The War Lab: Exploring the Future of Conflict
War Lab — Episode: “Recon-Strike Since Desert Storm: Speed, Sensors, and the Logistics That Win (or Lose) Wars” How do you turn sensors into strikes fast enough to matter — and keep them flying when the runway’s been cratered? In this episode we trace four decades of hard lessons: from the U-2 shootdown and Vietnam’s Lightning Bug to the long bureaucratic battle over drones, then forward into today’s race for JADC2, AI-enabled kill chains, quantum timing, and the brittle logistics that could grind modern power projection to a halt. We unpack why technical brilliance won’t save you if the organization, doctrine, and supply chain can’t move at the same tempo. What you’ll hear: * A clear narrative of how unmanned reconnaissance evolved — and why organizational culture, not just tech, repeatedly stalled progress. * How JADC2 and agentic AI aim to collapse the OODA loop, and the real limits that keep the “decide” and “act” stages slow. * The brutal operational reality in the Indo-Pacific: missile salvos, anti-runway submunitions, tanker closure times, and what REDR + Agile Combat Employment can (and can’t) fix. * Concrete logistics fixes the transcript argues for: push-based buffers, forward pre-positioning, delegated sustainment authorities, and redesigning supply doctrine for contested, degraded comms. Why listen: if you care about whether America’s ISR-to-strike edge actually holds up in a peer fight — and how to stop brilliant sensors from becoming useless paper promises — this episode stitches history, doctrine, and hard operational math into a single, urgent argument. Subscribe to War Lab for deep, source-driven episodes on the future of conflict.
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