The ban aims to protect the country’s “national sovereignty and security," and it follows US tariffs against Beijing, ...
Cubic announces FMS award to deliver its Live Training Systems (LTS) product lines to support Force-on-Force (FoF) and Force-on-Target (FOT) training programs in the Indo-Pacific region. The advanced ...
Learn more about Cubic Defense's appointment of U.S. Navy veteran and former CAES executive Russell Marsh as president.
10 countries with the highest military spending in 2025: The global defence expenditures reached $2.46 trillion in 2024, according to a recent report by the International Institute of Strategic ...
From peacekeeping on the Russia-Ukraine border to defending our own waters, experts say it can't come soon enough. Two defence experts are warning that New Zealand's ageing navy is woefully inadequate ...
The New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) says New Zealand received no notice from China that it would be sending three navy ships to the Tasman Sea. Defence Minister Judith Collins said China was ...
We will create a new era of defence partnership to bring us closer than ever before as we tackle increasing threats, strengthen Nato, and boost our security in the High North." "The UK is determined ...
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s plan to reduce projected US military spending by 8% over the next five years would spare southwest border enforcement, the Air Force’s newest drone program, nuclear ...
India and Malaysia enhance cooperation in maritime security, defence production, and multilateral engagements, focusing on cybersecurity and AI. They will form a Sukhoi-30 forum for exchanging ...
Thyssenkrupp shares jump 20% on expected defence budget surge BofA Global Research sees TKMS as a 'hidden' defence stock Iveco and Thyssenkrupp catching up with broader aerospace and defence index ...
Some defense officials responsible for drafting lists of civilian Pentagon employees to be terminated as soon as this week are raising concerns with their superiors that the summary firings could ...
Denmark will spend an additional 50bn kroner (€6.7bn) on defence over the next two years, amid the ongoing threat Russia poses to Europe, the Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has announced.