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Army cuts helicopters, pushes ‘Amazon for war’ as drone combat reshapes military
Army leaders signaled Wednesday that drone-heavy warfare and recent conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East are reshaping the service’s aviation and missile defense strategy, driving new scrutiny of helicopter programs and costly Patriot interceptor systems.
The comments come as the Army’s fiscal year 2027 budget request sharply cuts the funding request for helicopter procurement, including reducing Apache funding from roughly $361.7 million to about $1.5 million, Black Hawk funding from about $913 million to roughly $39.3 million and Chinook procurement from roughly $629 million to about $210 million, while increasing investment in drones, autonomy and low-cost battlefield technologies.
The transformation push already is extending beyond procurement. The Army previously announced plans to cut roughly 6,500 active-duty aviation positions over fiscal years 2026 and 2027 — including pilots, flight crews and maintainers — as leaders shift resources toward unmanned systems and drone warfare.
It remains unclear whether the procurement reductions ultimately will shrink aviation fleet sizes, extend the service life of aging aircraft or delay planned replacement cycles.
Army leaders suggested the battlefield lessons driving the changes already are shaping budget decisions, as the service redirects money away from some traditional aviation programs toward drones, autonomy and low-cost mass systems.
“Absolutely, as we look across the aviation portfolio … we’re re-looking that,” Assistant Army Secretary Brent Ingraham said during a Pentagon media roundtable Wednesday.
Ingraham said the Army is reassessing how traditional manned aircraft fit alongside larger unmanned systems increasingly capable of missions once handled by helicopters.
The proposed aviation cuts already have drawn concern on Capitol Hill.
During a recent Senate Armed Services Committee hearing May 12, Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., warned that the Army’s budget request included “zero H-64 Apaches, zero Chinook Block IIs, and one UH-60 Black Hawk,” arguing the service was divesting critical capabilities before validating replacements.
“Your department’s budget request cuts over $5 billion from the industrial base in the aviation sector alone, effectively shutting down all current Army aviation platforms,” Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., top Democrat on the Appropriations Committee, pressed War Secretary Pete Hegseth during a May 12 House Appropriations hearing. “How did the department arrive at the conclusion that reducing procurement for these Army aviation platforms strengthens rather than weakens the aviation industrial base?”
Hegseth acknowledged the Pentagon was reconsidering parts of the plan.
“There are some very good things in the Army Transformation Initiative, and there are some things that we’ve needed to get another look at,” Hegseth told lawmakers during a House hearing after facing questions about the scale of the aviation cuts.
Hegseth said Pentagon leaders were focused on ensuring the Army does not create “aviation capability gaps” as it transitions toward more unmanned systems and next-generation technologies.
‘EYES IN THE SKY’: ARMY DRONE EXPERT EXPLAINS US STRATEGY ON INNOVATION AS GLOBAL CONFLICT LOOMS
Army leaders said the rapid spread of cheap drones is forcing the Army to rethink how it buys and fields aircraft, missile defenses and battlefield technology.
“We know we don’t want to continue to use a Patriot missile to shoot down a cheap drone,” Ingraham said. “You’ve got to get on the right side of the cost curve.”
The concern has become increasingly urgent after the U.S. and its allies burned through large numbers of expensive missile defense interceptors during the Israel-Iran conflict and broader Middle East operations, fueling Pentagon concerns about stockpile depletion and the long-term sustainability of relying on multimillion-dollar defensive systems against cheap drones and missiles.
Officials also described a new allied drone and counter-drone procurement marketplace designed to speed foreign military sales and standardize interoperable systems across partner nations. Driscoll compared the effort to “an Amazon for war.”
Officials said the marketplace is expected to become available to roughly 25 U.S. allies and partners worldwide, initially focused on drone and counter-drone systems before potentially expanding to additional capabilities and countries.
The platform will for now only allow allies to buy U.S. capabilities.
US DRAINS CRITICAL MISSILE STOCKPILES IN IRAN WAR AS YEARSLONG REBUILD LOOMS
The Army also is launching a rapid competition to develop low-cost interceptors designed to counter drones and cruise missiles without exhausting multimillion-dollar Patriot missile stocks.
Ingraham said companies will have roughly 120 days after an upcoming industry event to demonstrate technologies ranging from rocket motors and seekers to fully integrated interceptor concepts.
