70 pointsby anigbrowl4 hours ago17 comments
  • nullocator36 minutes ago
    This should be a massive wakeup call to anyone who believes the ~$500B-1T per year "defense" tax burden placed on U.S. citizens for the last 20 years is keeping them safe.

    Apparently it wasn't until Ukraine+Iran that the most sophisticated and well funded military in the world realized that cheap drones and missiles weren't just the future but they are the present. We've been getting raked over the coals by these defense contractors and I'm guessing we probably have no idea how far down are pants actually are.

    And the response: 1.5x the budget and unboard a new generation of corrupt defense contractors who will sell the american military and people more shit tier products at top dollar.

    • 9x399 minutes ago
      It could also be that the tide is changing and we did have the security ROI until cheap drone tech emerged to push us to a new gen of warfare.

      For example, there is still a stable petrodollar, there are 11 carrier battle groups and 70 nuclear subs out there, there is an experienced US military capable of force projection. These are a few random metrics from a casual observer, and we seem to get more out of spending than some rival countries.

  • Aboutplants3 hours ago
    The most surprising thing here is that the US was previously only spending $225 Million on drones when it’s been fully apparent for the past decade(s) that drones were the future of warfare.
    • jonplackett2 hours ago
      What is weird is that all these current super expensive high tech weapons like aircraft carriers, f22s are basically like cavalry in the tank era.

      Drones (and cheap-ish ballistic missiles) have turned it all on its head.

      In the war with Iran you have the USA shooting down 50k drones with multiple multi-million dollar missiles. Some of the THAAD missiles are over 10 million each - and you have to launch 2 to get an interception.

      Meanwhile they have to keep the aircraft carriers hundreds of miles off shore or they’ll be sunk with hypersonic missiles.

      The economics are crazy but even if you’re willing to pay, the capacity to build enough isn’t there either.

      • canucker2016an hour ago
        In the book "Skunk Works" by Ben Rich (former head of Lockheed's Skunk Works), the authour talks about the behaviour of the military officers. Spy planes weren't seen as valuable/important to the typical officer who was looking to get promoted to higher levels versus the typical sexy fighter jets or bombers.

        Just as in any group, there are certain positions that are more prestigious/desired than other positions. Typically the prestige increased the more people that they supervised or valuable pieces of equipment (expensive tanks / fighter jets) in their group.

        Then there are other positions with lower prestige / desirability - think support/logistics (unless your org's main revenue stream is support/logistics).

        This has little correlation to the effectiveness/impact of the group.

        Those who worked well with the current strategies / standard operating procedures, can't see/don't want to see how new technology can be used to operate more effectively.

        Imagine how army officers treated those who wanted to use airplanes in the period from World War I to World War II.

        • b3ingan hour ago
          I'm sure the defense contractors wanted to sell the expensive planes that require more maintenance rather than drones
      • JumpCrisscross2 hours ago
        > they have to keep the aircraft carriers hundreds of miles off shore

        Drones + cheap antidrones + aircraft carriers + stealth aircraft looks like a solid high/low optimum. Anyone pitching an only-high or only-low strategy is leaving chips on the table.

        • ohnei2 hours ago
          I'm not familiar with a stealth meant for even when you have to park it sometimes. If anyone has a great drone dominance then all your anti drone should go into drone related infrastructure. If someone has the corresponding high dominance then you can wait until nature runs out of resources for maintaining the absurd.

          The US is a strategy of failure since Vietnam because it is profitable to war hawk supporters to lose every war in the economics and funnel the money back into more strategic losers.

      • Leonard_of_Q43 minutes ago
        > like cavalry in the tank era

        Ehhh, tanks are the cavalry of the tank era. Cavalry did not go away, it changed from its namesake horses to armoured battle vehicles but its task remains more or less the same. Drones and 'cheap-ish' ballistic missiles can make life harder for the mentioned expensive high-tech weaponry until cost-effective counter-measures are widely available. For drones that'll probably end up being directed energy weapons - lasers and the likes - while ballistic weaponry can (for now) be countered by moving out of their (ballistic) path. Eventually aircraft carriers will probably be replaced by multiple drone carriers, that may happen sooner or later depending on how the current fleets end up performing in coming conflicts.

