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Defining acquisition on a wartime footing

Wednesday, 15 April 2026 19:45

The President, the Secretary of War, and the Chief of Space Operations are all saying it: We no longer have the luxury of time.

Lebanon as Last Resort: Why Netanyahu's Political Survival Now Depends on a War He Can Actually Win

Netanyahu is escalating in Lebanon because it is the only front where he can claim a winnable victory for domestic political survival. That single fact explains more about the current campaign than any security briefing or diplomatic statement. With prolonged military operations across the region producing no decisive outcomes, Lebanon has become the stage where […]

The post Lebanon as Last Resort: Why Netanyahu’s Political Survival Now Depends on a War He Can Actually Win appeared first on Space Daily.

‘Future Operating Environment’ and ‘Objective Force’ documents outline a contested space domain and call for a combat-ready force

Mars Sample Return illustration

Several senators are asking appropriators to increase funding for NASA’s robotic Mars exploration efforts, fearing “severe and irreversible harm” if funding is not restored.

Sudan's Economic Collapse By the Numbers: Why Even Peace Can't Undo $18.8 Billion in Projected Losses

Sudan’s civil war has produced a economic catastrophe so severe that even an immediate peace deal cannot undo it: projected cumulative GDP losses of $18.8 billion stretching to 2043, with average incomes already thrown back to levels last seen in the early 1990s. A quarter century of economic progress, erased in three years. That projection, […]

The post Sudan’s Economic Collapse By the Numbers: Why Even Peace Can’t Undo $18.8 Billion in Projected Losses appeared first on Space Daily.

Space domain awareness has a data problem. Not a shortage of data, but a shortage of the right data, delivered at the right time, with enough autonomy to act on […]

The people who fall in love slowly aren't guarded. They're paying a kind of attention that most people mistake for hesitation, and they know the difference between intensity and depth.

People who fall in love slowly aren't guarded or avoidant — they've learned the difference between neurochemical intensity and genuine depth, and they're paying a kind of careful attention that our culture routinely mistakes for hesitation.

The post The people who fall in love slowly aren’t guarded. They’re paying a kind of attention that most people mistake for hesitation, and they know the difference between intensity and depth. appeared first on Space Daily.

The people who go quiet during group decisions aren't passive. They're running a cost-benefit analysis on whether their honesty will be punished or rewarded.

Strategic silence in group decisions isn't passivity — it's a rational response to environments that punish honesty. The quiet person has calculated the social cost of speaking up and found the price too high, revealing more about the group's dysfunction than their own.

The post The people who go quiet during group decisions aren’t passive. They’re running a cost-benefit analysis on whether their honesty will be punished or rewarded. appeared first on Space Daily.

Rethinking cyber and space with Joe Mazur

Wednesday, 15 April 2026 13:35

In this episode of Space Minds, Mike Gruss talks with Nightwing’s Joe Mazur to discuss the intersection of cyber and space.

Japan Turns to Unmanned Systems as Demographics Reshape Its Defense Reality

Japan established two new offices within its Ground Self-Defense Force in early April dedicated entirely to unmanned warfare, a move that signals how seriously Tokyo is treating the convergence of demographic decline and modern battlefield realities. The offices, formally inaugurated at a ceremony in mid-April, are staffed by a small team. They are tasked with […]

The post Japan Turns to Unmanned Systems as Demographics Reshape Its Defense Reality appeared first on Space Daily.

Salps

Shrinking ice is arguably one of the most visible indicators of climate change – particularly in the Arctic. However, a European Space Agency-funded study used information from satellites to show that Antarctica is now experiencing similar dramatic changes, with profound consequences for key plankton species that underpin the region’s marine food web.

ESA's €18.6 Million Bet on Kepler Communications Reveals How Europe Plans to Build the Backbone of Space-Based Internet

The European Space Agency just handed a Canadian satellite operator the keys to one of Europe’s most strategically important space programs. The question is why. ESA awarded Kepler Communications an 18.6 million euro ($22 million) contract to lead the final demonstration element of HydRON, a program that aims to build the world’s first multi-orbital optical […]

The post ESA’s €18.6 Million Bet on Kepler Communications Reveals How Europe Plans to Build the Backbone of Space-Based Internet appeared first on Space Daily.

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