• The U.S. Army and its NATO allies in Europe are honing their ability to to fight back against an incursion by throwing enough artillery at an enemy so stop them in their tracks for good, most recently during the annual Dynamic Front exercise with the Germany-based 56th Multi-Domain Command earlier this month. 

    The goal is to be able to shoot down 600 to 1200 ballistic missiles in a 24-hour period, the command’s boss told reporters Thursday, as well as be able to fire on 1,500 targets during that same time. 

    “We want to build a capability within the United States, within NATO, that if a peer adversary decides to aggress into NATO territory, or the territory of another ally, or the United States, that the repercussions will be so extreme, create an experience for them that is so unrelenting, that no nation ever considers doing that again,” said Brig. Gen. Stephen Carpenter.

    Dynamic Front allows the U.S. Army to not only look at its own capabilities, but to compare across NATO’s partner forces to see where there are gaps that need filling—whether it’s a need for an updated technology or just more of something that already exists.

    Cribbing an idea from Ukraine, the Army is looking at acquiring fleets of decoy drones to misdirect enemy fires, and to buy more high-altitude drones that can detect EW systems so they can be destroyed. 

    “Ultimately, what we'll do is we'll look to develop…a force where we have even more capable unmanned decoys, high-altitude and aerial collection platforms, both terrestrial and aerial platforms that can go ahead and affect the electromagnetic spectrum, and then obviously long-range interceptors and kinetic strike systems,” Carpenter said. 

    The command is also looking to protect itself from enemy EW technology that could jam up its ability to locate targets and fire on them.

    “How can we create munitions that have the electromagnetic hardening required based on what we're seeing in Ukraine?” he said. “And then getting that out to the defense industrial base to ensure that they can go ahead and create that capability and compete for those contracts.”

    With that in mind, next year Dynamic Front will merge with the Arcane Thunder exercise to game out a battlefield that combines the use of  non-lethal effects like EW jamming and lethal munitions in its simulations. It will be called Arcane Front.  

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  • SAN DIEGO, California—Boston-based Blue Water Autonomy aims to take its 190-foot robot patrol craft from prototype to production this year, joining a newly crowded field of startups and established players trying to get their unmanned surface vessels in front of U.S. Navy buyers, commanders, and operators.

    “Right now, the focus really should be on the suppliers” so the Navy can “see the performance of these vessels,” CEO Rylan Hamilton told Defense One ahead of the WEST 2026 conference here. He said the Navy needs to know industry’s offerings are reliable and “see these vessels in the water operating every single day with the fleet.”

    The Navy hasn’t yet decided how many medium and large unmanned surface vessels it needs. Experiments are continuing under at least three commands, while fleet leaders are working to shape plans to buy, operate, and maintain USVs. But the lethality of robot warcraft has been proven in waters in and off Ukraine. And some analysts suggest that unmanned vessels might be key to deterring China while the United States works to grow its manned fleet.

    All this has several dozen companies lining up to pitch USVs to the Navy, from shipbuilding giant HII to defense stalwart Leidos to newer, smaller ones such as HavocAI and Saildrone

    “I don't think anyone questions whether unmanned has a place in the fleet architecture,” Hamilton said. “It's really: ‘How long is it going to take to get some of these vessels out into the fleet and operating, so the end user of the fleet can really figure out how they want to use them and how many they actually want?’”

    It’s complicated 

    The Navy’s working on it, Adm. Daryl Caudle, chief of naval operations, told reporters last month. 

    The Pentagon “can get fairly enamored and up to speed very quickly on buying things…the defense industrial base loves that, and it's very capability-centric. But that has to clutch into the gearing of how the Navy actually prepares to utilize, sustain, employ, deploy, and the concepts of operation of that kit,” Caudle said. 

    If the Navy buys too much too fast, USVs could stack up in storage because the service’s operations, training, and sustainment models haven’t been tweaked to match. So Caudle outlined a “standard model” for how the Navy does business in the Fighting Instructions he released on Monday. 

