It doesn’t take high technology to kill someone. Simple chemicals propel pieces of lead out of steel tubes. Other simple chemicals are placed in larger vessels and are triggered by the weight of a vehicle or even a human body. Some are even set off by strings attached to fuses. Not one computer involved.
But the weapons of warfare do evolve - some into trillion dollar monsters that gobble up whole defense budgets and can destroy life on earth with the turn of a key. And new weapons are always on the horizon.
Today, we’ve brought on Patrick Tucker to talk about some recent developments and what may lie ahead. Patrick is the technology editor at Defense One and writes about weapons technology every day.
See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
ICYMI: Why QANON Matters And Why It Won't Go Away
America's War In Somalia Is Heating Up Again
Japan's Surprisingly Large Military
Romanticizing History Can Be Worse Than Repeating It
Can Psychonauts Win America’s Wars?
How A Legendary Black Samurai Became an Anti-Imperialist Icon
ICYMI: Inside the Occult Neo-Nazis Killing People in America
The History of Preparing for Nuclear War
The Era of Shitposting White Nationalist Terrorism
The War In America's Backyard
Everything You Know about Putin (and Russia) Is Wrong
The Arms Business is Booming
Breaking Down Complex Conflict Between India and Pakistan
The Secret History of the Pentagon's Hollywood Studio
The Kurds are In a "Double Colonial Bind"
This Is (Not) Sparta!
What Cigarettes Tell Us About the Military-Industrial Complex
The Syrian Revolution Is Over, but the War Rages On
A Green Beret Cyber Ninja, The Avengers of Terrorism, and the Missile Defense Review
The Unsung Heroes of the National Guard
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free