Monday, May 26, 2025

Nassau County holds Memorial Day tributes to fallen troops with parade, moment of silence: 'Say a prayer for them'New Foto - Nassau County holds Memorial Day tributes to fallen troops with parade, moment of silence: 'Say a prayer for them'

Nassau County paused in solemn tribute this Memorial Day honoring Long Island's fallen troops with a county-wide moment of silence, a patriotic parade, and heartfelt words from veterans and elected officials alike. County Executive Bruce Blakeman, alongside members of the county legislature — spoke to a crowd of roughly 150 people in Glen Cove Monday afternoon, honoring the area's historic veteran population for the third year in a row. "This is the day where we remember those who died in the line of duty defending our country," Blakeman told The Post. "Say a prayer for them, for their soul, for their families." Veterans and civilian residents alike came to the ceremony to honor those who gave their life for the country. Michael Renga, a 17-year-old high school student from Glen Cove who was rocking a full-blown American Flag suit jacket, said the county's celebration is important to him and his "patriot family." "We enjoy this weekend for being the unofficial start to summer, but these ceremonies are important so we can reflect on what the day truly means and how much sacrifice has gone into protecting the freedoms that we have," Renga, whose grandfather served in World War II, told The Post. But the day means more to those who served — like Howard Stillwagon, a disabled combat veteran who fought in Vietnam. "I saw about 20 soldiers get killed over in my time in the jungle," Stillwagon solemnly remembered. "It really bothered me to see them in a bag going home to their families." "It's a party day full of barbeques, but you have to stop and think of the guys that sacrificed their lives." After the ceremony, Stillwagon led his troop of local combat veterans in the city's parade alongside Blakeman down Glen Cove's Main Street — where businesses were offering deals and specials after the march. A second county-wide moment of silence was scheduled for 6 p.m. later that day, alerting residents with church bells and fire alarms from departments and houses of worship all over Nassau.

Nassau County holds Memorial Day tributes to fallen troops with parade, moment of silence: ‘Say a prayer for them’

Nassau County holds Memorial Day tributes to fallen troops with parade, moment of silence: 'Say a prayer for them' Nassau County pau...
US Coast Guard's Fleet Week demonstration in NYC nixed due to real offshore search mission on Memorial DayNew Foto - US Coast Guard's Fleet Week demonstration in NYC nixed due to real offshore search mission on Memorial Day

This was not a drill. Members of US Coast Guard Air Station Atlantic City nixed a Fleet Week search and rescue demonstration in Manhattan on Memorial Day for the real thing — more than 100 miles away. The Atlantic City unit, known as the "Blackjacks," were diverted to a distress call 20 miles off the Jersey shore on Monday after a radio transmission that sounded like "Help" was transmitted just before noon, a US Coast Guard rep told The Post. "Any sign that there could be potential distress, that's enough for us to launch [a search and rescue operation] and go search," the rep said, adding that no other "correlating" evidence, such as a missing person or missing boat, were reported. The investigation – which was conducted in the area of Barnegat Light, Atlantic City and Cape May in New Jersey, was called off just after 3 p.m., the rep added. Coast Guard Station Cape May also responded to the search. The Fleet Week demonstration, slated to start at 2 p.m., was set to involve a dummy doll being rescued in the water by a Coast Guard member dropping in from a helicopter. Some US Coast Guard members at Pier 86 — where the demonstration was planned to take place after the annual Memorial Day commemoration ceremony at the Intrepid Museum — told The Post they were unsurprised the diversion happened due to the popularity of marine-related activities over the holiday weekend. On Memorial Day weekend, there's "more than a 50% chance that they are going to get diverted," one Coast Guard member at the Pier 86 event said. "A lot of people's boats have been up [out of the water] for the winter, and now they finally want to get out. Sometimes they don't take enough fuel, or forget to check the electronics: it could be a number of things." An example of frequent calls to the Coast Guard during the busy holiday weekend are for disabled vessels – boats which could simply be adrift while passengers onboard are safe. Several people have been pulled from the water across the Mid-Atlantic region this weekend, but there haven't been any reports of missing persons, severe injuries or deaths as a result, according to a Coast Guard rep. Despite the unexpected absence at the Memorial Day celebration in Manhattan, plenty of other Coast Guard members filled booths outside the Intrepid Museum – including divers based in California and Hawaii. Diver Richard Rudek, 24, told The Post he assists in underwater maintenance operations – such as underwater construction, repairing buoys and other navigational tools – as well as search and recovery operations "relatively frequently." Rudek said his team went out to recover the wreckage of a2024 helicopter crash in Kauai, Hawaii,which "helped to provide closure to the families." His favorite part of his job, however, remains underwater navigation projects – where "you never know what you're going to get into." "Sometimes it's zero [visibility], you're in scuba [gear] and holding several thousand pound objects with, basically, balloons. Every job is super different," he said. The Coast Guard's Atlantic Strike Team — which responds to fires, hurricanes, hazmat incidents and other emergencies fromEast Palestine's train derailmentto theLos Angeles firesto theBaltimore Bridge collapse— was also in attendance at the fleet week event. "Most Coasties join because they want to help," said Lieutenant Connie Tobler. "The best part [of the job] is search and rescue," said Officer Bismarck Miranda, who recalled an operation a decade ago in which he rescued a 4-year-old and their family 50 miles off the shore of Key West. "Being able to rescue that and see the baby and the family come back to the United States safely — that was probably the best feeling."