“Even if you don’t have it all on the ground … bring it,” he said.
The transformation effort reflects growing concern inside the Pentagon that cheap drones, autonomous systems and mass-produced weapons are rapidly changing the economics and survivability assumptions of modern warfare, particularly after conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East exposed vulnerabilities in traditional armored and aviation-heavy battlefield concepts.
Army leaders increasingly suggest future wars will rely less on small numbers of expensive manned platforms and more on large quantities of cheaper, networked and rapidly replaceable systems capable of surviving in drone-saturated battlefields.
Army Secretary Daniel Driscoll said at the roundtable that the service is attempting to overhaul what leaders view as decades of broken acquisition practices that left the Army too slow to adapt to rapidly changing battlefield conditions.
“How do we dig down deep into the system to change the broken processes that have led to so many bad outcomes over the last 30 years?” Driscoll said.
Driscoll said the Army had lost Congress’s trust after decades of acquisition failures and budget overruns.
“The United States Army had in some ways lost Congress’s trust over the last 30 years that we could do big new projects, keep them on time, keep them on budget,” he said.
He later referenced the Army’s now-canceled M10 Booker armored vehicle program as an example of the type of procurement failure leaders are trying to avoid.
“When we go to Congress and say, ‘Hey, trust us to develop a new platform. This one will not turn out like the Booker tank,’” Driscoll said.
Driscoll argued the Army already is trying to field new capabilities on dramatically accelerated timelines more similar to wartime adaptation cycles seen in Ukraine than traditional Pentagon acquisition schedules.
“When Operation Epic Fury kicked off, we were able to on day five go start the process to purchase 13,000 Merops counter-drone interceptors,” Driscoll said.
“By day 10, we had contracted for something we had never purchased before,” he added. “They were starting to flow into theater in the thousands by day 20.”
Army officials also said the service is trying to rapidly improve how weapons systems, sensors and battlefield networks communicate with one another after studying Ukraine’s ability to quickly integrate commercial and military technologies during the war.
“The Ukrainians were highlighting to us how their open architecture system allowed information to pass between nearly all of their sensors and radars,” Driscoll said. “That empowered so many things that they could do that we just can’t do yet.”
“At this exact moment at Fort Carson, there are 450 developers and programmers jailbreaking all of our equipment,” he added.
“I’m cautiously optimistic within a month from now we will have jailbroken literally hundreds of pieces of equipment.”
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Lindsey Graham Finally Learns His Fate
South Carolina Republicans delivered a decisive victory Tuesday night to incumbent Senator Lindsey Graham, handing the longtime lawmaker a commanding win in one of the most closely watched Senate primaries of the 2026 election cycle.
The race attracted national attention as Republicans work to protect and potentially expand their Senate majority ahead of the midterm elections. With Democrats continuing to push progressive policies in Washington, GOP leaders have emphasized the importance of maintaining experienced conservative voices in the upper chamber.
Graham entered Election Day with several significant advantages, including the endorsement of President Donald Trump, strong support from South Carolina’s Republican establishment, and a lengthy record of statewide victories.
Not long after polls closed, major outlets projected Graham as the winner over businessman Mark Lynch, ending months of campaigning and reaffirming the senator’s strong standing among Republican voters in the Palmetto State.
Throughout the campaign, Graham emphasized his support for President Trump’s agenda and his commitment to fighting what he described as efforts by the political left to fundamentally reshape the country. He frequently highlighted battles over judicial appointments, election integrity, border security, and Democratic proposals involving structural changes to the federal government.
The senator’s alliance with President Trump proved particularly important in a state where the president remains enormously popular among Republican voters. Trump’s endorsement gave Graham a powerful boost and helped solidify support among conservatives who may have once questioned the senator’s relationship with the president during earlier stages of Trump’s political rise.
While Graham focused on his record and support for the Trump agenda, Lynch spent much of the final weeks of the campaign responding to a series of controversies involving his personal history, financial disclosures, and campaign operations.
According to reports, questions emerged regarding Lynch’s financial filings and the source of millions of dollars he contributed to his own campaign. The allegations generated increased scrutiny as Election Day approached and prompted calls for further review of campaign finance records.
Additional attention focused on Lynch’s past criminal history. Lynch has publicly acknowledged a 1984 felony cocaine trafficking conviction and has spoken openly about overcoming addiction and rebuilding his life. He has also claimed that he later received a presidential pardon.
