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The Pentagon plans to buy 30,000 one-way attack drones this month, but the military’s ability to repair or even build drones on the battlefield could make or break operations in modern conflicts.So when Dan Magy, the CEO of Firestorm, first told me in December about a mobile industrial-grade 3D printing shop inside a shipping container, I needed to see it for myself. And I did, a couple months later on a rare rainy day in San Diego.
The entire setup felt like walking into a field lab—white floors, ceilings, and walls draped in vinyl sheets—and smelled like brand new toys just ripped out of the package. There’s a giant computer that shows renderings of what’s to be printed. A table displayed a smorgasbord of what was made—neck braces, satellite antenna, splints, drone arms, and what could only be described as a giant wrench.
“You hit print and then you come back in six to 12 hours and you're done,” Magy said. “When you want to move it, this processing station will roll and then these two sides roll up, and then you can just ship it. And then it takes about two hours to redeploy. So you just pull it up, and away you go. Put it on a boat, a plane.”
The HP printers are massive, like two coffins stacked on top of one another, and set up in a climate-controlled container, called XCell, which can be broken down and assembled in a few hours. This particular mini factory is two 20-foot units connected, measuring just shy of 1,200 square feet, and includes a chamber to clean and remove particle dust from the 3D prints.
“It's an advanced manufacturing line,” Magy said. “We were using [the HP printers] already to make our drones. Then we were asked by the end user to figure out how to put this in a box so we could build stuff where we need it, as opposed to waiting 18 months for resupply on drones.”
Firestorm is building a library of the most in-demand items for battlefield and humanitarian use, while also working with the government to create an easily searchable database for computer aided designs the military might need.
“A lot of these are parts that the end users have either designed or asked us to build because the supply chain can't sustain them. Remember, there's no Pep Boys or AutoZone in defense. You can't go to the store. So we're building things like engine coolant pans,” Magy said. “Now, you don't need to ship all these components. We'll just have libraries full of things we can print” at a much cheaper rate.
It’s a growing field gearing up to match the military’s need to deploy drones by the thousands.
“The military has looked at expanding the use of 3D-printed parts in everything from Humvees to rocket motors and hypersonics. There's also a big upside for organic maintenance depots…if the military can print its own 3D parts in the field, that cuts down on maintenance costs, reduces equipment downtime, and increases overall capacity at the depot,” said Shaun McDougall, a lead defense analyst for Forecast International.
Magy said the next year is about expansion, including printing with other materials beyond the current nylon composite and designing their own medical products, such as knee braces.
“What you're going to see over the next year is a dramatic expansion in advanced manufacturing capabilities we're going to be containerizing. We think this covers a part of the pie. We want to expand,” he said.
Welcome
You’ve reached the Defense Business Brief, where we dig into what the Pentagon buys, who they’re buying from, and why. Send along your tips, feedback, and song recommendations to lwilliams@defenseone.com. Check out the Defense Business Brief archive here, and tell your friends to subscribe!
Drones in the USA. The Pentagon wants to buy more than $1 billion in small drones in less than two years—while simultaneously making sure those drones are free from China-made parts and subcomponents. And the first big test starts this summer.
- Travis Metz, the Pentagon’s Drone Dominance program manager, told the Senate Armed Services Committee last week that while all drones it delivers to troops are compliant with current legal bans on certain foreign-made small UAS, the plan is to be “more prescriptive than the NDAAs in terms of not allowing various components to be included in the systems that we procure, with the long term goal of building a drone supply chain that is American.”
- “We'll be placing orders in August for Phase Two. We will not be allowing any Chinese batteries and motors in Phase Two, in addition to other restrictions that we'll be imposing that are above and beyond the current statutory restrictions,” Metz said.
- The Pentagon wants to order 30,000 drones in the coming days, after a recent tech competition at Fort Benning, and at least another 50,000 in August after the next competition phase, Metz said. The goal is to deliver 300,000 by 2027 and keep that pace for a few years.
AI “copilots” on submarines. Despite the age of the Navy’s fleet of attack submarines, the service is focused on inserting the latest tech when it can, said Vice Adm. Richard Seif, commander, Naval Submarine Forces.
- “So, today we have 48 attack submarines,” which are a mix of newer Virginia-class submarines, and older Seawolf and Los Angeles-class submarines, some of which are “over 30 years old,” Seif told the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission.
