• Decades-old B-1 and B-52 bombers have hit hundreds of Iranian military targets this week, and experts say it underscores the need to retire the former and modernize the latter for future conflicts against Russia and China.

    The two venerable aircraft are the latest additions to the list of platforms used in Operation Epic Fury, according to a CENTCOM fact sheet released this week. Gen. Dan Caine, the Joint Chiefs chairman, told reporters Wednesday that the U.S. military has hit “over 2,000 targets,” and said Iranian ballistic missile shots had decreased by 86 percent since the first day of the war.

    “Our B-2 bombers and B-1 bombers have executed uncontested surgical strikes against multiple missile facilities deep inside Iran,” Adm. Brad Cooper, the CENTCOM commander, said in a Tuesday night video, adding that “a B-52 bomber force struck ballistic missile and command and control posts.”

    The B-1, which has been in service since the mid-1980s, was initially developed as a replacement for the mid-century B-52 bomber. Now, following initial stealth bombing runs from B-2 Spirit stealth bombers and the destruction of Iran’s anti-air defenses in the early days of the war, both are seeing heavy use in the Trump administration's bombing missions over Iran. 

    “The B-52 Stratofortress has been utilized in every major conflict since 1965,” CENTCOM said Thursday on X. “During the first 100 hours of Operation Epic Fury, B-52s struck Iranian ballistic missile and command and control posts.” Additionally, the command said Monday on X that B-1 Lancers “struck deep inside Iran” to target more missile sites. 

    Air Force officials said they’re retiring B-1s and B-2s by the 2030s to make way for the new B-21 stealth bomber. Ongoing modernization efforts to the B-52’s radar and engines will extend the Cold War-era bomber’s service life to its 100th birthday

    Even with the legacy bombers’ renewed use in Operation Epic Fury, those modernization and retirement timelines are still “absolutely reasonable,” said Mark Gunzinger, the Mitchell Institute’s director of future concepts and capability assessments. The B-21 and upgraded B-52 will be a necessity in European or Pacific theaters, he added.

    “As far as the modernization, Iran is not a peer adversary in any way, shape or form. For example, you achieve your air superiority probably in a space of 24 to 48 hours,” Gunzinger said. “[That’s] not going to be the case with China, or even if we should have to defeat Russian aggression in Europe at some future date.”

    Test engines for the B-52 are expected to be delivered next year, Defense One reported last month. Other aspects of modernization efforts have faced headwinds, including F130 engine integration problems tied to Boeing, and skyrocketing radar upgrade costs that triggered a breach of the Nunn-McCurdy Act last year. 

    Gunzinger said modernizing the B-52 is still an ideal option. 

    “If the Air Force didn't have B-52s, still very long-range standoff weapons platforms, it would probably have to buy a new one, and that would be even more expensive than upgrading the current force,” Gunzinger said. 

    The Air Force’s total bomber inventory “has reached an all-time low of 141 aircraft,” Gunzinger wrote in a Mitchell Institute report last month. The majority of those—76—are B-52s, 46 are B-1s, and only 19 are B-2s. The report said the U.S. needs 200 B-21 bombers to be competitive with China. Gunzinger added that the financial and manpower constraints of keeping the B-1 in operation will hinder the rollout of the B-21.

    “The size of our bomber force, its smallest ever in the U.S. Air Force's history, and the crew ratios, for example, on our bomber fleet, essentially talking one crew per combat capable aircraft, and when you're talking about flying 33-, 35-, or 36-hour sorties, well, those air crews just can't turn around and fly another one a day or two later,” Gunzinger said. “So, they also don't have enough air crews, maintainers, and infrastructure to bring the B-21 online and maintain the B-1 as operationally ready and fully crewed.”

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  • With a timeline for the U.S.’s war with Iran very much up in the air, a task force assigned to improving the U.S.’s ability to down small drones both at home and abroad is eagerly awaiting lessons learned from the conflict—while moving as quickly as possible to make sure bases around the world are protected from retaliatory drone strikes.

