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- Missile Defense Project | Defense and Security | CSIS
The Missile Defense Project at CSIS looks at a wide range of policy, program, and strategic issues related to missile defense Technological and geopolitical factors have driven increased global supply and demand for high-velocity, unmanned, missile-based weapons and their corresponding counters Besides more recognized cruise and ballistic missile threats, global missile proliferation now
- Missile Defense: Research Analysis | CSIS
Missile Defense As hypersonic missiles, cruise missiles, and unmanned aircraft systems become increasingly common on the battlefield, focusing on the full spectrum of missile threats is crucial, especially as the missile threat from China and Russia grows CSIS research seeks innovative means to counter the full spectrum of global missile threats
- The 2022 Missile Defense Review: Still Seeking Alignment - CSIS
The 2022 Missile Defense Review advances several new capability areas, but leaves some questions unanswered
- Hypersonic Hegemony: Niobium and the Western Hemisphere’s Role . . . - CSIS
CSIS Americas Program experts Guido L Torres, Laura Delgado López, Ryan C Berg, and Henry Ziemer argue China's growing control over Brazil's niobium industry risks putting the United States on the back foot when it comes to hypersonic missile technology
- Prioritizing Air and Missile Defense Spending in the Broader . . . - CSIS
The most ambitious visions of the Golden Dome missile defense architecture face tough budgetary decisions about their prioritization within the missile defense portfolio, in the Department of Defense capability mix, and across the federal budget
- Report Rollout: Mesh Sensing for Air and Missile Defense
The CSIS Missile Defense Project is pleased to roll out our new report, Mesh Sensing for Air and Missile Defense As threats to missile defense assets increase, the study assesses a vision for passive, proliferated sensor networks for surface-based air and missile defense
- Russia’s Intense Air Campaign in October - CSIS
Russia's recent missile strikes indicate a transition in strategy and doctrine, where industrial capacity plays a growing role in determining battlefield dynamics Massed salvos have given way to a more flexible strike schedule, necessitating an adaptive defensive strategy
- Russia’s Nuclear-Powered Burevestnik Missile: Implications for Missile . . .
Nuclear-powered cruise missiles are not a new idea—they’re just a bad idea While Russia’s Burevestnik missile is grabbing headlines, it does not fundamentally change Russia’s ability to hold the U S homeland at risk or the strategic balance between the two states
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