- “Today, we have over a dozen submarines that have, really, state-of-the-art algorithms. We call it a copilot for AI/ML. Anywhere you have a lot of data and not a lot of analysts to look at the data just it screams for AI/ML, as an example,” Seif said.
- That ability to update submarines with new technology “underpins” deterrence, he said: “And so going forward, whether it's quantum, whether it's artificial intelligence, machine learning, or the new capability, or even unmanned systems, as we integrate those payloads, we’ll be fully ready to do that.”
One last thing: Check out this very cool image of the Civil War-era USS Monitor on the seafloor.
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Key refueling-related tests for the B-21 Raider are now underway, an Air Force spokesperson confirmed to Defense One, the latest milestone towards delivering the next-generation bomber by 2027.
On Tuesday, several open-source intelligence accounts and plane spotters posted images of a B-21 approaching a KC-135 tanker over California. One account cited flight radar data indicating that the tanker was from Edward Air Force Base’s 370th Flight Test Squadron. Other photographs and videos showed the bomber being followed by an F-16 fighter jet.
“We can confirm that a B-21 Raider flight test aircraft completed a test event involving a close-proximity flight with a KC-135 Stratotanker,” the spokesperson said in an emailed statement. “This flight is part of the ongoing, rigorous test campaign to validate the B-21's capabilities and operational readiness.”
The B-21’s latest appearance comes as President Trump’s war in Iran stretches into its second week and the U.S. Air Force’s current long-range bomber fleet continues to hit Iranian missile sites and other military infrastructure. The first Raider is scheduled to be delivered next year, but some defense experts said the program’s recent progress might mean key milestones will be hit sooner than anticipated.
“It's a great sign that, once again, what we've been hearing now for a few years is the program is on track and on time, maybe even ahead of schedule,” said Mark Gunzinger, the Mitchell Institute’s director of future concepts and capability assessments.
Gunzinger, a former B-52 bomber pilot, said the close approach of a B-21 to a tanker is a key preliminary step.
“When you have a new aircraft, you do proximity testing, you approach the refueling envelope, and you do that multiple times.” Gunzinger said. “You practice emergency breakaways from a tanker, which is a standard training event for all aircrew before you actually come in contact. So, that will likely progress until it's actually hooking up and unhooking, hooking up and so forth. And then they actually will pass fuel.”
Last month, the service reached a deal with Northrop Grumman to accelerate B-21 bomber production by 25 percent, using $4.5 billion approved for the effort in the 2025 reconciliation spending bill.
While the original plan was to spend that funding over five years, the Defense Department plans to allocate it all by October “if that can be done without sacrificing effectiveness,” a Pentagon planning document obtained by Defense One last month said.
Air Force officials said the service remains “on track” to deliver the first B-21 Raider in 2027 to Ellsworth Air Force Base, South Dakota, which will serve as the bomber’s first main operating base and formal training unit.
New tanker?
While the service prepares for a new bomber, a timeline for a new refueling tanker is less clear. The KC-135, seen refueling the B-21 by plane spotters, has been in service since the late 1950s. Last year, the Air Force weighed keeping the tanker in service past its originally planned 2050 retirement date.
Lt. Gen. Reba Sonkiss, the interim head of Air Mobility Command, told reporters last month that the service needs to seriously discuss what the future replacement for its aging tankers will be, given that they’ll be supporting next-generation airframes like the B-21.
“I cannot have a 90-year-old tanker refueling a B-21, and if you do the math, as we reach the end of programs for things, that’s the reality,” Sonkiss said during a Feb. 24 roundtable at the Air and Space Force Association’s Warfare Symposium.
Gunzinger said the KC-135 is capable of refueling a B-21, but agreed with Sonkiss’ point. The 1950s-era tanker was built with other conflicts in mind, and it needs key upgrades to stay relevant in a fight against a future adversary.
“I think that's a valid point. The Air Force's Global Strike Forces were designed to operate together back in the 50s and in the 60s,” Gunzinger said. “My point is KC-135 [was] never designed to be part of a secure communications network of the kind that you would want to operate in a conflict with China.”
