Vol. 86 No. 580, March 2002
Index
- Editor's corner.
- Policy issues that matter to industry.
- Does the public care about civil defense?
- Precision Strike Association enters affiliation with NDIA.
- Army O&M accounts hard to track.
- Defense budget to reach $380 billion.
- Lack of interoperability hampers transformation.
- Levin: Storing nukes is a risk.
- Mogadishu veteran ponders 'lessons learned'.
- Apache digital imaging system gets an upgrade.
- Hand-held sweeper cleans up bio contaminants.
- Sensors monitor soldier health during combat.
- Boot protects against land mines.
- CDC develops bio-threat test kits.
- Combat radio promises short-range, secure communication.
- Navy's latest destroyer: Is it a ship or a test-bed?
- Anti-terrorism planning shapes experiments: Marine Corps Warfighting Lab sharpens focus on covert urban reconnaissance.
- Coast Guard's future depends on Deepwater: Current fleet lacks technologies needed to tackle emerging seaborne threats.
- Chem-Bio attack looming, say U.S. officials: According to Sen. Tim Hutchinson, 'The unthinkable has become thinkable'.
- Chem-Bio detector market reaches $400M.
- Breakthroughs sought in Chem-Bio sensors.
- U.S. troops find new uses for non-lethal weaponry.
- Stopping intruders can be a sticky mess: Joint non-lethal program office funds development of Mobility Denial System.
- Non-lethal weapons to gain relevancy in future conflicts.
- Shipbuilding sector remains uncompetitive: U.S. government should take action to make the nation's shipyards more efficient.
- Navy Reforms International Programs Office.
- Pentagon needs accurate accounting of fuel: Military services urged to set up measurement tools for energy consumption.
- Environmental market to remain flat in U.S.: Companies should seek business expanded opportunities in developing countries.
- Information Dominance key to U.S. Security.
- Government.
- Industry.
- 2002 annual NDIA membership meeting.
- Iowa-Illinois Chapter hosts conference.
- NDIA Even.