    “That's how we do it in the Navy. And so my goal is to try to get the C2 and organization structure right. That's why you've seen the stand up of UUVRons, unmanned undersea vehicle squadrons, unmanned undersea vehicle groups, flotillas, unmanned surface vehicle squadrons,” Caudle said in January. “Because if I don't get that form factor right, then I don't know how to, essentially, maintain these systems, present those forces, train with them, experiment and demo with them in a way that's effective so the combatant commanders actually even know what to ask for. And so that's the challenge.”

    But some analysts say global threats demand faster action.

    “The Chinese are not slowing down. So the urgency for actually getting firepower and capabilities to sea is the priority, as I estimate it, to try to keep the peace and to buy time” for the United States to catch up to China’s ability to produce manned warships, said Brent Sadler, a senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, who focuses on maritime security. 

    “And also, when you look at it, the only thing that you're going to get in the water in time in the immediate future that might get ahead of the Chinese calculations are the unmanned systems—and I'm not talking one-way drones like the little quadcopters or the little jet-ski-boat-looking things. It's the type of unmanned platforms that are substantial, that can carry munitions, that have the range that's required in the Pacific theater.” 

    All eyes on MASC

    So far, the Navy has been buying mostly the robot jet-skis—for example, several hundred Global Autonomous Reconnaissance Craft under a program launched in 2024 by the previous CNO’s Project 33 effort.

    The market for small drone boats “is accelerating a lot quicker” than the ones for medium and large ones, said David Hutchins, a military systems researcher and analyst for Forecast International, a sibling brand of Defense One.

    But that is expected to change. The Navy envisions a fleet of 381 manned and 134 unmanned ships and has talked about flooding the warzone with unmanned vessels. Last year, Congress gave the service $2.1 billion in the reconciliation bill to develop and buy medium USVs. 

    And the Navy is soon to announce awards to build variants of its highly anticipated Modular Attack Surface Craft.

    MASC is still kind of prototyping” but will likely become the “biggest hot ticket” in the medium and large USV space, said Thomas Freebairn, weapons analyst with Military Periscope, another sister brand of Defense One.

    The smallest version of the MASC vessel is expected to carry a 20-foot payload, while the largest could carry four 40-foot containers. That facilitates a wide variety of equipment, and therefore missions, Freebairn said. The larger ones are likely to be able to handle Vertical Launch Systems that can launch strike weapons or anti-missile interceptors. 

    “A lot of them, especially the smaller ones, will be equipped with sensor payloads that have a lot of wide, sweeping implications for, obviously, [anti-submarine warfare], for counter-air detection. And so I think that there is going to be a lot of money in it,” he said.

    That last part has been received loud and clear.

    The MASC program “has been a really strong signal to industry,” said Hamilton of Blue Water Autonomy. “Because of that strong signal, you've seen private industry really lean in and take some of their own capital and [invest] ahead of the contracts coming up from the Navy.”

    And in general, the service is offering a clearer message about its unmanned-vessel plans, he said.

    “The Navy's done a great job kind of communicating what it wants, where it's going, and removing maybe some of the uncertainty from the program that you would have seen a couple years ago.”

    Blue Water’s entry is the Liberty class, based on Damen’s 800-ton Stan Patrol 6009 and packed with systems to enable it to operate autonomously. Its design range of 10,000 nautical miles is meant to enable months-long missions with up to 150 tons of payload, including missile launchers.

    “We've been able to raise private capital from firms like Google Ventures, and we've used that to basically test everything…on the ocean seven days a week,” Hamilton said.

    Production is slated to begin next month at Conrad Shipyard in Louisiana, with the first Liberty to be delivered later this year. If needed, Hamilton said, the yard could ultimately build 20 of the USVs a year.

    Making bubbles?

    Blue Water has steep competition, including Anduril, GARC-maker BlackSea Technologies, and Austin, Texas-based Saronic, which aims to build its own yard

    “You’ve got, easily, a dozen companies that are trying to be relatively big players in the USV industry. And then there's probably two or three dozen more that are small contributors—either they're starting up a company or they're working with another company to partner on building them,” said Bryan Clark, who leads the Hudson Institute’s Center for Defense Concepts and Technology.

    Clark said only some of them are likely to survive.

    “I think all these companies feel like when the government orders level out, that there's going to be a couple of winners. Because the government will have a sustained number of orders, so they'll continue to need USVs to get built, but not at the kind of scale that's going to keep a dozen companies in business. It might keep two companies in business—and so they all feel like they're going to be one of the two,” Clark said. 