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A hacktivist group with links to Iran’s intelligence agencies is claiming responsibility for a data-wiping attack against Stryker, a global medical technology company based in Michigan. News reports out of Ireland, Stryker’s largest hub outside of the United States, said the company sent home more than 5,000 workers there today. Meanwhile, a voicemail message at Stryker’s main U.S. headquarters says the company is currently experiencing a building emergency.
In a lengthy statement posted to Telegram, an Iranian hacktivist group known as Handala (a.k.a. Handala Hack Team) claimed that Stryker’s offices in 79 countries have been forced to shut down after the group erased data from more than 200,000 systems, servers and mobile devices.

A manifesto posted by the Iran-backed hacktivist group Handala, claiming a mass data-wiping attack against medical technology maker Stryker.
“All the acquired data is now in the hands of the free people of the world, ready to be used for the true advancement of humanity and the exposure of injustice and corruption,” a portion of the Handala statement reads.
The group said the wiper attack was in retaliation for a Feb. 28 missile strike that hit an Iranian school and killed at least 175 people, most of them children. The New York Times reports today that an ongoing military investigation has determined the United States is responsible for the deadly Tomahawk missile strike.
Handala was one of several Iran-linked hacker groups recently profiled by Palo Alto Networks, which links it to Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS). Palo Alto says Handala surfaced in late 2023 and is assessed as one of several online personas maintained by Void Manticore, a MOIS-affiliated actor.
Stryker’s website says the company has 56,000 employees in 61 countries. A phone call placed Wednesday morning to the media line at Stryker’s Michigan headquarters sent this author to a voicemail message that stated, “We are currently experiencing a building emergency. Please try your call again later.”
A report Wednesday morning from the Irish Examiner said Stryker staff are now communicating via WhatsApp for any updates on when they can return to work. The story quoted an unnamed employee saying anything connected to the network is down, and that “anyone with Microsoft Outlook on their personal phones had their devices wiped.”
“Multiple sources have said that systems in the Cork headquarters have been ‘shut down’ and that Stryker devices held by employees have been wiped out,” the Examiner reported. “The login pages coming up on these devices have been defaced with the Handala logo.”
Wiper attacks usually involve malicious software designed to overwrite any existing data on infected devices. But a trusted source with knowledge of the attack who spoke on condition of anonymity told KrebsOnSecurity the perpetrators in this case appear to have used a Microsoft service called Microsoft Intune to issue a ‘remote wipe’ command against all connected devices.
Intune is a cloud-based solution built for IT teams to enforce security and data compliance policies, and it provides a single, web-based administrative console to monitor and control devices regardless of location. The Intune connection is supported by this Reddit discussion on the Stryker outage, where several users who claimed to be Stryker employees said they were told to uninstall Intune urgently.
Palo Alto says Handala’s hack-and-leak activity is primarily focused on Israel, with occasional targeting outside that scope when it serves a specific agenda. The security firm said Handala also has taken credit for recent attacks against fuel systems in Jordan and an Israeli energy exploration company.
“Recent observed activities are opportunistic and ‘quick and dirty,’ with a noticeable focus on supply-chain footholds (e.g., IT/service providers) to reach downstream victims, followed by ‘proof’ posts to amplify credibility and intimidate targets,” Palo Alto researchers wrote.
The Handala manifesto posted to Telegram referred to Stryker as a “Zionist-rooted corporation,” which may be a reference to the company’s 2019 acquisition of the Israeli company OrthoSpace.
This is a developing story. Updates will be noted with a timestamp.
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US-Israeli war on Iran, day 12: An estimated 140 to 150 U.S. service members have been injured in Trump’s Iran war so far, multiple news outlets reported Tuesday, beginning with Reuters, then later Axios and CBS News.“Approximately 140 U.S. service members have been wounded over 10 days of sustained attacks,” a Pentagon spokesman said, and added that 108 of the wounded had already returned to duty.
Notable: “Reuters could not determine the types of injuries and whether they include traumatic brain injuries, which are common after exposure to blasts.”
Iranian missile and drone attacks have dropped significantly since the war began. Analysts at the Institute for the Study of War are documenting each day’s tally in an updated chart over halfway through their latest daily report, here.
At least 14 ships have been attacked in the Hormuz Strait, including three in the past several hours, Reuters reported Wednesday. The most recent vessels included a container ship, a dry bulk vessel and a bulk carrier. “While there have been some voyages through the waterway in recent days, the majority of shipping traffic remains on hold with hundreds of ships anchored,” the wire service reports.
