Vol. 87 No. 590, January 2003
Index
- Editor's corner.
- Those who defend us.
- Czech Republic's chem-bio unit in Kuwait.
- Errata.
- Former Polish official: military reform is slow.
- JSF will be expeditionary, says aviation chief.
- Marines tell suppliers they'll be treated better.
- Department of Homeland Security trumps FBI?
- FBI short on info-security specialists.
- Immunizing a building for chem-bio attacks.
- Sharing information technology at airports.
- The rise of the homeland security lobbyist.
- 'Systemic approach' needed in anti-terrorism.
- Pentagon seeks to turn photos into 3-D models.
- Air-traffic controller voices made synthetic.
- Flight simulator displays selected for F-35.
- ROK fears North Korean ability to wage asymmetric warfare.
- Joint Strike Fighter partners hope for industrial windfall.
- Navy-Marine tac-air integration gets underway: as details of the consolidation come to light, operators raise wide-ranging concerns.
- Aerospace commission report light on details: blue-ribbon study criticized by its own members for lack of specific solutions.
- Submariners want larger role in joint expeditionary combat.
- USJFCOM steps up efforts to organize combined ops.
- Army's Future Combat System shakes up procurement culture.
- Army logistics: changes ahead in force structure, maintenance.
- U.K. defense researchers pick U.S. partner: Washington-based Carlyle group to seek investors for London's new military technology firm.
- Future Tactical Truck to expedite transportation: Army garnering support for what could be a $3 billion vehicle program by 2006.
- Hybrid-electric vehicles not yet ready for the battlefield.
- A-12 termination sets harmful precedent for defense programs.
- Tactical airlifter marketed to Coast Guard, Air Guard.
- New division focuses on small businesses.
- Defense department.
- Industry.
- AFEI elects new board of directors.
- Women In Defense opens chesapeake bay chapter.
- Helping Coast Guard enhance port security.
- NDIA events & Calendar.