US Coast Guard’s Fleet Week demonstration in NYC nixed due to real offshore search mission on Memorial Day

US Coast Guard's Fleet Week demonstration in NYC nixed due to real offshore search mission on Memorial Day This was not a drill. Members...
Samoa's leader seeks an early election after opponents reject her budgetNew Foto - Samoa's leader seeks an early election after opponents reject her budget

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) —Samoa's Prime Minister said she would seek to dissolve Parliament, prompting an early election, after a vote on her government's budget for the next year failed Tuesday. Fiamē Naomi Mata'afa's admission of defeat followed months of political havoc in the South Pacific island nation, during which the leader survived two votes of no confidence and struggled on with a minority government. Her budget was rejected during a swift vote in the capital Apia, with 34 lawmakers against it, 16 in favor and two abstaining. An election must be held within 90 days. Samoa, a country of about 200,000 people, was due to go to the polls next April. Samoa's first woman leader Fiamē hasled Samoa since 2021, when she ousted her predecessor of 22 years. She is the country's first woman prime minister and in 1991 was the first woman appointed to Samoa's Cabinet. The daughter of a former prime minister, Fiamē is one of the region's longest-serving politicians. She came to power after splitting with the previous leader's party over constitutional changes that she said would undermine the rule of law. Fiamē holds a chiefly rank as a village leader, rare for women in Samoa. She remains an outlier, too, in Pacific island politics, where only 8% of parliamentarians are women, according to January figures from the Inter-Parliamentary Union. Politics roiled for months Tuesday's budget defeat capped months of political turmoil after Fiamē in January sacked a Cabinet member who faced a raft of criminal charges and is also her party's chairman. He in turn expelled Fiamē from the FAST party and forced her into a minority government. She beat two no-confidence motions since. Debate over the efforts to unseat her provoked outrage among some in Samoa when Fiamē's opponents derided her for being unmarried and suggested she needed a husband's advice. Earlier this month Fiamē told reporters she would contest the election next April. She did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday. Warnings about election readiness In Parliament Tuesday morning, the leader warned lawmakers that rejecting the budget would provoke operational problems for the government, according to Pacific news outlet PMN. Fiamē also cautioned that a re-registration process for Samoa's voters, which was expected to conclude before next April's vote, had only captured 52% of Samoans in the new system so far. The old registration system was obsolete, her government said last year. Fiamē has drawn attention outside Samoa for urging larger powers, such as Australia, to do more to curb the effects of climate change, which have been ruinous for low-lying Pacific island nations. She also took a more cautious approach than her predecessor to Beijing's bankrolling of infrastructure projects in Samoa, which is heavily in debt to China. Samoa has this year faced severe electricity shortages that Fiamē warned in April could seriously hamper the country's economy.

Samoa’s leader seeks an early election after opponents reject her budget

Samoa's leader seeks an early election after opponents reject her budget WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) —Samoa's Prime Minister said s...
Golden Dome project includes challenging costs, political risksNew Foto - Golden Dome project includes challenging costs, political risks