And the U.S. Navy says it won’t escort ships through the Strait just yet because the waterway is still too dangerous, industry sources told Reuters, reporting Tuesday from London. That update came shortly after U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright claimed on social media the U.S. Navy had “successfully escorted an oil tanker” through the strait—but that wasn’t true, and Wright later deleted his tweet, which caused a brief selloff in the global oil market, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Developing: Iranian forces have allegedly begun mining the Strait of Hormuz, Jennifer Jacobs of CBS News reported. CNN later confirmed her report, citing two people familiar with U.S. intelligence on the matter.
President Trump responded by ordering a new boat-strike campaign for the U.S. military, this time for the waters around Hormuz—in addition to the arguably illegal operation that’s been underway off the coasts of Latin America since September.
“We are using the same Technology and Missile capabilities deployed against Drug Traffickers to permanently eliminate any boat or ship attempting to mine the Hormuz Strait,” the president wrote on his social media platform Tuesday afternoon, after deleting a confusing post on the matter from nearly two hours earlier. “They will be dealt with quickly and violently,” he said.
By midnight, the U.S. military said it had destroyed at least 16 Iranian mine-laying vessels on Tuesday alone, and released a 34-second video illustrating several of these strikes.
Global energy concerns are so great that “The IEA is expected to recommend the release of 400 million barrels of oil, the largest such move in the agency's history,” Reuters reported Tuesday evening. “Such a volume would be more than double the 182 million barrels released in 2022 following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.”
New: Iran’s military says it is now targeting banks across the Middle East that do business with the U.S. or Israel, and advised people in the region to stay at least 1,000 meters away from such buildings, al-Jazeera reports. Dubai could be at increased risk as it is “home to many international financial institutions,” France24 reports, noting separately Tuesday, “Two Iranian drones hit near Dubai International Airport, wounding four people though flights continue.”
Iran also claimed it will now target offices across the region associated with Google, Microsoft, Palantir, IBM, Nvidia, and Oracle for those firms’ alleged assistance with the U.S.-Israeli war effort.
After around 10,000 U.S. and Israeli strikes, Iranian officials still refuse to surrender, and are attempting to message their resolve in the face of almost two weeks of constant attacks. “Get ready for the oil barrel to be at $200 because the oil price depends on the regional security, which you have destabilised,” Iranian spokesman Ebrahim Zolfaqari declared Wednesday.
Notable: “Israeli leaders now privately accept that Iran's ruling system could survive the war,” and “Two other Israeli officials said there was no sign Washington was close to ending the campaign,” Reuters reported Wednesday.
Turkey has moved a Patriot air-defense system southeast, to the Kurecik NATO radar base, officials said Tuesday after the system was recently spotted on the move. That move comes after NATO forces shot down two Iranian missiles over Turkey in the past week.
And the Pentagon has begun cannibalizing air defense systems in the Pacific for its war with Iran, the Washington Post reported Tuesday. That includes “moving parts of a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system from South Korea to the Middle East” and “drawing from its supply of sophisticated Patriot interceptors in the Indo-Pacific and elsewhere to bolster its defense against Iran’s drone and ballistic missile attacks.”
The U.S. military is leaning heavily on AI during this war, Navy Adm. Brad Cooper said in a five-minute video message Wednesday. “These systems help us sift through vast amounts of data in seconds so our leaders can cut through the noise and make smarter decisions faster than the enemy can react,” Cooper said. “Humans will always make final decisions on what to shoot and what not to shoot and when to shoot, but advanced AI tools can turn processes that used to take hours and sometimes even days into seconds.”
Big picture: In launching their war on Iran, “there’s no doubt that the United States and Israel are in violation of international law,” Oona Hathaway, a professor at Yale Law School, told Isaac Chotiner of the New Yorker on Tuesday. She elaborates: “There’s the body of law that governs whether states can use force. And, here, there’s no doubt that the United States and Israel are in violation of international law, which provides that it’s only lawful to use military force against another state if it’s been authorized by the Security Council of the United Nations, or if a state is acting in its self-defense under Article 51 of the United Nations Charter. And that has to be self-defense against an armed attack or an imminent attack. And I think the consensus is that there isn’t enough evidence to support the self-defense claim. And the fact that this has not been authorized by the Security Council means it is in violation of international law.” Read the rest, here.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth read scripture from the Old Testament to reporters in the Pentagon briefing room yesterday, and he added “amen” to his recital of excerpts from the New International Version of Psalms 144—excluding a line at the end of verse 2 about subduing people, and finished with what appeared to be Hegseth’s own exegesis—atop a briefing with reporters Tuesday morning. These breaks from precedent for a Pentagon chief are extensions of Hegseth’s documented dabbling in Christian nationalism, which lawyer Dahlia Lithwick referred to as Pete’s “secret weapon,” writing Tuesday for Slate.
