Axios: Outgunned at home


Axios AM
By Mike Allen · Apr 15, 2026
 Hello, Tax Day! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,291 words … 5 mins. Thanks to Noah Bressner for orchestrating. Edited by Andrew Pantazi and Bill Kole. If you’re in D.C. today: Join us at 7:30 a.m. for our blockbuster Axios News Shapers event. I’ll interview Sen. Dave McCormick (R-Pa.). We’ll also talk with Kevin Hassett, Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) & more. RSVP.
 
 
1 big thing: Outgunned at home
 
Illustration of a swarm of drones surrounding the State of Liberty's torch.
Illustration: Lindsey Bailey/Axios
 
A Pentagon competition to build out a killer drone fleet ended with a small British company crushing American contractors on their own turf, Axios Future of Defense author Colin Demarest writes.

Why it matters: The Defense Department’s Drone Dominance push is designed to arm American troops with expendable drones on a massive scale in a few short years. It’s also a tacit admission of how ill-prepared the U.S. is to match some combat conditions seen overseas: Roughly 75% of casualties in the Russia–Ukraine war are caused by drones.🔎 

Zoom in: Skycutter — the British company with frontline Ukraine experience — entered the Shrike 10-F, a 10-inch drone that can be operated via fiber optic cable to counter electronic jamming and spoofing.

The drone is the result of collaboration with SkyFall, a Ukrainian outfit.

“They make one every 23 seconds, 123,000 units per month,” Vincent Gardner, Skycutter’s operations director, told Axios. “We redesigned it with them to exclude any Chinese parts or components.”

Gardner was blunt: “A lot of people came with, I would argue, quite overengineered solutions. … These drones, they’re like mechanical wasps. 

The result: It was a blowout. Skycutter scored an overall 99.3 at an attack drone fly-off at Fort Benning in Georgia. In second was Neros, a Southern California startup, at 87.5.

Skycutter, which has a manufacturing footprint in Atlanta, is now under contract for more than 2,500 drones. It plans to boost U.S. manufacturing in the near term.Photo: Presidential Office of Ukraine🔮 

Future of war: Here’s another story that caught Colin’s attention …

viral video is making the rounds of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky bragging about taking a Russian position with only robots and drones.

No human soldiers.Inside the story: Ukraine, outmanned and outgunned by Russia, has spun up a sci-fi-style defense industry.

Zelensky said Ukrainian ground robots carried out more than 22,000 missions in just three months.

Frontline footage from the robots helps fuel fundraising for cheap drones and interceptors.More on the “Gauntlet” … Get Axios Future of Defense.
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Steve Hanke on X: US Foreign Military Bases. Germany has 118 US military bases in Germany

Steve Hanke

@steve_hanke

·

The US has 118 military bases in Germany. That’s the highest concentration of US bases in a foreign country. In Germany, Uncle Sam runs the show.

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The Ezra Klein Show: Reckoning With Israel’s ‘One State Reality’

Apr 14, 2026

The Ezra Klein Show

For decades, most discussions of Israel and Palestine were framed around the eventual creation of a two-state solution. That effort has been dead for years. What has emerged in its place is what the political scientists Marc Lynch and Shibley Telhami call the “one-state reality.” Their book on this — edited with Michael Barnett and Nathan Brown — came out before Oct. 7, 2023. Since Oct. 7, that reality has become further entrenched: There’s been a record pace of settlement construction in the West Bank. Israel now occupies more than half the territory of Gaza. And Israel’s push into Lebanon has displaced more than a million people. So what does it mean to reckon with Israel’s one-state reality — to see the facts on the ground rather than the frames of the past? Shibley Telhami is the Anwar Sadat professor for peace and development at the University of Maryland, College Park. Marc Lynch is the director of the Project on Middle East Political Science at George Washington University. Lynch is the author, most recently, of “America’s Middle East: The Ruination of a Region.” 0:00 Intro 7:16 One-state reality 14:52 Netanyahu’s messaging 25:28 After Oct. 7 43:36 Gaza after the cease-fire 53:03 Israel’s strategy on Iran 58:49 What’s happening in Lebanon 1:13:46 The one-state reality now 1:22:24 U.S. support for Israel 1:27:24 Book recommendations Read the full transcript here: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/14/op… Watch more on ‪@EzraKleinShow‬ Thoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at ezrakleinshow@nytimes.com. You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of “The Ezra Klein Show” at nytimes.com/ezra-klein-podcast. Book recommendations from all our guests are listed at https://www.nytimes.com/article/ezra-… Leo Correa/Associated Press

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Just Jay: Our Lord meets the Pope meme

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World’s Largest Oil Chokepoints

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Iran Answers Trump’s Blockade with a LEGO Diss Track

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Current Report: Polish MP Konrad Berkowicz displayed an altered Israeli flag in parliament featuring a swastika …

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Russia. Reminder to the West about Russia’s submarine warfare abilities. Comment: Island of Ireland remains vulnerable

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Chris Hedges Report: The Trump Administration’s War on Cuba (w/ Medea Benjamin) | The Chris Hedges Report

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Breaking Defense: The US and Iran are using new weapons in the war. Here’s what to know.