    • scottyah3 hours ago
      It didn't make sense to physically stock up on them before. It was mostly research, prototyping, comms infrastructure, software for swarms, AI piloting, ground control, etc. The next phase of building factories and manufacturing tooling/capabilities is a little bit concerning.
      • GerryAdamsSF3 hours ago
        Simple DJI style drones employed en masse in Afghanistan would have been helpful for a variety of tasks.

        I cannot see any reason, over than oversight and a lack of imagination, why something useful in Ukraine in 2022 was not feasible or useful in 2017 by the USA.

        We already used drones quite handily well before that time frame but in a much more limited manner in a different form factor.

        • rl32 hours ago
          >I cannot see any reason, over than oversight and a lack of imagination, why something useful in Ukraine in 2022 was not feasible or useful in 2017 by the USA.

          Perhaps it had to do with optics? It's not like there was a lack of capability in 2017. [0]

          The war in Ukraine provided a way for the US to assist in rapid iteration of the technology without having to shoulder the negative sentiment or grapple with the morality of it.

          Also worth noting that the two conflicts were wildly different: Afghanistan was more of an occupation across a much larger area with air superiority. There's not really much impetus to field killer drone swarms when you already have the 24/7 ability to instantly delete most enemy combatants off the map to begin with.

          Whereas Ukraine with neither side having air superiority and it resembling something closer to modern trench warfare. In most cases with literal trenches.

          >We already used drones quite handily well before that time frame but in a much more limited manner in a different form factor.

          The picture below is from 1995. [1]

          By approximately 2001 it received the MQ-1A designation indicating it was capable of employing AGM-114 (hellfire) payloads. Kind of crazy to think about.

          [0] https://www.twz.com/6866/60-minutes-does-an-infomercial-on-d...

          [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Atomics_MQ-1_Predator#...

        • cosmicgadget2 hours ago
          Combat in Ukraine is, as I understand it, somewhat like WWI with long lines of contact that only shift slowly. So you have a good idea that if you point your drone in a given direction, you'll find an enemy tank or trench.

          For Afghanistan it seems like high-flying, capable, armed drones were a better option for that type of conflict.

    • dijit3 hours ago
      I think the surprising thing to me here is that there is a generation of children afraid of a clear blue sky because it means drones can see them..

      ... and it only cost $225M.

      (source: https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/2013/10/saddest-words-c...)

      • cosmicgadget2 hours ago
        Surely the 225M only covers tiny drones and not the Predators, Reapers, and the others employed in the GWOT.
    • l5870uoo9y3 hours ago
      Took a war to realize this.
    • mc323 hours ago
      I think we sorely miss people like Paul van Riper. I’m pretty confident he’d have seen their use and advocated for them years ago.
    • rozal2 hours ago
      [dead]
  • SimianSci2 hours ago
    I see drones as more of a side-affect to the new era of warfare we are in. The more powerful your economy, the more autonomous weapons you can create and eventually deploy. Manufacturing capacity and economic resiliancy are becoming far more important than a nation's ability to equip and train its military.

    The alarming part of this to me is that this heavily implies that wars will be decided more by who can successfully destroy their adversary's economy, than who can take and hold points of strength. Holding a city with an entrenched military doesnt matter much when there is still a factory deep in enemy territory producing the next wave of attacks. The incentives for targeting non-combatant civilians is rising at an alarming rate.

    • JumpCrisscross2 hours ago
      > Manufacturing capacity and economic resiliancy are becoming far more important than a nation's ability to equip and train its military

      This has been the case in wars of attrition since the Civil War. It took between then and WWII for the message to land.