“Reinstituting American Christian nationalism as a lodestar of U.S. public policy was one of the guiding principles of Project 2025, and it continues to lead the Trump administration in 2026,” Lithwick writes after speaking with Rachel Laser, president and CEO of Americans United for Separation of Church and State. “But Christian nationalism reared its ugly head in the McCarthy era, when, in the 1950s, there was a series of civic religious advances that really laid the foundation for what we’re seeing now,” Laser explains. It also coincided with “a peculiar U.S. cowboy individualism” that arose in the 1950s when American right-wing ideologues “embraced a fantasy world in which a hero cuts through the red tape of laws and government bureaucracy to do what he thinks is right,” historian Heather Cox Richardson explained Sunday in tracing the roots of Trump and Hegseth’s Iran war.
“The administration’s approach to foreign affairs appears to be the logical outcome of two generations of a peculiar U.S. cowboy individualism,” said Richardson. “That image was fed by TV westerns that rose after the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision to portray a world in which dominant white men delivered justice to their communities without the interference of government. By 1959, there were twenty-six westerns on TV. In one week in March 1959, eight of the top ten TV shows were westerns.”
Richardson continues: “The idea of white men acting for freedom and justice on their own, unhampered by a government that served Black Americans, people of color, and women, became a guiding image for the rising right wing beginning with Arizona senator Barry Goldwater in 1964. It found a home in the Republican Party with Ronald Reagan in 1980, as supporters took a stand against a federal government they insisted was redistributing the tax dollars of hardworking Americans to undeserving minorities and women. That cowboy individualism spread into foreign affairs as well, until by 2003, right-wing talk radio host Rush Limbaugh could use it as shorthand to defend President George W. Bush’s military operation in Iraq,” with Limbaugh telling his audience Bush "distinguishes between good and evil” because “That’s what cowboys do.”
“You’re seeing it in this idea of fighting holy wars,” Laser told Lithwick, “I think maybe it’s most vivid with the so-called Department of War, where we’re seeing the secretary with a Christian crusade tattoo on his body, former Fox News host Pete Hegseth, initiating prayer services and inviting his pastor, Doug Wilson, to lead prayer services that are broadcast across the department.”
But like Richardson’s tracing of the cowboy mythology in U.S. foreign affairs, Laser also describes the rise of Hegseth’s Christian nationalism as a “reaction to massive demographic and social changes that have been happening in this country.” Over the past 15 years, she said, “We’ve seen the advent of marriage equality, the #MeToo movement, the Black Lives Matter movement—there’s just been a lot of change afoot, and we’re seeing a real backlash to that. So it’s not that Christian nationalism is brand-new, but it is strong, and it is raging.”
By the way: In May 2024, several top Trump officials met at the Army Navy Country Club in Arlington, Va., to sharpen military aspects of Project 2025. They called themselves the Border Security Workgroup. “These were people with extensive ties to Trump, military professionals supportive of Trump, and the white nationalist and Christian nationalist substrate that undergirded Project 2025,” investigative journalist Beau Hodai reported Tuesday. Their guidance: “Become experts on the Insurrection Act” so as to widen the president’s domestic use of the military, according to notes shared with Hodai from that meeting nearly two years ago.
“Records show the group considered using a variety of means to target a number of different groups, including certain non-governmental organizations, government agencies, judicial districts and a number of states or cities governed by the Democratic Party,” Hodai writes. “They also contemplated targeting college students who were protesting Israel’s actions in Gaza.” Other proposals “sought the integration of a number of law enforcement, intelligence, military and other government databases—to be data-mined by AI, an undertaking the Trump administration has since pursued.”