    The threat is even bigger than that of the improvised explosive devices that devastated U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan during the Global War on Terror, Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, the head of Joint Interagency Task Force-401, told reporters on Thursday at an industry event hosted by the Army.

    “What I can tell you is that the challenge of unmanned systems, the threat posed from unmanned systems, is going to far exceed the threat that we saw from IEDs … where we made some progress, but never really got in front of it,” Ross said.

    The U.S. sunk more than $20 billion into the counter-IED fight 20 years ago, and never came up with a good detection system for roadside bombs, but did create a vehicle that at least offered much better protection from them than the unarmored humvees troops had been patrolling in.  

    “That's a weapon for which there's no commercial application,” Ross said of IEDs, compared with the ubiquity of drones. “And we're going to see proliferation of unmanned systems into our commercial airspace. It's going to be very common in the next few years. And what that means is that our ability to manage that airspace safely—and then protect critical infrastructure that must be protected, whether it's formations or locations—that market is just going to continue to grow over time.”

    Ross’s comments came as the Army finished identifying six soldiers who were killed in a one-way drone attack on Sunday in Kuwait. Asked whether the war with Iran is accelerating efforts, he answered generally as to avoid commenting on ongoing operations.

    “What it means is that we're paying attention to what's going on, and we're making sure that we get them everything they require to protect themselves, both at home and abroad,” he said. “And so I wouldn't say this is exclusive to the Middle East right now, but we are absolutely thinking about Department of War partners and allies locations globally that could come under threat to make sure that they've got the equipment they need to protect themselves.”

    Now the task force is working to get ahead of threat as it continues to grow. 

    “I believe one of the reasons we stood up JIATF-401, just to surge against this problem, is because we didn't want to wait for a 9/11 event inside the United States to address the threat of unmanned systems,” Ross said. “And what has happened  over the past week in the Middle East is, we have elevated the sense of urgency, and it's getting a lot of attention in terms of how we maintain the capability and capacity to deal with the threat of these systems. We knew it was there, and we've been working against the problem. This has just elevated the conversation nationally.”

    Making progress

    Since JIATF-401 stood up in late summer, the small office has been working with partners from the FBI and Homeland Security to create standards and policies for operating counter-unmanned systems, while getting its online marketplace off the ground. 

    The site is live—if “clunky,” Ross said. The next step will be to award a contract for a common command-and-control architecture that can operate systems across the military services and other government agencies seamlessly. That’s expected be fielded within months.

    The task force is also looking for data-sharing standards.

    “We appreciate your collaboration with us as we try to standardize how we're going to send and receive data in what formats,” Ross told an audience of industry representatives during the event. 

    That’s a key part of any counter-UAS system in the JIATF-401 marketplace, whether it goes to the Defense Department, NATO, or any civilian law-enforcement agency.

     “They’ve got to know that it's going to work. I’ve got to know that it's compatible,” he said. “The people don't know that today.”

    Ross also wants to overhaul the installation process for these systems, with out-of-the-box functionality that doesn’t require a technician from the vendor to get it running.

    “I think an installation ought to be able to order equipment from you and ought to be able to set it up like a Ring doorbell,” he said. “We don't do that today. A lot of systems require additional expertise on that.”

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  • Kristi Noem will step down as secretary of the Homeland Security Department at the end of the month, President Trump announced on Thursday, amid a tumultuous period for the agency that has overseen the administration’s controversial immigration crackdown. 

    Trump said on social media that he will nominate Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., to replace her. He suggested the change would take effect March 31, though the DHS secretary requires Senate confirmation and the timing for such a vote is not yet clear. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for clarification. 

    DHS is currently shut down after its funding lapsed last month, though more than 90% of its employees are still working. Many of those are doing so without immediate pay. 

    Noem’s firing came after she testified in Congress on back-to-back days this week, where she faced pointed questions from members of both parties on the fatal shootings of U.S. citizens by DHS employees, the aggressive tactics used in immigration enforcement, and the spending on a contract for advertising in which the secretary was featured prominently. Noem said Trump personally signed off on that spending; on Thursday, the president denied it. 