(The Center Square) – President Donald Trump's plans for a $175 billion missile defense shield include significant technical challenges and political risks. Trump outlined plans for his Golden Dome in the Oval Office last week. The system Trump envisions would protect the U.S. and Canada using multiple layers of defense against diverse potential attacks, making it much more complex than previous proposals. The Golden Dome would also include space-based sensors and interceptors that the president said would be able to intercept missiles "even if they are launched from other sides of the world and even if they are launched from space." The president said the missile defense system would be operational before he leaves office in 2029. Trump's plan is loosely modeled after Israel's Iron Dome – but on a much larger scale. Israel's Iron Dome defends a nation the size of New Jersey against short-range missiles built in underground tunnels. Trump's system would protect a much larger area – North America – against more challenging threats, including intercontinental ballistic missiles and hypersonic weapons. The Congressional Budget Office, which helps Congress understand the cost of budget proposals, said in aletterearlier this month that lower launch costs could reduce the price tag for deploying a constellation of space-based interceptors designed to defeat one or two intercontinental ballistic missiles fired at the U.S. by a regional adversary, such as North Korea, a nation with limited resources. CBO noted that a reduction in launch costs would "cause the total estimated cost of deploying and operating the SBI constellation for 20 years to fall from $264 billion to $161 billion (in 2025 dollars)," according to the letter. On the high side, the total estimate would fall from $831 billion to $542 billion, CBO said. However, the system discussed in the CBO letter has little resemblance to what Trump is planning. Trump's executive order on the Golden Dome called for deploying a missile defense system to protect the United States from attacks by regional adversaries and attacks by peer or near-peer adversaries, including those with military capabilities similar to the U.S. "Such a defense could require a more expansive SBI capability than the systems examined in the previous studies," CBO noted. "Quantifying those recent changes will require further analysis." Nearly every president since Ronald Reagan has discussed a missile defense system for the U.S. In 1992, the U.S. Government Accountability Office concluded that a proposed space-based interceptor system known as "Brilliant Pebbles" was based on immature simulations that "use many unproven assumptions." Some such projects cost taxpayers billions before being scrapped. The Missile Defense Agency, a U.S. Department of Defense component, has been working on a Ground-Based Midcourse Defense system to defend the U.S. against a limited ballistic missile attack from potential adversaries such as North Korea and Iran since 2002. Its latest project, called the Next Generation Interceptor, was designed to respond to new threats and eventually replace aging Ground-Based Interceptors. DOD's Director for Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation estimated the total cost to design, develop, produce, operate and sustain an initial capability of 20 production unit NGIs and additional test articles would exceed $17 billion, according to a 2024reportfrom the Government Accountability Office. "MDA is making progress developing NGI and the program is currently estimating initial interceptor deliveries will occur by the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2027, 1 year ahead of schedule," the GAO report noted. "However, we found that NGI's schedule is optimistic when compared to DOD's historical performance developing and testing systems similar to NGI." That GAO report further noted that the NGI "program's prime contract development costs have increased by hundreds of millions of dollars in the last year (specific details are sensitive) but remain within the program's current budget." Todd Harrison, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, said Trump's ambitious project comes with challenges and risks. Scale will be a key challenge, he said. "The physics of space-based interceptors mean that they inherently have an absenteeism problem – each interceptor spends the vast majority of its time each orbit out of range of any missiles it could intercept," Harrisonwrotefor AEI. "According to my calculations and using fairly generous assumptions for the performance of each interceptor, it takes about 950 interceptors spread out in orbit around the Earth to ensure that at least one is always in range to intercept a missile during its boost phase. If an adversary launches ten missiles in a salvo, it requires some 9,500 interceptors in space to ensure at least ten are within range to intercept all of the incoming missiles." The numbers get much bigger very quickly, Harrison said. "Given that China has about 350 ICBMs and Russia has 306, not including their sub-launched ballistic missiles, scaling a space-based interceptor system to meet the threat quickly becomes impractical," he wrote. "In peacetime competition, this means an adversary can build missiles faster and more affordably than we can build the space-based interceptors needed to counter them." Harrison said lawmakers should put expectations in check. "No matter how many different layers are included in Golden Dome, whether space-based or not, homeland missile defense will never be iron clad. Policymakers should limit their expectations for what can be deployed by the end of 2030," he said. "The objective should be a system that can reliably defeat an attack by North Korea or Iran and merely blunt a large-scale attack by China or Russia. This much is technically feasible, but it will require substantial and sustained funding on the order of tens of billions of dollars over the next decade and beyond." Harrison noted the Golden Project faces political challenges as well. "Golden Dome is technically feasible and strategically sound overall, with the notable exception of space-based interceptors, which the laws of physics continue to render impractical," he wrote. "The main mark against Golden Dome is the political risk that a future Congress or new administration will terminate it ... The U.S. military could spend billions of dollars developing it only to have a subsequent administration kill the effort before it bears fruit. Golden Dome could become the poster child for waste and inefficiency in defense." Defense contractors are eager to join the effort. Lockheed Martin has already launched a Golden Domewebsite, suggesting how the company could help make it a reality.

