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Army\'s Space and Missile Defense Command puts big money on the table.
The Army\'s largest post saw a record number of soldiers kill themselves in 2010 despite a mental health effort aimed at reversing the trend.
Camelina biofuel has broken the sound barrier. Tom Hicks, Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Energy tells us why that\'s important.
The Navy awarded two different companies two separate contracts to build the same ship. Lockheed Martin\'s Vice President of Business Development of Lockheed Martin\'s Mission Systems and Sensors business explains the science behind their ship
The move is part of a larger transition from SSN use
Defense.gov reports on the policy to prevent secondhand smoking\'s effects on other sailors.
The Navy is under fire for not properly reviewing invoices from a contract with Northrop Grumman
NASA\'s Mike Sweigart gives details of the contract that replaces Lockheed Martin.
This week on Federal Security Spotlight host Tom Temin talks to Riley Repko, the senior advisor for cybersecurity to the Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations and Requirements at the Air Force. December 30, 2010
Jeremy Johnson, formerly of the Navy, discussed some of the steps the military must take now that DADT will be repealed.
The Battlefield Automatic Life Status Monitor is a new technology that would allow soldiers to be monitored remotely
The contractor joins the growing number of companies adding cybersecurity capabilities.
Information Security reports that a security expert says the Air Force ban of thumb drives will not solve the problem of how to prevent classified leaks, such as in the WikiLeaks incident.
Congress has authorized the Pentagon to spend nearly $160 billion on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan with no major restrictions on the conduct of operations. This year\'s approved legislation includes $725 billion in defense programs, including $158.7 billion for overseas combat. Among its numerous provisions is a 1.4 percent pay raise for troops and a guarantee that children of service members can stay covered under the military\'s TRICARE health care program until they are 26 years of age.
Each week, Defense Reporter Jared Serbu speaks with the managers of the federal government's largest department. Subscribe on PodcastOne or Apple Podcasts.