,” the Wall Street Journal reported Monday;
- And “Trump’s War in Iran, and Rising Gas Prices, Collide With Midterm Agenda,” the Times reported Monday.
Welcome to this Tuesday edition of The D Brief, a newsletter focused on developments affecting the future of U.S. national security, brought to you by Ben Watson with Bradley Peniston. It’s more important than ever to stay informed, so we’d like to take a moment to thank you for reading. Share your tips and feedback here. And if you’re not already subscribed, you can do that here. On this day in 1987, Iran attacked three Kuwaiti ships as part of the Tanker War.
Around the Defense Department
Hegseth presses Defense civilians to deploy for immigration enforcement. The U.S. military is reupping its request for civilian employees to deploy to the southwest border to assist with immigration enforcement operations, with supervisors now facing a stronger push to solicit their staff to sign up for the details, Eric Katz of Government Executive reported Monday. The memo is dated Feb. 19, more than a week before the U.S. and Israel began the war in Iran, though it was delivered to employees on Monday.
Hegseth encouraged “all who are interested” to volunteer for the detail, calling the work “vital to the national security of the United States.” According to an Army official, “With the potential for increased numbers of migrants in the interior of the United States territory and across the southwest border, [the Department of Homeland Security] needs volunteers to assist in its commitment to ensuring a safe and orderly immigration system.” Katz notes, “It was not immediately clear why the number of migrants entering the country could potentially increase—the Trump administration has consistently boasted that it has slashed the number of individuals illegally entering the country to record-low levels.”
“We all think it’s absurd,” one civilian said. The timing of the new push seemed to be a “bad look,” the person added, given the war the U.S. is currently waging against Iran. Continue reading, here.
The U.S. military says it killed six more people in its 45th known strike targeting alleged drug traffickers off the coasts of Latin America. The latest strike occurred Sunday as the vessel transited “known narco-trafficking routes in the Eastern Pacific,” officials at Southern Command said in a statement Sunday.
Notable: Critics have likened the strikes to a campaign of extrajudicial killings, and the administration has yet to share evidence supporting its claims that those aboard the boats were in fact trafficking drugs when they were killed. The New York Times maintains a tracker from the ongoing strikes, here.
Anthropic sues DOD, Hegseth, other federal agencies. The AI company that was recently declared a “national security risk”—even as its tools were reportedly being used to plan strikes on Iran—filed suit on Monday with the U.S. District Court in the Northern District of California. The lawsuit “asserts that the government's actions after this disagreement—primarily the designation of the company as a supply-chain risk and alleged violations of its right to due process through a lack of ‘core requirements’ such as ‘adequate notice and a meaningful hearing’—constitute illegal retaliation,” reports Nextgov’s Alexandra Kelley. Read on, here.
New science on heat is changing the future of soldiering. “The U.S. military has been studying the effects of heat on troops for almost a century, dating to the 1927 establishment of the Harvard Fatigue Laboratory at the military's request. Still, soldiers’ and commanders’ approach to core physical tasks—think timed runs, strenuous outdoor activity, or environmental exposure—lags the growing body of science about heat risks, sometimes by years or decades. That may finally be changing under new initiatives to expand research into human performance,” reports Defense One’s Patrick Tucker, here.
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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has narrowed the U.S.’s objectives in Iran to three, scrapping President Donald Trump’s recent calls for “unconditional surrender” and a “great and acceptable leader” to replace the assassinated Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
The U.S. military is entering day 11 of its campaign to destroy Iranian missile capabilities, destroy the Iranian navy and “permanently deny Iran nuclear weapons forever,” Hegseth said at a Tuesday press briefing at the Pentagon.
Asked about the White House’s quickly shifting timelines—Trump said on Monday that “the war is very complete”—his defense secretary hedged.
“So it’s not for me to posit whether it's the beginning, the middle, or the end,” Hegseth said. “That's his, and he'll continue to communicate that.”
The war isn’t “endless, not protracted, we’re not allowing mission creep,” he said, adding that Tuesday will be the “most intense” day of strikes inside Iran yet.
So far, the U.S. has hit more than 5,000 targets, including dozens of 2,000-pound bombs dropped on underground missile launchers, said Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
“We also have struck several one-way drone factories to get at the heart of their autonomous capability,” Caine said at the press conference. “And of course, alongside our regional partners along the southern flank, continue to execute intercepts against one way attack drones using fighters and attack helicopters.”
Iranian ballistic missile attacks are down 90 percent and drone attacks down 83 percent, Caine said, giving same figures as U.S. Central Command boss Adm. Brad Cooper gave at a press conference last Thursday.
Asked about Israel’s strikes on Iranian oil facilities, Hegseth said, “that wasn't our necessary objective,” but added that Israel is not leading the U.S. deeper into war.
“The president has made clear to those concerns that we're not getting pulled in any direction,” Hegseth said. “We're leading. The president is leading. He's determining where we want to go, what the outcome will be, what the end state is, with a very keen eye.”
After Trump accused the Iranian military Monday of using a Tomahawk missile to strike a girl’s school on Feb. 28, Hegseth reiterated that the U.S. is investigating the incident.
“No nation takes more precautions to ensure there's never targeting of civilians than the United States of America,” he said.
However, Hegseth last year gutted a congressionally-mandated Pentagon office that sought to reduce civilian harm in U.S. air strikes, created in response to thousands of civilian deaths during the campaign against ISIS in Iraq and Syria.
“From the boat strikes in the Caribbean, where every single strike is assessed, to this campaign here, no nation in history of warfare has ever attempted in every way possible to avoid civilian casualties, and frankly, that's a point that just isn't appreciated enough,” Hegseth said.
However, experts have questioned the legality of the administration’s attacks on suspected drug smuggling boats, determining that the people on board are indeed civilians until Congress authorizes military action against suspected drug cartel activity.
Asked what the administration’s next steps will be after achieving its goals in Iran, Hegseth offered no specifics about Iran’s future leadership or any future deals that would control its ability to rebuild its conventional or nuclear weapons capabilities.
“Ultimately, the aftermath is going to be in America’s interests,” he said.
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A recent research paper describing the training of an experimental AI agent has started a discussion after the…
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