    “Like, if you're a Blue Water Autonomy, they're going to build medium, uncrewed surface vehicles. But they don't have a shipyard. They do the autonomy, they design the ship, they integrate things together. And so they don't need a whole lot of orders to stay viable financially,” he said. 

    “I think [USV companies are] all looking for ways to mitigate their risk once the Navy's orders start to level off. But I think there is a little bit of a bubble. What's interesting is now looking at the strategies they're all pursuing to try to make sure they can survive once the bubble deflates.” 

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  • Google on Thursday said it observed the North Korea-linked threat actor known as UNC2970 using its generative artificial intelligence (AI) model Gemini to conduct reconnaissance on its targets, as various hacking groups continue to weaponize the tool for accelerating various phases of the cyber attack life cycle, enabling information operations, and even conducting model extraction attacks. “The

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  • Cybersecurity researchers have discovered a fresh set of malicious packages across npm and the Python Package Index (PyPI) repository linked to a fake recruitment-themed campaign orchestrated by the North Korea-linked Lazarus Group. The coordinated campaign has been codenamed graphalgo in reference to the first package published in the npm registry. It’s assessed to be active since May 2025. “

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  • Border patrol agents prompted the extraordinary U.S. airspace closure over El Paso Tuesday night and into Wednesday after using a high-powered laser to shoot down what was later revealed to be a party balloon that had drifted into the sky near the U.S.-Mexico border. 

    Initially, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy claimed the U.S. military was responsible and said the Federal Aviation Administration lifted its 10-day closure after “a cartel drone incursion” had been “neutralized.” That was far from the truth, as military and federal officials familiar with the incident later told media outlets. 

    Customs and Border Protection used the directed-energy weapon “near Fort Bliss without coordinating with the FAA,” the Associated Press reported Wednesday. Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth loaned the weapon to Homeland Security officials for a 30-day period that began last month, Fox reported. On Tuesday, “CBP officials thought they were firing on a cartel drone…but it turned out to be a party balloon,” the New York Times reported

    The incident occurred about a week before a planned meeting about the weapon’s safety. Some military officials reportedly believed “requirements governing the protection of certain facilities from unmanned aircraft had been met,” justifying the weapon’s use before it had been authorized by the FAA, according to CBS News. A meeting about the weapon’s safety was scheduled for Feb. 20, “but the Pentagon and DHS wanted to move forward more quickly, prompting the FAA to put the flight restrictions in place,” the Washington Post reported.

    Drones can be “useful for pinpointing the location of US Border Patrol agents to assist the cartel in smuggling non-citizens across the border into the United States,” Ars Technica points out. However, nothing about alleged drone activity in this incident appears to have been out of the ordinary, Rep. Veronica Escobar, D-Texas, said at a news conference Wednesday. And that suggests it remains unclear whether the incident resulted from “genuine concern about air travelers, a show of force, a fit of pique, or something else,” as Eric Berger of Ars Technica writes.

    Local reax: “This was a major and unnecessary disruption, one that has not occurred since 9/11,” El Paso Mayor Renard Johnson told reporters Wednesday. You cannot restrict airspace over a major city without coordinating with the city, the airport, the hospitals, the community leadership. That failure to communicate is unacceptable,” Johnson said. 

    “We have never seen something quite this extreme,” El Paso City Rep. Chris Canales said Wednesday. “No one from the local government or the local military base received any advance notice more than a few minutes, nor did the mayor.” 

    Additional reading: 

    • Update: An immigration judge dropped the deportation case against the father of three U.S. Marines detained last year while landscaping. He’s now been enrolled in the military’s “parole in place” program, which recruiters have been using in Minnesota and Oregon
    • Developing: Trump’s border czar announced Thursday the feds will end their immigration crackdown in Minnesota; the operation surged 3,000 agents to a city with just 600 police, resulting in more than 4,000 arrests as well as the deaths of two American citizens before multiple surveys showed voters souring on the administration’s immigration agenda;
    • CBP Signs Clearview AI Deal to Use Face Recognition for ‘Tactical Targeting,’WIRED reported Wednesday; 
    • And in commentary, “ICE Is on a Dark Path. Congress Must Act Now,” the New York Times editorial board argued Thursday ahead of the Friday deadline for Congress to fund DHS. 