The US and Iran are using new weapons in the war. Here’s what to know.

From upgraded, extended range Iranian missiles to America’s deployment of Iran-inspired drones, the deadly conflict is also a real-world munitions testing ground.

By Agnes Helou and Ashley Roque on April 14, 2026 11:24 amShare

An Iranian Sejjil solid-fueled medium-range ballistic missile is being displayed at the Azadi (Freedom) square in western Tehran during a rally to mark the 45th anniversary of the victory of Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution, on February 11, 2024. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

BEIRUT and WASHINGTON — In the weeks since the US and Israel launched a surprise attack on Iran, the Middle Eastern battlefield has seen the combat debut of several weapons, many of them missiles that had never been fired in anger before.

Beyond its already well-known Shahed-family one-way attack drones, Iran has reportedly launched a handful of new munitions at targets throughout the Gulf and as far away as Diego Garcia. The US, meanwhile, has embraced Iranian-inspired drone designs and fired off a few new missiles of its own.

Some notable examples:

Iran Launches New Or Upgraded Missiles

Sejjil Missile: On March 15, Iran’s semi-official press agency Tasnim reported that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) launched for the first time solid-fuel Sejjil missiles against Israel.

Sejjil is described as an 18-meter (60-foot) medium-range ballistic missile developed by Iran, powered by two-stage solid propellant. It reportedly carries a 700 kg (1,500-pound) warhead and has a maximum range of 2,000 km (1,243 miles).

Khorramshahr-4: Earlier last month Iran reportedly used for the first time its heavy-weight ballistic missile Khorramshahr-4 missile, which Iranian media describe it as “super-heavy” missile “with a 2-ton warhead and speed exceeding 14 Mach.”

According to the US-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, Khorramshahr is ground-launched medium-range ballistic missile, with high explosive head and submunitions. Its range varies from 2,000 to 3,000 km.

Haj Qassem: The conflict has also seen upgraded versions of existing missiles, including the Haj Qassem. The missile, which was unveiled in May 2025, has an extended range of 1,200 km, according to Iranian media. The ongoing conflict, is the first time Iranian-government controlled media outlets report its use.

The missile reportedly uses solid fuel and has a modified warhead that enables it to maneuver to “penetrate the air defense missile systems” and is equipped with “an advanced navigation system that allows it to hit targets precisely and counter electronic warfare,” Iran’s Tasnim said.

Mystery Long-Range Munition: Perhaps the most surprising and mysterious development involving new munitions was a reported March 20 Iranian attack on far-distant Diego Garcia, which includes a British military base used by the US, about 2,500 miles from Iran’s borders.

Two missiles did not strike their targets — one failed in flight and the other was intercepted by US naval assets — according to The Wall Street Journal. But the sheer range of the strike pushed the boundaries of what experts believed Iran was capable of. (One analyst told WSJ that Iran could have modified a space launcher to cover the distance, and even then it’s unclear either would have made it all the way to any island targets.)

But unlike strikes on closer targets, Iran denied the attack. Still, Israeli officials have used the purported strike to warn that European capitals, until then out of range of the conflict, were in danger.

US Uses PrSM And Iran-Inspired Drones

Meanwhile, the US is also using several new weapons for the first time in combat against Iran. While US Central Command declined to provide a list the new capabilities making a debut, it has previously confirmed the first use of the Precision Strike Missile (PrSM), Low-Cost Unmanned Combat Attack System (LUCAS) and the Global Autonomous Reconnaissance Craft (GARC).

PrSM: On March 4, CENTCOM announced Lockheed Martin’s Precision Strike Missile (PrSM) Increment 1 had been used for the first time in combat, “providing an unrivaled deep strike capability.”

Designed to replace Lockheed’s MGM-140 Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) and hit targets at least 500 kilometers away, the new missiles can  be launched by either M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System launchers and the M270A2 Multiple Launch Rocket System (MLRS).

A pair of New York Times articles have claimed that the PrSM weapon was used in a strike on a sports hall, a school and two residential areas in the Iranian city of Lamerd. CENCTOM has denied that a PrSM was involved.

LUCAS: Taking a page from Iran’s playbook, CENTCOM confirmed the use of a new one-way attack drone, dubbed LUCUS, after the initial wave of strikes on Iran. That new drone is reverse engineered from an Iranian Shahed 136, costs roughly $35,000, is about 10-feet in length and can carry an explosive payload that detonates on impact.

“As many of you know, and if you don’t know, this was an original Iranian drone design,” CENTCOM Commander Adm. Bradley Cooper told reporters on March 5. “We captured it, pulled the guts out, sent it back to America, put a little made in America on it, brought it back here, and we’re shooting it at the Iranians.”

GARC: In late March, Reuters reported that a new uncrewed surface vessel named GARC had been used in Operation Epic Fury.

Built by Maritime Applied Physics Corp, the US Navy has tested out the 16-foot vessel over the past couple of years but in June 2025, DefenseScoop reported that the service temporarily paused testing when it flipped another boat.

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