Monday, September 4, 2017

Military And Intelligence News Briefs -- September 4, 2017



New York Times: What’s the Difference Between a Hydrogen Bomb and a Regular Atomic Bomb?

North Korea claimed that a nuclear blast on Sunday was a big advance from its previous five tests because it had successfully detonated a hydrogen bomb. But some experts suspect the North may have tested a “boosted” atomic bomb.

How are a hydrogen bomb and a regular atomic bomb different? And why would that matter to the United States and its allies? Here’s what the experts say.

Read more ....

Military And Intelligence News Briefs -- September 4, 2017

Hydrogen vs atomic bomb: What's the difference? -- DW

'If we fire, they will die': Kim Jong-un accuses Seoul's 'scabby sheep' army of being 'puppets' for Donald Trump which can be wiped out by his 'nuclear striking power' -- Daily Mail

North Korea's Sixth Nuclear Test Is Its Biggest -- Stratfor

South Korea warns that North may launch ICBM after nuclear test -- Reuters

South Korea Simulates Attack on North Korea’s Nuclear Site After Test -- NBC

South Korea to temporarily deploy four remaining THAAD launchers: ministry -- Reuters

South Korea holds live-fire drills and warns of more launches by North -- The Guardian

US military options on North Korea 'very ugly' -- CNN

Japan says U.S. has assured it of nuclear deterrent protection -- Reuters

S. Korea, US discuss deploying aircraft carrier, strategic bombers to Korean Peninsula -- RT

Iran tests home-grown air defence system: official -- AFP

Report: Iran sent warnings to US aircraft twice in 6 months -- AP

Iran says warns off U.S. U2 spy plane, drone -- Reuters

Israel questions six in submarine graft probe: police -- AFP

India appoints new defence minister, rejigs cabinet to refocus on economy -- Reuters

Israeli police make six arrests over ThyssenKrupp 'Submarine Affair' -- DW

British troops in Iraq bolstered as fight to wipe out Islamic State enters final push, Defence Secretary says -- The Telegraph

Bundeswehr admits failures following deadly training march -- DW

Mattis reportedly threatens Swedish defense cooperation over nuclear treaty -- Defense News

US will send more navy patrols to disputed South China Sea amid tensions with Beijing -- Express

New LCS completes U.S. Navy acceptance trials -- UPI

US to Replace Destroyers Damaged in Accidents at Sea -- Sputnik

Lawmakers to grill Navy officials over fatal mishaps -- Defense News

Granite, Obayashi preparing new Marine base on Guam -- UPI

Goldfein: Air Force could see increased airstrikes, new deployments in Afghanistan -- Defense News

US Air Force secretary names T-X trainer contract, new hires as potential CR victims -- Defense News

9,400 resumes of US military & intel contractors exposed in massive security lapse – reports -- RT

DARPA looks beyond Moore's Law -- Defense Systems

Did the Navy’s tipping point just tip after accidents? -- Gordon C. Morse, Virginia Pilot

Tank Busters: The Top 5 Man-Portable Anti-Armor Systems in the World -- Sputnik

Course Correction: The Navy Needs to Invest in People, Not Just Platforms -- Daniel Straub, Patrick Cronin, War on the Rocks

What Twitter Taught Me About (Nuclear) War With North Korea -- Franz-Stefan Gady, The Diplomat

1 comment:

Bob Huntley said...

I would think that delivery of the bomb would be the key. If NK proved they can slip a device with a bomb in it into a given country then they have power. Reminds me of the movie with Glen Ford, Evening in Byzantium.

The screenplay is a cautionary tale about terrorists attacking major cities in the United States using hijacked commercial airliners containing nuclear bombs as the attack vehicles.