Daily Report

March 19, 2026

STRATCOM Boss: Pentagon Eyes Second B-21 Production Line

The U.S. military struck a $4.5 billion deal last month to increase the rate of production on its new B-21 bomber. Now officials are considering whether they will open up an entire second production line to go even faster in constructing the sixth-generation stealth Raider.

Space Force ‘Serious’ About Planning for Cislunar Operations

As NASA prepares for a slew of lunar missions over the next few years, the Space Force is contemplating its role in future operations around the moon and developing a plan to increase focus on cislunar operations, according to Thomas Ainsworth, who is performing the duties of Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Space Acquisition and Integration.

Space Command to Launch Wargame Series for Industry

U.S. Space Command will host the first in a series of “commercial wargames” on March 23, inviting industry participants to engage with “hard problems in orbit” at a classified level, according to SPACECOM’s director for joint force development.

Radar Sweep

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Pentagon Seeks More Than $200 Billion in Budget Request for Iran War

The Washington Post

The Pentagon has asked the White House to approve a more than $200 billion request to Congress to fund the war in Iran, according to a senior administration official, in an enormous new ask that is almost certain to run into resistance from lawmakers opposed to the conflict.

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How China Is Quietly Helping an Isolated Iran Survive

The Wall Street Journal

China is a longstanding friend of Iran that has helped sustain the Islamic Republic through decades of sanctions and international isolation. Since the U.S. and Israeli militaries began striking Iran late last month, Beijing has offered Tehran limited public support, condemning the killing of the Iranian leadership while calling on all sides to stop fighting. But its longstanding support for Iran could grow increasingly critical as the war continues.

China Pursuing Non-Violent Unification with Taiwan, Unlikely to Invade in 2027: US Intel

Washington Examiner

The People’s Republic of China is unlikely to invade Taiwan by the end of 2027, U.S. intelligence officials claim in a new report. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard released this year’s Annual Threat Assessment of the U.S. Intelligence Community on March 18, which found that Beijing would rather not resort to belligerence to bring the island under its control.

Ukraine War Undermining Russia’s Arctic Plans, US Intelligence Says

Defense News

Russia’s efforts to assert its power in the Arctic are being undermined by the Ukraine war, according to U.S. intelligence. “While Russia has enhanced its ability to operate in the Arctic by focusing on combat readiness and using dual-use technologies and facilities for defense, its war with Ukraine has limited its ability to fully achieve its Arctic ambitions,” according to the 2026 Annual Threat Assessment by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence released March 18.

Pentagon CTO ‘Pretty Confident’ About Life After Anthropic

Breaking Defense

The Pentagon’s Chief Technology Officer said he’s “pretty confident” that the military can replace Anthropic’s Claude before President Donald Trump’s six-month deadline, arguing that the four “frontier” AI models were proving largely interchangeable.

Inside the White House Plan to Sell the Iran War Online

POLITICO

President Donald Trump’s hype campaign for the Iran war has demolished decades of presidential decorum around wartime messaging—and is mortifying former defense officials and members of Congress. The White House is loving it.

Republicans Defeat Resolution to Halt US Military Strikes Against Iran

The Hill

Senate Republicans on March 18 defeated a Democratic-sponsored motion to advance a war powers resolution to halt President Trump’s military strikes against Iran. ... The Senate voted 47-53 against discharging the resolution to rein in Trump’s authority from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Ukraine Faces Missile Shortage due to Middle East War, Says Zelensky

BBC News

Volodymyr Zelensky has said Ukraine will face a deficit of missiles it is using to fight Russia due to the war in the Middle East. In an exclusive interview with the BBC, the Ukrainian president said Russia's Vladimir Putin wanted a "long war" between the U.S., Israel, and Iran because it would weaken Kyiv, with U.S. resources being directed elsewhere.

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Shipping Delays over Iran War Hit Military Families Moving to New Assignment

Task & Purpose

Military families shipping their household goods and cars to new assignments are seeing delays brought on by the ongoing U.S. war with Iran, Pentagon officials say. A March 10 memo issued by the Defense Department’s Personal Property Activity, or PPA, warned that “the operation in the Middle East is causing severe, widespread, and rapidly evolving disruptions to air and sea shipments. Airport closures, suspensions of port operations, the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz and significant security risks are preventing vessel and airline ability to safely transit the area.”