    Welcome to this Thursday 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 1988, Navy missile-cruiser USS Yorktown and the destroyer USS Caron were intentionally rammed and pushed by Soviet vessels in the Black Sea as the Soviets sought to push the American ships out of Soviet territorial waters and into international waters.

    Around the Defense Department

    Two U.S. Navy ships collided while attempting to refuel in the Caribbean Sea Thursday, the Wall Street Journal reports. The destroyer USS Truxtun was taking on fuel from the USNS Supply fast combat support ship, both part of the largest naval buildup in the region since the Cuban Missile crisis.

    Two people were injured but they’re in stable condition, and both ships have moved on with their mission, officials said. The incident is under investigation.

    Here’s an explainer video about the process of refueling at sea. 

    A Marine who fell overboard in the Caribbean Sea has been declared dead after search-and-rescue efforts were unsuccessful, Military Times reported Thursday. His name is Lance Cpl. Chukwuemeka E. Oforah, 21, and he fell from the amphibious assault ship USS Iwo Jima on Feb. 7. He was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 6th Marines, which is based out of Camp Lejeune, N.C.

    Developing: The Navy is preparing to send a second aircraft carrier to the Middle East, the Journal reported separately on Wednesday. The USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group is already in the region amid renewed tensions with Iran. 

    USS George H.W. Bush would likely be called for the job, though the call may not come for two weeks. The carrier and its crew are currently conducting “a series of training exercises off the coast of Virginia, and it could potentially expedite those exercises,” U.S. officials said.  

    “We have plenty of time,” Trump told reporters Friday. “If you remember Venezuela, we waited around for a while. And we’re in no rush. We have very good talks going with Iran.”

    That’s not what he was saying last month. “Time is running out, it is truly of the essence!” the president posted in January. Why the turnaround? Nancy A. Youssef and Vivian Salama of The Atlantic explain how threats turned into talks, here.

    Marines will use Air Force-tailored drone to help develop its robot wingman. General Atomics’ YFQ-42A will be used as a testbed for CCA concepts and gear, the company said on Tuesday. The work is part of the 

    Marine Corps Air-Ground Task Force Uncrewed Expeditionary Tactical Aircraft effort. Defense One’s Thomas Novelly has a bit more about that, here.

    MUX TACAIR is one of the top priorities of the 2026 Marine Aviation Plan, also released on Tuesday. FYI: “Central to the AVPLAN is the active integration of AI/ML as a primary modernization effort,” a USMC press release says.

    Russia still sees the U.S. as its top adversary, Estonian intelligence report says. Recent U.S.-Russian talks about ending Moscow’s war on Ukraine should not be taken as a sign that Russia poses less of a threat to the United States and Europe, according to a new report from Estonia’s foreign-intelligence agency. “Despite this illusory thaw, Russia continues to regard the U.S. as its principal global adversary,” says the report, which was released Tuesday. 

    Russian leader Vladimir Putin intends such talks to benefit him in two ways, it says: “First, by binding U.S. and Russian interests more closely together; second, by widening what Moscow perceives as existing rifts between the U.S. and Europe.” Defense One’s Patrick Tucker has more, here.

    Developing: NATO launched a series of new exercises in the Arctic this week, the alliance said in a statement on Wednesday: “These activities include, among others, Denmark’s Arctic Endurance, a series of multi-domain exercises designed to enhance Allied ability to operate in the region, and Norway’s upcoming exercise Cold Response, where troops from across the Alliance have already begun to arrive.”

    The drills come just weeks after Trump threatened to seize Greenland ahead of a speech before Europeans at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Trump later said he wouldn’t use military force to achieve that goal, but he has since posted on social media that he still aims to make Canada and Greenland U.S. territories. Since his speech at Davos, both Canada and France have opened consulates in Greenland. 