    Noem also presided over a rapid hiring surge at the department, focused primarily on Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection. ICE more than doubled its workforce in 2025, when it brought on more than 10,000 employees. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act that Trump signed into law last year provided $165 billion for DHS, including $16 billion for staffing. 

    Mullin began serving in the House in 2013 and in the Senate in 2023. Trump called him a “MAGA warrior” and said the senator “knows the wisdom and courage required to advance our America first agenda.” 

    “Markwayne will work tirelessly to keep our border secure, stop migrant crime, murders and other criminals for illegally entering our country, end the scourge of illegal drugs and make America safe again,” Trump said. “Markwayne will make a spectacular secretary of Homeland Security.” 

    Trump said Noem will become special envoy for the Shield of the Americas, an upcoming conference on Western Hemisphere security. 

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  • Will the joint war on Iran with Israel compromise the United States’ already taxed missile stockpile, challenged by sluggish production? The question is on the minds of many in the defense space.

    “The stockpiles are not going to be replenished anytime soon,” said Jerry McGinn, who leads industrial base policy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “We were talking about this three years ago, in the early days of Ukraine, like ‘we're running out of missiles. How do we do this?’ Obviously, we haven't fixed the situation.”  

    The only way to change that is to make more. But it takes years to make these exquisite weapons that are being fired in high quantities in a conflict that has no clear end date. So the Trump administration’s push for defense contractors to make weapons faster is gaining more urgency. 

    On Tuesday, President Donald Trump warned defense companies they were under “emergency orders” to build weapons faster. 

    Is there policy or legislation that could help, like the Defense Production Act? Not for such a long standing problem, but the Pentagon could do more with multiyear procurements, such as the recent Lockheed Martin announcement for Patriot missiles, for other munitions, McGinn said. 

    But there may just never be enough inventory. 

    “I'm starting to come to the conclusion that we're just never going to have enough precision-guided munitions. There's such a huge demand for them in conflict that I just think there's probably no stockpile big enough, to be honest,” he said. 

    Ultimately, the U.S. has to figure out how to build missiles that are easier to produce and scale as part of “a mix of really exquisite munitions and then some that are more expendable,” McGinn said. “But we're just…we're not there right now.”

    Still, heightened attention on the matter from the White House and Pentagon could prove positive, said Jim Segelstrom, who leads the National Defense Industrial Association’s manufacturing division.

    “There's an incredible focus on surge. We're engaged with the J4, they have surge efforts going on. There's now the Wartime Production Unit, which is all focused on surge. There's the Joint Production Accelerator Cell focused on surge,” said Segelstrom, CEO of defense contractor McNally Industries. “I think that degree of attention will only produce positive outcomes.”

    And missiles aren’t the only stockpiles to consider: drones carry their own challenges.

    “This conflict reinforces a few themes: quantity carries strategic weight, software and autonomy drive advantage, and industrial capacity is decisive,” said Brett Velicovich, a former special operator and intelligence analyst who helped launch Powerus, which produces autonomous systems and software for the military. “The side that can iterate faster and sustain inventory under pressure will shape the operational tempo.”

    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 best long-run song recs to lwilliams@defenseone.com. Check out the Defense Business Brief archive here, and tell your friends to subscribe!

    China, subsea drones and the need for rapid testing. A Congressional review board gathered this week to talk about China’s threat undersea and the need for unmanned underwater vessels. What wasn’t discussed is how retrieving UUVs’ data quickly when coming back from sea trials can be a challenge. 

    An “analysis that used to take, after each test, around four hours to produce, we've gotten down to around 15 minutes,” Nominal CEO Cameron McCord told Defense One in an exclusive interview. 

    Nominal is teaming up with major military shipbuilder HII to make that timeline the norm for their fleet of unmanned underwater vessels, called Remus. UUVs can be used to launch drones and weapons, hunt mines, perform surveillance and reconnaissance missions, and map terrain.