    • chung81232 hours ago
      It feels like the drone factories should be targetable and who controls that may control a war.
      • ASalazarMX37 minutes ago
        Ukraine has shown that a drone factory can be made on any old building, it's not like they need huge machines. Would you carpet bomb all usable buildings? Cheap drones as a defensive weapon make war way more costly to the aggressor.
        • chung812327 minutes ago
          Cheap drones have made war more expensive for people that care about where they inflict the damage.
  • BugsJustFindMe3 hours ago
    It would cost less to provide free breakfast and lunch to all public school students in the US, but that might actually improve the country's future instead of blowing things up.
    • tptacek3 hours ago
      We spend drastically more money than this on education; it isn't even in the same ballpark. People get tripped up about this because the funding comes from different taxing bodies (most education funding is state and local) --- but all taxation is linked.

      We also couldn't fully fund free school meals for this sum, this sum is an ambit claim by the administration not a budget, and a large component of this funding request is for capital expenditures, not ongoing operational expenditure. The (larger) school meal funding dollars would have to be paid regularly.

      • BugsJustFindMe3 hours ago
        Please don't compare the entirety of the US education system against an incremental fragment of military spending as though that isn't a completely bogus evaluation. We spend just as much on the war machine if not more.

        We're talking about an incremental fragment of the US military budget. It's fair to compare it to an incremental fragment of public wellness that would cost less and have profound impact.

        > and a large component of this funding request is for capital expenditures, not ongoing operational expenditure

        Oh, of course. You're right. I forgot that drones have zero operational costs and that military spending will decrease next year instead of increasing again and again and again like always.

        • tptacek2 hours ago
          Put real numbers to this. We spend well over a trillion dollars on education.

          Also recognize the falsity of attributing the entire defense budget to "the war machine". There are policy debates that could take you lower or (like this request) higher, but it's not like an order-of-magnitude thing.

          • BugsJustFindMe2 hours ago
            > We spend well over a trillion dollars on education.

            And we spend well over a trillion dollars on defense. And yet the straight of hormuz is still closed, just like there are still children who don't have enough food and suffer for it. Comparing the total budget of one thing against a budget delta of another thing is wrong. Compare deltas of each and compare their benefits.

          • TimorousBestie2 hours ago
            If we’re putting numbers on things, what’s the number you’re putting on “pure, non-war-machine” defense spending?
      • ljf3 hours ago
        The rough cost to provide free breakfast and lunch to all students in the US is $30b - so as the go says, less than $55b.
      • fontain3 hours ago
        School meal funding would not cost more than $55bn or even close to $55bn. California’s program, subtracting initial implementation cost, was close to $1bn to feed ~10% of U.S. public school students 2 free meals per day. $55bn couldn’t fund a free school meal program indefinitely but I am sure the ongoing costs of the drone program could, this $55bn isn’t a one time cost.
    • analogpixel3 hours ago
      If we took all the money we spent on war for 2 years, and diverted it to buying $10k electric cars, we could buy everyone in America an electric car, remove our dependence on oil, and thus never need to fight wars for it ever again; let other countries fight it out for oil while we move on to bigger and better things.

      or we could continue spending all of our money on wars to get oil, fall further and further behind, and be living like the Flintstons in a few years while all the other countries that actually invested in useful stuff forge forward.

      • jandrewrogers2 hours ago
        > remove our dependence on oil, and thus never need to fight wars for it

        The US is the largest oil producer in the world by a significant margin. They don't have a dependency on foreign oil. They are also the largest refiner of oil products in the world.

        Any wars related to oil are about other countries' dependence on foreign oil and refining.

        • BugsJustFindMe2 hours ago
          > The US is the largest oil producer in the world by a significant margin.

          The US is also the second largest oil importer in the world. A true fact about oil is that it's not all the same, so lumping them all into a single category is a mistake when talking about production/refining/consumption.

          > They don't have a dependency on foreign oil.

          It does still, because local refining is optimized for a global market not domestic self-sufficiency. It would probably require a bit of the old "seizing the means of production" to change that, and the US is generally opposed to such things.

          • phil21an hour ago
            Local refining is setup for refining heavier crudes. They can process sweet domestic crudes just fine at a technical level. It would be an economic loss due to underutilized stuff like Cokers, and likely at somewhat reduced overall throughput. Light crude is typically more expensive than heavy which accounts for much of the theoretical economic loss, but perhaps that will be inverted for some time if trends continue.