However, recent reports raised questions regarding documentation of that pardon. According to published reports, searches of publicly available Justice Department records did not locate evidence supporting the claim, and Lynch reportedly acknowledged difficulties locating records through his legal team.
Further scrutiny surrounded a separate legal matter from the mid-1980s involving allegations connected to an accident. Lynch has disputed characterizations of the incident and maintained that some reporting on the matter has been misleading.
Graham’s campaign repeatedly highlighted those issues throughout the race while also questioning Lynch’s preparedness for federal office.
President Trump weighed in forcefully during the campaign and made clear where his loyalties stood.
The president endorsed Graham and sharply criticized Lynch, calling him a “LUNATIC” and warning that he would be a “DISASTER for the Republican Party.”
Despite receiving support from former Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene shortly before the election, Lynch struggled to gain traction against the well-funded incumbent.
“I am done watching Lindsey Graham sell out America,” Greene wrote on X.
Graham campaign spokeswoman Abby Zilch argued that the race ultimately represented a choice between Republicans working alongside President Trump and factions she believed were undermining his agenda.
“Senator Graham believes that South Carolina is Trump country, not MTG/Massie country,” Zilch said.
She added that Graham is proud to have the support of Trump, Sen. Tim Scott, and what she described as legions of pro-Trump Republicans throughout the state.
The victory gives Republicans another reason for optimism heading toward November. South Carolina remains one of the nation’s most reliably Republican states, and Graham is widely expected to enter the general election as a heavy favorite.
For President Trump, the result also serves as another demonstration of his continued influence within Republican politics. Once again, voters in a major GOP primary overwhelmingly sided with the candidate carrying the president’s endorsement, reinforcing Trump’s role as the dominant figure in the Republican Party as the 2026 midterm elections approach.
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Senate Passes It With 52-46 Vote — Chuck Schumer Explodes
The U.S. Senate has overwhelmingly approved bipartisan legislation designed to crack down on the illegal export of American semiconductor technology, delivering another major victory for efforts to protect U.S. national security and maintain America’s technological advantage over China.
The legislation, known as the Stop Stealing Our Chips Act, now heads to the House of Representatives, where supporters hope it will quickly gain approval before reaching President Donald Trump’s desk for signature.
South Dakota Republican Senator Mike Rounds, the lead sponsor of the bill, praised the Senate’s passage of the legislation and emphasized the growing threat posed by China’s efforts to acquire advanced American technology.
“I look forward to working with our colleagues in the House to get this important legislation through Congress and to President Trump’s desk to be signed into law,” said South Dakota Republican Sen. Mike Rounds, who lead the bill.
Rounds originally introduced the legislation in April 2025 alongside Democratic Senator Mark Warner of Virginia, demonstrating rare bipartisan agreement on one of Washington’s most pressing national security concerns.
If enacted, the measure would amend the Export Control Reform Act and establish a new whistleblower reward program within the Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS), which operates under the U.S. Department of Commerce.
The goal is straightforward: identify and stop illegal schemes used to smuggle American-made semiconductor technology into China.
Semiconductors are the foundation of modern technology, powering everything from smartphones and advanced computing systems to military weapons platforms and artificial intelligence applications. As competition between the United States and China intensifies, controlling access to cutting-edge chip technology has become a central component of American national security strategy.
“I am pleased that the Stop Stealing our Chips Act has passed the Senate,” Sen. Rounds said.
“The United States has taken extensive measures to prevent American-made semiconductors from falling into the wrong hands, particularly China; however, China continues to smuggle these chips into their country,” Rounds added.
The senator warned that China’s continued efforts to obtain advanced American chips pose significant risks as artificial intelligence technologies become increasingly powerful.
As the use of artificial intelligence continues to expand across both civilian and military sectors, the importance of safeguarding advanced semiconductor technology has never been greater.
“Our legislation would strengthen BIS’s export control enforcement by rewarding whistleblowers with credible information on illegal actions to come forward,” said Sen. Rounds.
Under the bill, the government would establish a secure reporting platform for whistleblowers and create a dedicated fund to compensate individuals who provide credible information leading to successful enforcement actions.
According to the proposal, whistleblowers whose information results in penalties against violators could receive between 10 percent and 30 percent of the fines collected. The legislation also includes confidentiality protections and safeguards against retaliation.