    McCord said the platform allows engineers to remotely track whether a system is hitting desired targets, and thus collecting the right data. The manual process often relies on assuming data collection was correct and usable, which can’t be verified until the system returns. 

    The metrics? HII expects to speed up its testing cycle by 75 percent, which could lead to faster system upgrades and deployments, said Eric Chewning, HII’s maritime systems and corporate strategy lead.

    “If the testing time collapses, then we're able to generate a next-generation capability that much faster,” for example, he said of Remus.

    The plan: Use Nominal’s software on the existing Remus fleet: 750 delivered and those under development, as well as on the still-under-development Romulus unmanned surface vessel. But there’s also potential to apply the software “outside of the unmanned business,” Chewning told Defense One

    Going deeper: The announcement comes as UUV production is expected to grow with a little help—about $1.3 billion—from last year’s budget reconciliation bill, and as concern grows around military competition underwater, particularly with respect to China. 

    “We are working on a family of systems, everything from what we call extra-large unmanned undersea vehicles—think like big payload trucks for things like mine warfare or other other payloads—as well as large diameter torpedo tube launch-and-recovery,” Vice Adm. Richard Seif, who leads Naval Submarine Forces, testified Monday before the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission. “So the more we can invest and move out at scale, it will be critically important in the future.”

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  • Researchers at Zenity Labs uncover PleaseFix flaws in Perplexity’s Comet browser. See how zero-click calendar invites allow AI agents to steal 1Password credentials and personal files.

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  • As the U.S. and Israel launched strikes on Iran, American citizens living in or visiting the Middle East found themselves stranded in countries facing bombing attacks by Iran. The State Department on March 2, 2026, urged Americans in 14 Middle Eastern countries to leave via “available commercial transportation, due to serious safety risks.” But commercial air travel and airports were shut down in many of those places and the U.S. wasn’t offering to evacuate its citizens.

    Media reports featuring frustrated and frightened Americans stuck in places where danger was mounting, as well as growing criticism that the U.S. hadn’t handled the situation well or according to normal procedure, led the State Department to scramble and send charter flights to evacuate U.S. nationals from a handful of countries.

    The Conversation’s politics editor Naomi Schalit interviewed former ambassador Donald Heflin, a veteran diplomat who now teaches at Tufts University’s Fletcher School, to understand how such situations are normally handled – and how the current situation diverged from longstanding practices.

    What is the customary way that the United States and the State Department deal with U.S. nationals who are abroad in an area that becomes dangerous?

    Over my 35-year career, I was ambassador to a small country and I worked a lot on African affairs. But most of my time was spent in consular affairs, which is the part of the State Department that does this work. And over the last 20 or 30 years, we’ve made a lot of progress. We’ve developed a model that works pretty well. 

    When you’re in a country with instability, what you want to do is to get the population of Americans down as small as you can. So the first thing that happens is you have some instability, and you tell Americans, “Listen, we advise against traveling here.” See if you can discourage everybody except missionaries or people whose employers really want them to go there to make money or people visiting family members, but get rid of the casual tourist. 

    Then, a little more time goes by and things start to get bad, and you say, “You should consider leaving.” And then, a little while later, the embassy gives its own employees and their families what they call “authorized departure,” which is, “It’s OK for you to go back to the U.S., and in fact we’ll help pay for it.” And we tell the public that, and we hope that that’ll help spur more people to leave.

    And the step after that?

    Next step: We order departure, where we tell parts of the embassy, “You’ve got to go home. You can’t make the decision to stay here, you and your kids go home.” And we tell the public that, and hopefully that makes the number of Americans remaining in the country smaller and smaller.

    Then – and it doesn’t always happen – the last step is we evacuate. We say, “We’re getting our people out of here on planes, we’ve got space for you on the planes, you should have listened to us before.” 

    That’s the standard model. Unfortunately, it didn’t get followed very well this week.