    Additional reading: 

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  • This week in cybersecurity from the editors at Cybercrime Magazine

    Sausalito, Calif. – Feb. 12, 2026

    Read the full story in The Motley Fool Australia

    Tristan Harrison, one of the longest-serving writers at The Motley Fool Australia, highlights a cybersecurity growth theme for potential investors in the sector. He points out Cybersecurity Ventures predicted global spending on cybersecurity over the five-year period of 2021 to 2025 will be a cumulative total of $1.75 trillion USD, representing year-over-year growth of 15 percent. (Go here for the 2016 to 2031 spending predictions)

    The Betashares Global Cybersecurity ETF (ASX: HACK) aka “Hack ETF” is an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that aims to give Australian investors access to the world’s leading cybersecurity companies. That includes both global cybersecurity giants as well as emerging players from different countries.

    There are currently 32 businesses in the portfolio, which include names like Cisco Systems, CrowdStrike, Fortinet, and Okta. These companies are from a variety of countries, including the US, India, France, Israel, and Canada.

    We don’t necessarily need to pick which of these businesses will be the biggest winners – it’s a diversified bet on the sector, according to Harrison.

    The HACK ETF has done well for investors over the long term – since Aug. 2016, it has delivered an average annual return of 15.9 percent, which is a fantastic level of performance. But, past performance is not a guarantee of future returns, of course, Harrison cautions.

    Read the Full Story



    Cybercrime Magazine is Page ONE for Cybersecurity. Go to any of our sections to read the latest:

    • SCAM. The latest schemes, frauds, and social engineering attacks being launched on consumers globally.
    • NEWS. Breaking coverage on cyberattacks and data breaches, and the most recent privacy and security stories.
    • HACK. Another organization gets hacked every day. We tell you who, what, where, when, and why.
    • VC. Cybersecurity venture capital deal flow with the latest investment activity from various sources around the world.
    • M&A. Cybersecurity mergers and acquisitions including big tech, pure cyber, product vendors and professional services.
    • BLOG. What’s happening at Cybercrime Magazine. Plus the stories that don’t make headlines (but maybe they should).
    • PRESS. Cybersecurity industry news and press releases in real time from the editors at Business Wire.
    • PODCAST. New episodes daily on the Cybercrime Magazine Podcast feature victims, law enforcement, vendors, and cybersecurity experts.
    • RADIO. Tune into WCYB Digital Radio at Cybercrime.Radio, the first and only round-the-clock internet radio station devoted to cybersecurity.

    Contact us to send story tips, feedback and suggestions, and for sponsorship opportunities and custom media productions.

    The post Betashares Global Cybersecurity ETF (ASX: HACK): A Diversified Bet On The Sector appeared first on Cybercrime Magazine.

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  • Operational Relay Box (ORB) networks are covert, mesh-based infrastructures used by advanced threat actors to hide the true origin of their cyberattacks. Built from compromised Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices, Small Office/Home Office (SOHO) routers, and rented Virtual Private Servers (VPS), these networks act like private residential proxy systems that blend malicious traffic with legitimate user activity. […]

    The post ORB Networks Leverages Compromised IoT Devices and SOHO Routers to Mask Cyberattacks appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.

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  • A new security investigation has uncovered 287 Chrome extensions that appear to secretly send users’ browsing data to remote servers, impacting an estimated 37.4 million installs. That is roughly 1%1% of the global Chrome user base, based on the researchers’ estimate. The researchers built an automated testing pipeline to catch “spying” behavior at scale. They ran Chrome inside a […]

    The post 287 Malicious Chrome Extensions Steal Browsing Data from 37.4 Million Users appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.

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  • DragonForce is a ransomware group that has rapidly evolved into a cartel-style operation, extending its reach across the cybercrime ecosystem since late 2023. Operating under a Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS) model, the group now positions itself not just as a single gang, but as a platform for other threat actors and affiliate crews. Over time, the group shifted from […]

    The post DragonForce Ransomware Group Targets 363 Companies, Expands Cartel-Like Operations Since 2023 appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.

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  • A DShield honeypot sensor recently recorded a complete compromise sequence involving a self-replicating SSH worm that exploits weak passwords to spread across Linux systems. The incident highlights how poor SSH hygiene and the use of default credentials remain among the most persistent threats to Internet-connected devices. Even in 2026, attackers continue leveraging automated credential stuffing […]

    The post SSH Worm Exploit Detected by DShield Sensor Using Credential Stuffing and Multi-Stage Malware appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.

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