Business

Most Troops Will See More Money Next Year

The Pentagon announced increases in basic pay, housing and food allowances. By Kellie Lunney

Ideas

Obama's Handling of Castro Is a New Blueprint for Dealing With Dictators

Dictators are fickle creatures, but not all that difficult to figure out. By Jake Flanagin

Science & Tech

The CIA Has a Problem With Biometric Surveillance

The growing use of digital fingerprint matching at European airports troubles Langley. By Aliya Sternstein

Threats

Why Foreign Fighters Face Few Real Travel Restrictions

A variety of approaches from across the world has created loopholes that fighters can easily bypass by traveling through other countries with their Western passports. By Harry Oppenheimer

Defense Systems

Making civilian skies safe for unmanned aircraft

How the Army is working with the FAA and other military services to prevent drone collisions with other aircraft.

Defense Systems

Navy's new underwater drone looks and swims like a fish

The GhostSwimmer, developed under the Silent NEMO project, can run silent, run deep.

Threats

North Korea Is Experiencing a Full Internet Blackout

It's unclear what is causing the outage, though the timing is likely to fuel speculation that it is a retaliatory move by U.S. authorities over the Sony hack. By Dustin Volz

Business

Lockheed Contractor Must Repay $27.5M for Overcharging Troops in Iraq and Afghanistan

A Lockheed Martin contractor agrees to repay the government for overbilling for its products and services to U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. By Charles S. Clark

Threats

What the Intelligence Community Thought Would Happen in 2015 - in 2000

At the turn of the century, a group of intelligence officers offered up what they thought conflict would look like in 2015 would look like. By Kedar Pavgi

Threats

What Does ‘Security’ in Post-2014 Afghanistan Really Mean?

It’s not just about troops on the ground and the readiness of the Afghan security forces. By Catherine Powell

Threats

Why the US Can't Punish North Korea

The FBI formally accused the isolated country of the Sony hack, but the White House is basically powerless to do anything to respond. By Adam Chandler

Business

Bid Protest Slows Navy's $2.5 Billion Upgrade for Shipboard Networks

A recent GAO report says the Navy unfairly changed the price on bids to upgrade the nation’s surface warship fleet. By Frank Konkel

Defense Systems

2 keys to enhancing DOD’s new risk framework

There are a couple of things agencies should require from vendors to better address the DIARMF process, Dan Fallon of Nutanix says.

Defense Systems

7 breakthrough technologies from 2014

These DOD technologies and projects started making the transition this year from research to reality.

Threats

How Did North Korea Pull Off the Sony Hack?

The Sony hack was carried out by a very poor country where citizens are thought to lack basic internet access. By John McDuling

Threats

US Releases Four Afghan Detainees From Guantanamo

The U.S. prison in Guantanamo still holds 63 men who have been cleared for release. By Allen McDuffee

Threats

Obama Says the North Korea Hack Was ‘Cybervandalism,’ Not Cyber War

President Obama calls the Sony hack a reminder to do a lot more to guard against them.’ By Allen McDuffee

Business

The Tank That Won't Go Away and Other Details in the New Defense Budget

Key reforms across every section of the Pentagon's budget have been altered or slashed by lawmakers. Here are a few of them. By Janine Davidson