    What did you see this week, and how did it diverge from the normal procedure?

    We went from zero to 60 very quickly. Look, the Mideast is unstable on a good day, but there had not been a new instability where people should be getting scared and going home. And then what happened was we launched the attack, and all of a sudden there was that instability. 

    Logically, you would think, there were two places that Americans should be getting out of. One was Iran, where we’ve told people not to be for many years. The other was Israel, because Israel is going to be attacked. 

    But no, the Iranians attacked over half a dozen countries. So now, all of a sudden, you’ve got Americans who feel unsafe in places that have never really been considered unsafe, like Oman, Cyprus or Turkey

    So now you have a long list of countries where you want to encourage Americans to leave and where they want to leave. There’s some demand, and you haven’t got that drawdown, where it makes things smaller, and also you haven’t done anything about arranging charter flights or military flights to get them out. So they’re going to have to stay where they are and feel unsafe for X number of days.

    That’s when this started generating news stories.

    This led to lot of people calling a member of Congress, a lot of people talking to the press, saying, “We got to get us out of here.” That’ll continue until the evacuation is arranged. There’s a bit of an analogy to COVID. When COVID first took off, we had a lot of Americans stuck overseas. They wanted to get home to their families. They figured U.S. health care to be the best that’s available, and it took us awhile to arrange charter flights. It was a very expensive process to get everybody home. They just kind of had to hunker down. That’s where we are right now.

    Do you think this problem that’s being faced by Americans in the Middle East now should have been anticipated by the State Department?

    Yes and no. I think a big part of the problem here was that the Trump administration kept the knowledge of the impending attack to a very small circle of people for operational security reasons. You can’t launch a surprise attack if half of Washington knows about it.

    You can see a scenario by which a very trusted State Department officer has to eventually talk to a charter plane company about chartering a whole bunch of planes. They’re going to figure out pretty quickly what’s going to happen, and then you’ve got a security leak. 

    At the same time, I think going back weeks and months, maybe people should have been arranging charter flights and military flights, kind of on spec so that you could flip the switch and get that going right away. They’re kind of starting from scratch this week.

    You’ve got people who are stranded, afraid and can’t get on with their lives. What should happen next?

    All these Iranian strikes, the casualty numbers aren’t high. So objectively speaking, I think that very few of the Americans over there are in actual, real danger. 

    But casual tourists do get afraid, and they don’t travel overseas that much. This may be their first time in the Mideast, and all of a sudden this is happening. They want out bad. They’re scared, whether, objectively speaking, they have a good reason to be scared or not. And it’s better for everybody – the U.S. embassy, the host country, for people in Washington – if we get them out of there and get them home.

    This will sort itself out. There will be planes, we’ll get all the people out who want to get out, but it’s going to take at least a few days, maybe a week.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

    The Conversation

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  • US-Israeli war on Iran, day 6: The war’s death toll has risen to at least 1,230 Iranians after more 3,600 U.S. and Israeli military strikes across the country since Saturday. In response, officials in Tehran say they’ve targeted 27 military bases hosting U.S. troops throughout the region. Nearly all of those missile and drone attacks have been intercepted by American, Israeli or allied defense systems. 

    Iran’s retaliatory strikes have targeted the United Arab Emirates more than any other country, accounting for 1,138 of Tehran’s 2,171 drone and missile attacks, according to the Institute for the Study of War. Iran has also targeted Israel, Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Cyprus and Azerbaijan in the latest of these developments on Thursday. 

    Israel is also targeting alleged Iran-backed militants in Lebanon, killing at least 77 people and wounding more than 520 since Saturday, al-Jazeera reports.

    Update: U.S. defense officials identified the fifth and sixth American soldiers killed in the Iran war over the weekend. 

    • Maj. Jeffrey R. O’Brien, 45, of Indianola, Iowa; and
    • Chief Warrant Officer 3 Robert M. Marzan, 54, of Sacramento, Calif.

