24/7 Wall St. on MSN
Why The U.S. Military Still Uses This 100-Year-Old Machine Gun
The U.
The new tactical loitering munition from Singapore’s best-known defense company should be ready for production in early 2027.
What happened at Bum La is remembered not because it altered the course of the war—it did not—but because it shows how, in ...
In April 1916, George T Coles from Ebbw Vale, South Wales, enlists and trains as a driver in the Royal Field Artillery. He serves with the Small Arms Ammunition Section of the 38th Brigade RFA in ...
Hundreds of strike drones every night, minimal pauses between attacks, and constant changes in enemy tactics. The war in the ...
Forgotten Weapons on MSNOpinion
This rifle looks like sci-fi and it’s made in Africa
During the late 1970s, international embargoes and an ongoing conflict forced South Africa to develop its own general-purpose ...
Morning Overview on MSN
US Army fires its newest drone-killer gun in 1st live test
The United States Army has taken a visible step in the race to counter cheap, ubiquitous drones, firing its newest ...
The Marine Corps is rolling out the Bolt-M loitering munition to infantry squads in 2026, delivering more than 600 ...
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