“The group also prepared several draft emergency declarations for Trump” to lay the groundwork for many of Project 2025’s goals. (Trump declared at least 10 emergencies in just the first seven months of his second term; most presidents declared an average of about seven per four-year term, the New York Times reported in August.) However, Hodai observes, “While many things called for by the Border Security Workgroup have transpired, events that have unfolded during this Trump term have not perfectly mirrored its plans,” thanks in large part to pushback from courts—e.g., in the case of deploying the military to U.S. cities like Chicago, Los Angeles and Portland. Read the rest, here.
Additional reading:
- “Explosions, Black Rain, and Dead Birds: Waking Up to War in Tehran,” Rolling Stone reported Tuesday;
- “Russia-linked hackers appear on Iran war’s cyber front, but their impact is murky,” Nextgov reported Tuesday;
- “Trump Says the Iran War Is Nearly Won but Israel Has Other Ideas,” the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.
Welcome to this Wednesday 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 a third tanker in as many days, and warned the Kuwaiti government not to seek protection from Washington or Moscow.
Around the Defense Department
A year into Hegseth’s cuts, defense civilians report ‘degraded performance’ and low morale. “The climate, at least in my immediate organization, has shifted from fear to stress,” said one 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.”
Rewind: 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. Defense One’s Meghann Myers has more from conversations with DOD workers, here.
INDOPACOM was all in on Anthropic. Now it’s working to adjust, Defense One’s Jennifer Hlad reported Tuesday from Honolulu. “I actually started thinking about this last September,” said Bob Stephenson, INDO-PACOM's resources and requirements director, speaking Monday at the Pacific Operational Science & Technology conference.
“We were working on a plan to be more model-neutral in our workforce. Now we’re just going faster,” he said in the wake of Trump’s order less than two weeks ago ordering federal agencies to stop using Anthropic’s Claude AI platform after the CEO refused to lift restrictions on its use for autonomous weapons or domestic surveillance.
On the other side of the world, in Central Command, Stephenson said, “They’re executing about 1,000 fires a day. That’s a lot. That’s what we think, that’s what modern warfare looks like. They’re working really hard to try to stay up with this, and they’re using some AI tools that actually worked well for us.” Continue reading, here.
Related reading: Five national-security law experts told Reuters Anthropic “appears to have a strong case that President Donald Trump's administration overstepped” by designating the firm as a supply chain risk. Worth the click, here.
NSA, Cyber Command get a permanent leader, ending 11-month gap. Gen. Joshua Rudd has spent his career largely in special operations and joint command roles. Senate confirms Josh Rudd to lead NSA and Cyber Command. Nextgov’s David Dimolfette reports, here.
Related reading: “US military contractor likely built iPhone hacking tools used by Russian spies in Ukraine,” Tech Crunch reported Tuesday.
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The Department of Homeland Security plans to install AI upgrades in 148 of its uncrewed camera towers on the U.S. border this year, and to add another 50 next-generation ones. On Wednesday, GDIT unveiled its pitch for the job: the Relocatable Autonomous Surveillance Tower.
GDIT, which provided 200 of the existing towers in Texas, invested its own funds in a bid to harness technological developments and win new contracts over rivals Anduril and Elbit. The company’s new towers have better sensors: longer-range cameras, electro-optical sensors, radar, and light detection and ranging, or LIDAR. They run on solar power rather than diesel fuel. And they have enough computing power to do image recognition on the scene, which eliminates the need to transmit full-fidelity video footage to human monitors. That means the towers can use satellite communications rather than point-to-point microwaves, which have lower bandwidth, so less communication.
“Border Patrol has to have a contract with someone to go out and fill up those diesel engines every, you know, every couple days,” Mike Wagner, GDIT’s vice president of biometrics, border, and transportation security, told Defense One. He also emphasized that the towers use commercial, modular components and a software architecture that allows for remote updating. “We don't know what the technology is going to be in three or five years. So having the ability to incorporate and quickly validate on our side that this new technology works and then roll it out to the field, that's a great advantage,” he said.
The AI Border Frontier
The Senate and the White House are currently in a pitched fight over the funding of DHS, with Democrats demanding stricter oversight of the department. However, increased funds for border security technology is a much less controversial subject. Funding has increased across both Democratic and Republican administrations, with a majority of Democrats agreeing to add funding for border security in 2024 as part of Biden’s “Border Act,” which ultimately did not pass.