    Both were present at a makeshift facility in Port Shuaiba, Kuwait, when it was attacked by an Iranian drone on Sunday. Like the four soldiers identified on Tuesday, they were assigned to the 103rd Sustainment Command, based in Des Moines, Iowa. Officials noted Marzan “was at the scene of the incident…and is believed to be the individual who perished at the scene.” Relatedly, “Positive identification of Chief Warrant Officer 3 Marzan will be completed by the medical examiner,” the Defense Department said in a statement Wednesday evening. 

    Global oil prices continue to rise on Thursday, with the New York Times reporting a 15% increase since the war started, and Reuters reporting “Around 300 oil tankers remained inside the Strait of ​Hormuz” while the conflict continues. 

    Alert: Iranian drones could disrupt Hormuz traffic for “months,” even if Tehran’s missile-launching capabilities are degraded by U.S. and Israeli strikes, the wire service reported separately Wednesday. A container ship was attacked by an apparent naval drone while attempting to transit Hormuz Wednesday, forcing the crew to abandon ship, according to British maritime authorities (PDF). That’s at least the second suspected naval drone attack on Hormuz vessels since Saturday. Iran’s navy says it has targeted at least 10 ships and oil tankers in the strait since the war began, according to ISW; Reuters reports it’s tracking only nine vessels attacked so far.  

    Developing: “Crude oil supplies from Iraq and Kuwait could start shutting within days if the Strait ​remains closed, potentially ⁠cutting 3.3 million barrels per day (bpd) by day eight of the conflict,” Reuters reported Thursday, citing a note from analysts at JP Morgan.

    Watch Hormuz shipping traffic dry up in this data animation from the Wall Street Journal, which also has an explainer about the strait’s importance to the global economy.   

    And Danish shipping giant Maersk suspended operations in the region on Wednesday, including from ports at the UAE, Oman, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia. 

    Coverage continues below…


    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 1933, the Nazi party ascended to power with a 43.9% vote at the Reichstag elections, setting the stage for them to establish a dictatorship under Adolf Hitler.  

    Ukraine will send experts to Middle East countries to help fight off Iranian drones, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Wednesday on Telegram. At least five governments have requested advice and assistance from the world’s acknowledged expert on downing Shahed attack drones: Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, and UAE. “I instructed the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine, together with intelligence, the Minister of Defense, our military command, the Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council, to present support options for the respective states and provide assistance in such a way that it does not weaken our own defenses here in Ukraine. Our military has the necessary capabilities. Ukrainian experts will work on the spot, and the teams are already agreeing on this.” (h/t The Counteroffensive with Tim Mak, whose independent reporting in Ukraine is worth supporting.)

    Related reading:Trump’s lightbulb moment: America needs Europe after all,” Politico reported Thursday.  

    New: The Iran war is costing U.S. taxpayers an estimated $1 billion every day, a congressional official told Nancy Youssef of The Atlantic, the same day NBC News reported 4 in 10 Americans support the war—while more than 5 in 10 oppose it. (See also, “Fox News poll: Majority says Trump’s handling of Iran has made US less safe,” The Hill reported Thursday.)

    Economic pains could grow: “Rising energy prices, snarled supply chains and higher government debt could all hurt American consumers,” the New York Times reported Thursday. 

    One possible note of optimism: “If there is a cease-fire in the next week, trade flows could get back to normal fairly quickly.” However, “Even if the fighting stops, oil prices will remain elevated through the rest of the year, Goldman Sachs estimates, and if the strait remains closed for weeks, they could reach $100 a barrel.”

    Another wrinkle: “​​Inflation is expected to rise, decreasing the likelihood that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates in the coming months,” the Times reports. 

    Also taking a hit: The supply of fertilizer, which threatens not just U.S. farmers, but the entire global agricultural cycle, historian Adam Tooze explained Wednesday. 

    Related reading:

    A measure to limit Trump’s war powers on Iran failed in the Senate Wednesday in a 53-47 vote. Kentucky’s Rand Paul was the only Republican to join Democrats in support of the measure, while Susan Collins of Maine and Alaska's Lisa Murkowski voted against it. The Hill has more.