            You would lose some of the bottom of the barrel products like asphalt and the high sulphur products sour crudes have as well, but I'm unsure of how impactful that would be in practice.

            I'm certainly no petroleum engineer so I'm sure someone will be along to correct me - but I looked into this when I kept seeing this trotted out. You can definitely refine domestic light crude oils in local refineries setup for heavier crudes. The resulting products will simply be more expensive due to the refinery operating less efficiently. Self-sufficiency for fuel products at least is likely not a major concern for the US if the shit hits the fan for real.

          • jandrewrogersan hour ago
            > The US is also the second largest oil importer in the world.

            The US sells oil refinery services to the rest of the world. They "import" crude oil and then "export" the refined product.

            US refinery capacity far exceeds its domestic oil production. What did you think they were doing with all that capacity?

        • analogpixel2 hours ago
          If we don't need foreign oil, why are gas prices going up?
    • GerryAdamsSF3 hours ago
      US schools are some of the best funded in the world. The causative relationship of funding on student performance is not strong.

      Social programs such as Medicare, SSI, etc dwarf the military budget.

      • BugsJustFindMe2 hours ago
        > The causative relationship of funding on student performance is not strong.

        Please don't pretend that "school funding" is the same as feeding children or that we don't have established research showing a connection between school meal programs and improved academic performance and reduced student suspensions.

        • rayiner2 hours ago
          We spend $100 billion a year on SNAP, which goes primarily to feeding children and mothers. Why is it so important to you to structure the program in one way (providing kids lunches in school) versus feeding kids a different way (providing parents cash to feed their kids)?
        • GerryAdamsSF2 hours ago
          I argue that academic performance, and more importantly intelligence in general, is largely hereditary, as shown in twin studies.

          I am not concerned with trivia like GPAs or suspensions. Student capability is inherent to their genetics.

          The Soviet system created brilliant scientists for a fraction of the US system.

    • rayiner2 hours ago
      I would love to have a Japan-style universal lunch program. But this point is an empty appeal to emotion. Kids are being fed. The U.S. spends $100 billion a year on SNAP and $18 billion a year on the National School Lunch Program. We just focus most of the money on cash benefits to parents of children rather than feeding kids at school.
    • kybb43 hours ago
      "Why does man have reason if he can only be influenced by violence?"
  • tristanj3 hours ago
    A Chinese drone manufacturer [Poly Technologies] has disclosed a massive government order for almost a million lightweight kamikaze drones, to be delivered by 2026

    https://defence-blog.com/china-places-massive-order-for-kami...

    https://www.warquants.com/p/one-million-suicide-drones-with-...

  • zethraeus3 hours ago
    And they bought three new drones!
  • dmix2 hours ago
    They refuse to spend less in other areas, which is the big reason why they haven't already solved the glaringly obvious drone problem. Not surprised they just want to throw more money at a new program instead of stepping on anyones toes in the other branches.
  • ranger_danger4 hours ago
    > Funding tied to the little-known Defense Autonomous Warfare Group spans procurement, research, training and sustainment

    Someone really wanted to name a department DAWG.

  • hnthrow02873453 hours ago
    Misleading title: this article says it is seeking a budget increase, not that it's been approved

    >The funding request, a dramatic surge from roughly $225 million a year earlier, signals a major shift in how the U.S. military plans to fight future wars, accelerating a move toward large numbers of lower-cost, AI-enabled systems.

    The merits of this ask within this insane administration basically means nothing IMO. Hegseth could ask for cybernetic ponies with beer coolers and I wouldn't be surprised.

  • andrewstuart3 hours ago
    Doesn’t seem anywhere near enough.

    All future and present conflict is fundamentally based around drones.

    • neaden3 hours ago
      I'm not sure how true that is. Sure it's what we're seeing in Ukraine right now with both sides using them a lot, but my understanding is that has to due with the fact that neither side is able to get air superiority with conventional aircraft. The same reason Iran is using a lot of drones now. It doesn't seem like the US would be in a conflict where they don't have air superiority.

      Now I would agree that the US military can still find uses for drones, and that many of the people it fights will have a large usage of drones, but I don't think it's fair to say all conflict will be based around them.