Regardless of how the DHS budget showdown ends, the agency already has money to spend. Last July, Congress set aside $2.7 billion to upgrade surveillance technology along the northern, southern, and maritime borders as part of the "One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act."
But digital border surveillance isn’t as easy as it may sound. In 2006, then-Texas Gov. Rick Perry spent $5 million to install border cameras, stream the footage to the Web, and invite citizens to monitor them. But as the Texas Tribune observed three years later, traffic to the website dropped consistently; miles of empty border just aren't that interesting.
More recently, years of DHS tower deployments have produced mixed results. One reason is that DHS staffing hasn’t kept up with the increase in cameras, passive ground sensors, and other data collection systems, according to multiple GAO reports spanning several years.
Border professionals say that automated systems capable of alerting busy agents to threats or incursions are essential. “New autonomous solutions and autonomous enhancements to existing systems are therefore preferable and are expected to reduce the number of personnel required to monitor surveillance systems,” Customs and Border Protection noted in 2022.
Wagner says GDIT’s contribution is rooted in better training for AI systems regarding what actually constitutes an illegal crossing. This depends on how well the model understands the specific environment. “We found a provider of edge autonomous solutions that trained their models on: ‘Here in this terrain, this is a cow. This is a person. This is a person with a long rifle. This is a person with a backpack that's full of potential contraband.’ We train the models on what operationally has been seen on the border over the last 10, 20 years, and use that to really help with that identification part—detect, identify, then track.”
Importantly, multiple studies show that surveillance towers alone do not increase the rate of apprehensions. A 2020 Rand study found that the placement of towers in certain locations actually hindered the ability of agents to apprehend people, as crossers would go out of their way to avoid them (so longer ranges on the cameras and faster processing could help.) A 2025 study published in the journal Political Geography found that crossers who avoided surveillance zones doubled the amount of water loss they experienced by taking alternative routes.
While neither study speaks to the effect of AI-enabled towers that might make alternative routes non-viable, the point remains: it is becoming easier to monitor the entire border with fewer humans. What policy-makers then do with that new information is not a problem technology itself can solve.
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Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of two now-patched security flaws in the n8n workflow automation platform, including two critical bugs that could result in arbitrary command execution. The vulnerabilities are listed below – CVE-2026-27577 (CVSS score: 9.4) – Expression sandbox escape leading to remote code execution (RCE) CVE-2026-27493 (CVSS score: 9.5) – Unauthenticated
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Meta on Wednesday said it disabled over 150,000 accounts associated with scam centers in Southeast Asia as part of a coordinated effort in partnership with authorities from Thailand, the U.S., the U.K., Canada, Korea, Japan, Singapore, the Philippines, Australia, New Zealand, and Indonesia. The effort also led to 21 arrests made by the Royal Thai Police, the company said. The action builds upon
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UNC6426 hackers turned a routine NPM update into a direct path to full AWS administrator access in under 72 hours, highlighting how fragile CI/CD-to-cloud trust can become when roles are overly permissive. When a developer at the victim organization updated or installed the affected package via a code editor plugin, the postinstall script silently executed […]
The post UNC6426 Hackers Exploit NPM Package to Gain AWS Admin Access in 72 Hours appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.
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This week in cybersecurity from the editors at Cybercrime Magazine
Sausalito, Calif. – Mar. 11, 2026Fergus Hay is the CEO & co-founder of The Hacking Games, a recruitment tech platform that uses AI to identify gamers whose skills can be transferred to ethical hacking and cybersecurity roles.
Hay joined Cybercrime Magazine Podcast hosts Paul John Spaulding, Kyle Haglund, and Sam White on the latest episode of CTRL, ALT, HACKED to discuss his company, what inspired the creation of it, why ethical hackers are valuable, and more.
The Hacking Games is enabling the cybersecurity industry to hire unconventional talent to fill its labor deficit by using entertainment, social media and online communities to acquire GenZ talent, and a bespoke AI platform to skills match candidates to jobs.
“Built for the ones who never fit in” is The Hacking Games’ tag. If you’re young and don’t fit in, then you might want to explore a career in cybersecurity.
Cybercrime Magazine is Page ONE for Cybersecurity. Go to any of our sections to read the latest:
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The post The Hacking Games Is Recruiting GenZ Talent To Create A Generation Of Cyber Fighters appeared first on Cybercrime Magazine.
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