    Trump officials who briefed lawmakers Tuesday night failed to answer two key questions about the war so far, Rep. Joe Courtney, D-Conn., said in a statement Wednesday. 

    1. “What imminent threat did Iran pose to the people and homeland of the United States on February 28 to justify a military strike without a Congressional Declaration of War or authorization of use of military force?”
    2. “What is the clear end game for this operation?”

    “Given the fact that six servicemembers have lost their lives and that we have tens of thousands of servicemembers in the region in harm’s way, getting coherent answers to these questions is a matter of life and death,” said Courtney, who serves on the Senate Armed Services Committee. 

    Trump: “If we didn’t hit within two weeks, they would’ve had a nuclear weapon,” the president claimed Wednesday at the White House. “When crazy people have nuclear weapons bad things happen,” he said

    • Reminder: Nearly 14 years ago, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed Iran was 90% on its way to having enough material to make a nuclear bomb. He famously brought a cartoon to the United Nations to make this point for the cameras on Sept. 27, 2012. 

    But as recently as June 21, Trump himself claimed, “Iran’s key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated.” Four days later, the White House shared remarks from four other top officials who agreed—including SecDef Hegseth, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Steve Witkoff and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard—and each used the word “obliterated” to describe the damage to Iran’s nuclear facilities. 

    Analysis: “Trump’s willingness to single-handedly drag the country into conflict reflects his approach to executive authority more broadly: He takes already extreme conceptions of expansive presidential power and stretches them even further, remaking the presidency into something more like the monarchies reviled by America’s Founders,” Quinta Jurecic wrote Thursday for The Atlantic

    Second opinion: “The president has unilaterally kicked off a regional war,” said former State Department counsel Brian Finucane, now a senior adviser at the International Crisis Group. “That is a real departure from prior unilateral uses of military force in recent decades.” 

    Jurecic concludes with this reminder: “Democracy allows people the freedom to make stupid decisions, so long as they make them collectively. But a system that allows a country to be dragged into war at the whims of a single person is not much of a democracy at all.”

    Also worth noting: By assassinating Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Saturday, Trump “shatter[ed] a precedent that had been sustained for decades by a mix of moral, political, and logistical concerns,” Tim Naftali of Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs wrote Tuesday in The Atlantic

    “This is an enormously consequential shift in the foreign-policy tools available to a president,” Naftali warns. “Killing anyone, let alone a dangerous foreign leader, without a trial involves a moral choice…A regime isn’t a chicken; decapitating it doesn’t necessarily bring about its death after a short dance. Indeed, in the modern age, no police state has died by assassination alone.”

    Mixed reality: The White House on Wednesday posted a video that mixes “Call of Duty” videogame footage with real-world strikes inside Iran. Critics called it “warporn.” 

    And lastly: For its ongoing Iran war, the Pentagon is using Anthropic’s AI tool Claude that Hegseth banned last week, the Washington Post reported Wednesday. Claude is part of the Maven Smart System, “which is built by data mining company Palantir” and combines information from “satellites, surveillance and other intelligence, helping provide real-time targeting and target prioritization to military operations in Iran.” 

    U.S. “Military commanders have become so dependent on the AI system that if [Anthropic’s CEO] directed the military to cease, the Trump administration would use government powers to retain the technology until it can be replaced,” a source told WaPo. Read more, here.

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  • Cisco has disclosed that two more vulnerabilities affecting Catalyst SD-WAN Manager (formerly SD-WAN vManage) have come under active exploitation in the wild. The vulnerabilities in question are listed below – CVE-2026-20122 (CVSS score: 7.1) – An arbitrary file overwrite vulnerability that could allow an authenticated, remote attacker to overwrite arbitrary files on the local file system.

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  • Hydrolix expert Tom Howe explains how AI bots impact ecommerce, how to spot good vs malicious bots, and why blocking them can hurt sales.

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