      • cco3 hours ago
        > The same reason Iran is using a lot of drones now. It doesn't seem like the US would be in a conflict where they don't have air superiority.

        Hmmm, this sentence appears to be a paradox? Is the US not fighting Iran right now?

        Iran has a very weak air force and the US claims air superiority, yet Iran is using a lot of drones.

        I think your comment proves GP's point, regardless of traditional air power, drones will feature heavily in any conflict.

        • boc2 hours ago
          Iranian drones have done nothing to prevent the US and Israel dropping gravity bombs en-mass over their capital right now. JDAMs and unguided munitions are still far cheaper for the explosion size than any drone today. That's not the situation in the Ukraine war on either side.

          The US has used one-way "drones" since the 80s or earlier. The entire Gulf War in the early 90s featured a ton of tomahawk cruise missiles. The only real change is that the new shaheeds are way cheaper, slower, and smaller, but can be spammed in larger numbers.

        • dmix2 hours ago
          Iran launched around 2k drones over the war. Ukraine uses around 200k/m.

          https://www.kyivpost.com/post/55897

          Either way the US needs way more drones instead of just expensive missiles/jets/boats/armor if they are going to face anyone serious like China.

      • jltsiren3 hours ago
        What we're seeing in Ukraine suggests that drones cannot win the war for you, but they are essential for not losing it. And what we saw in Iran was that US air superiority is no longer a given. While the US had conventional air superiority, it was unable to neutralize the threat from Iranian drones.
      • GerryAdamsSF3 hours ago
        A million suicide drones is far cheaper than 10,000 infantry.

        Very soon, "good enough" robotic autonomous infantry will exist which will make soldiers in the 21st century look as outdated as cavalry.

      • 8note3 hours ago
        you can keep looking at iran as the example - the US is uneilling to boots on the ground because even with air superiority, the drones are too dangerous
    • scottyah3 hours ago
      Still seems to be cyber warfare and mass social engineering.
    • rasz3 hours ago
      The whole selling point of drones is that they are _cheap_. Spending billions brings you back to missile territory.
    • jMyles3 hours ago
      > All future and present conflict is fundamentally based around drones.

      ...all the more reason to reduce spending on them.

  • avazhi2 hours ago
    They saw what’s happening in Ukraine and then got firsthand knowledge with the Shaheds.
  • tencentshill4 hours ago
    Reminder: The Trump family has direct involvement in drone companies

    https://apnews.com/article/trump-sons-powerus-drone-intercep...

    • blackjack_3 hours ago
      Yep. Unfortunately in 2026 if you look in the news at the US government spending and see a very big number, it is probably self-dealing / corruption to the Trump family.
    • cyanydeez4 hours ago
      >Reminder: The Trump family

      Do you really need to go past that. They're like a "trump" card for the grift economy.

    • jimt12343 hours ago
      But Hunter Biden said "the big guy" in an email - that's the corruption we need to be talking about!!! /s
  • carabiner2 hours ago
    Drones killing drones. No lives at stake any more. Like burning piles of money on the sidelines until one side runs out.
    • fastball2 hours ago
      Surely that is better than burning piles of bodies?
  • johnea3 hours ago
    But, but... What about Tom Cruise... on the flight deck... with his bomber jacket!!!

    This is... UNAMERICAN!!!

    p.s. This comment is sarcasm. For the unmitigated reality, please refer to your 1950s "duck and cover" propaganda...

  • mring336214 hours ago
    holy shit!
  • i_love_retros2 hours ago
    If only the regular folk could rise up and take back their tax money and spend it on something that collectively helps them like universal healthcare. It's so lucky for the crooks running the country that the regular folk haven't thought of that!
    • cosmicgadget2 hours ago
      They had the opportunity but decided a president that would appoint Hegseth and two houses of congress from the same party was a better idea.

      We will see how it works out for them.

  • Aboutplants3 hours ago
    My only hope is that as we flippantly give hundreds of billions of dollars to defense, at some point in the near future a few hundred billion dollars for actual infrastructure or education won’t seem like all that much.