Vol. 87 No. 592, March 2003
Index
- Editor's corner.
- Defense budget takes calculated risks.
- Readers forum.
- American group seeks peace in Chechnya.
- Erratum.
- Latvia outlines military modernization plan.
- Spratt: defense spending plans not realistic.
- Tensions in Congress running high, gridlock to continue.
- Avoid 'analysis paralysis,' DHS workers advised.
- House creates Select Committee on Homeland Security.
- Navy steps up deployment of Air Defense system.
- Physician assertiveness will prevent outbreaks of illness.
- Private Defense Information taken off Internet.
- Congressman wants nanoscience advisory board.
- Former General Dynamics chief named S&T head at DHS.
- Airbags move to airplanes.
- Bomb squads get rugged computers.
- Sensor sees through walls.
- Cadets learn from Civil War 3-D models.
- How to get a jolt when you really need it.
- Base closures a top concern for incoming GOP lawmakers.
- SASC members apprehensive about BRAC, force readiness.
- 'Joint bases' is the name of the game in BRAC '05.
- U.S. scales back JSF, Super Hornet buys: Consolidation of Navy-Marine tactical aviation eliminates 497 aircraft.
- Navy, Air Force team up in 'Joint Fires Network': current technologies not flexible enough for fast-paced strike warfare.
- Navy's fire-support weapon programs lag: long-range naval guns, precision-guided projectiles, are at least a decade away.
- NATO units in Kosovo predict mission could last a decade.
- Former Kosovo Liberation Army morphing into a national guard.
- New intelligence office must fix information breakdowns.
- Marine Corps sets sights on more precise shooting.
- Precision weapons command more attention, resources.
- Military transformation requires new suppliers: Pentagon study says more innovative companies needed in defense sector.
- NDIA lists top defense issues for 2003.
- Brass tracks.
- Scholarship honors past president Lawrence F. Skibbie.
- WID event to examine Defense Outsourcing.
- Ndia event.