The U.S. Navy championed digital weaponry as the decider of future fights in its inaugural cyber strategy, published in November. Master Chief Robotics Warfare Specialist Christopher Rambert was pinned less than a week after the service unveiled the new robotics-focused rating. The pool of sailors initially tapped for the Navy's new robotics rating will be "small and selective," according to the sea service. The “Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare” hits theaters on April 19. The island nation plans to acquire a dozen light frigates — six for anti-submarine warfare and six for anti-air warfare. The AOEW can work independently aboard the helicopter — either the MH-60R, as was tried, or the MH-60S — and can tie back to other systems aboard a vessel. "The challenges inherent to the cyber domain are considerable," the Navy secretary wrote, "but failing to mitigate cyber risks is not an option." Apart from defeating torpedoes with torpedoes (yes, you read that right), the Navy is also improving its safety gear. The measure will require 15% of a naval special warfare unit’s population to undergo performance enhancing drug testing each month. The three officers were notified last week that they face admiral's mast in connection to the 2022 training death of Kyle Mullen. Load More