The program would be funded entirely through fines assessed against export-control violators rather than taxpayer dollars.
The Senate’s action comes amid broader efforts by the Trump administration to strengthen America’s economic and technological position on the world stage.
Earlier this month, President Trump traveled to China for a high-profile summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping. The meeting focused on a range of issues, including trade, artificial intelligence, manufacturing, and economic cooperation.
Following the summit, Trump announced that China had agreed to purchase 200 Boeing aircraft, a deal that could provide a substantial boost to one of America’s most important manufacturing companies.
In an interview with Fox News host Sean Hannity, Trump described his discussions with Xi in positive terms and highlighted the significance of the agreement.
According to Trump, the conversations were “very good,” and the commitment exceeded expectations.
While specific details regarding aircraft models and delivery schedules have not yet been released, industry observers view the agreement as a major development for Boeing and American manufacturing.
Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg, who joined Trump’s delegation, previously described the trip as “a meaningful opportunity” for the company and expressed optimism regarding potential aircraft orders.
Together, the Senate’s action on semiconductor security and Trump’s efforts to expand American exports underscore a broader strategy aimed at protecting critical industries while strengthening U.S. economic leadership.
As China continues seeking access to advanced technologies, supporters of the legislation argue that safeguarding America’s semiconductor advantage is no longer merely an economic issue—it is a national security imperative.
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Prayers Pour In After Fox Host Dies: ‘Senseless Murder’
The sports and podcasting world is mourning the loss of James “Uncle Jimmy” Dodds, the beloved media personality and longtime friend of commentator Jason Whitlock, after authorities confirmed his death in what Whitlock described as a “senseless murder.”
Dodds, a father of five, became well-known to audiences through his appearances alongside Whitlock on television and later through the popular “Fearless” platform, where his humor, honesty, and larger-than-life personality made him a fan favorite.
Authorities have confirmed that three suspects are currently in custody and facing charges in connection with the homicide. While investigators have not yet released full details surrounding the circumstances of the crime, news of Dodds’ death sent shockwaves through viewers and supporters who had followed his work for years.
Whitlock shared the heartbreaking news in a public statement that reflected both personal grief and deep frustration over the circumstances surrounding his friend’s death.
“Three young black men are in custody for the senseless murder of Uncle Jimmy Dodds, father of five, my former TV/podcast sidekick, my longtime friend. My resolve to speak against the demonic culture celebrated as “black culture” has deepened. RIP, Jimmy.”
The tribute quickly spread across social media, prompting an outpouring of condolences from fans, fellow media personalities, and members of the broader sports community.
For many viewers, Dodds was much more than a recurring guest. His chemistry with Whitlock helped create some of the most memorable moments on “Speak for Yourself” after he joined the program in 2018. His unfiltered commentary, quick wit, and willingness to speak his mind gave the show a unique dynamic that resonated with audiences.
When Whitlock later expanded his independent media efforts through podcasts and digital platforms, Dodds remained a familiar and welcome presence. Fans often viewed him as the everyman voice in conversations about sports, culture, family, and current events.
Unlike many media personalities who carefully craft a public image, Dodds built a reputation for authenticity. Whether discussing serious issues or sharing humorous stories, he connected with audiences because he came across as genuine and relatable.
His ability to inject humor into difficult conversations and his obvious friendship with Whitlock helped make him one of the most recognizable figures associated with the “Fearless” brand.
The tragedy has also reignited broader conversations about violent crime and the impact such losses have on families and communities. Dodds leaves behind five children, relatives, close friends, and countless supporters who now must cope with his sudden absence.
Whitlock’s remarks suggest that the loss has strengthened his commitment to speaking out on cultural issues he believes contribute to violence and the breakdown of family structures. While investigations into the homicide continue, Whitlock made clear that the death of his longtime friend has deeply affected him both personally and professionally.
For those who knew Dodds, either personally or through his media appearances, the focus remains on remembering the man behind the microphone.
He was a father, a friend, a trusted confidant, and a personality who brought laughter and authenticity to every conversation he joined.
As tributes continue to pour in from across the country, many are remembering “Uncle Jimmy” not simply for his media work, but for the relationships he built and the lives he touched along the way.
His passing leaves a void that will be difficult to fill, but his legacy as a devoted father, loyal friend, and unforgettable voice in sports and cultural commentary will not soon be forgotten.
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