Golden Dome project includes challenging costs, political risks

Golden Dome project includes challenging costs, political risks (The Center Square) – President Donald Trump's plans for a $175 billion ...
India and Pakistan's drone battles mark new arms race in AsiaNew Foto - India and Pakistan's drone battles mark new arms race in Asia

By Devjyot Ghoshal, Ariba Shahid, Shivam Patel NEW DELHI/ISLAMABAD (Reuters) -A little after 8:00 pm on May 8, red flares streaked through the night sky over the northern Indian city of Jammu as its air-defence systems opened fire on drones from neighbouring Pakistan. The Indian and Pakistani militaries have deployed high-end fighter jets, conventional missiles and artillery during decades of clashes, but the four days of fighting in May marked the first time New Delhi and Islamabad utilized unmanned aerial vehicles at scale against each other. The fighting halted after the U.S. announced it brokered a ceasefire but the South Asian powers, which spent more than $96 billion on defence last year, are now locked in a drones arms race, according to Reuters' interviews with 15 people, including security officials, industry executives and analysts in the two countries. Two of them said they expect increased use of UAVs by the nuclear-armed neighbours because small-scale drone attacks can strike targets without risking personnel or provoking uncontrollable escalation. India plans to invest heavily in local industry and could spend as much as $470 million on UAVs over the next 12 to 24 months, roughly three times pre-conflict levels, said Smit Shah of Drone Federation India, which represents over 550 companies and regularly interacts with the government. The previously unreported forecast, which came as India this month approved roughly $4.6 billion in emergency military procurement funds, was corroborated by two other industry executives. The Indian military plans to use some of that additional funding on combat and surveillance drones, according to two Indian officials familiar with the matter. Defence procurement in India tends to involve years of bureaucratic processes but officials are now calling drone makers in for trials and demonstrations at an unprecedented pace, said Vishal Saxena, a vice president at Indian UAV firm ideaForge Technology. The Pakistan Air Force, meanwhile, is pushing to acquire more UAVs as it seeks to avoid risking its high-end aircraft, said a Pakistani source familiar with the matter. Pakistan and India both deployed cutting-edge generation 4.5 fighter jets during the latest clashes but cash-strapped Islamabad only has about 20 high-end Chinese-made J-10 fighters compared to the three dozen Rafales that Delhi can muster. Pakistan is likely to build on existing relationships to intensify collaboration with China and Turkey to advance domestic drone research and production capabilities, said Oishee Majumdar of defence intelligence firm Janes. Islamabad is relying on a collaboration between Pakistan's National Aerospace Science and Technology Park and Turkish defence contractor Baykar that locally assembles the YIHA-III drone, the Pakistani source said, adding a unit could be produced domestically in between two to three days. Pakistan's military declined to respond to Reuters' questions. The Indian defence ministry and Baykar did not return requests for comment. India and Pakistan "appear to view drone strikes as a way to apply military pressure without immediately provoking large-scale escalation," said King's College London political scientist Walter Ladwig III. "UAVs allow leaders to demonstrate resolve, achieve visible effects, and manage domestic expectations — all without exposing expensive aircraft or pilots to danger," he added. But such skirmishes are not entirely risk-free, and Ladwig noted that countries could also send UAVs to attack contested or densely populated areas where they might not previously have used manned platforms. DRONE SWARMS AND VINTAGE GUNS The fighting in May, which was the fiercest in this century between the neighbours, came after an April 22 militant attack in the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir that killed 26 people, mostly Indian tourists. Delhi blamed the killings on "terrorists" backed by Islamabad, which denied the charge. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi vowed revenge and Delhi on May 7 launched air strikes on what it described as "terrorist infrastructure" in Pakistan. The next night, Pakistan sent hordes of drones along a 1,700-kilometer (772-mile) front with India, with between 300 and 400 of them pushing in along 36 locations to probe Indian air defences, Indian officials have said. Pakistan depended on Turkish-origin YIHA-III and Asisguard Songar drones, as well as the Shahpar-II UAV produced domestically by the state-owned Global Industrial & Defence Solutions conglomerate, according to two Pakistani sources. But much of this drone deployment was cut down by Cold War-era Indian anti-aircraft guns that were rigged to modern military radar and communication networks developed by state-run Bharat Electronics, according to two Indian officials. A Pakistan source denied that large numbers of its drones were shot down on May 8, but India did not appear to sustain significant damage from that drone raid. India's use of the anti-aircraft guns, which had not been designed for anti-drone-warfare, turned out to be surprisingly effective, said retired Indian Brig. Anshuman Narang, now an UAV expert at Delhi's Centre for Joint Warfare Studies. "Ten times better than what I'd expected," he said. India also sent Israeli HAROP, Polish WARMATE and domestically-produced UAVs into Pakistani airspace, according to one Indian and two Pakistan sources. Some of them were also used for precision attacks on what two Indian officials described as military and militant infrastructure. The two Pakistani security sources confirmed that India deployed a large number of the HAROPs - a long-range loitering munition drone manufactured by Israel Aerospace Industries. Such UAVs, also known as suicide drones, stay over a target before crashing down and detonating on impact. Pakistan set up decoy radars in some areas to draw in the HAROPs, or waited for their flight time to come towards its end, so that they fell below 3,000 feet and could be shot down, a third Pakistani source said. Both sides claim to have notched victories in their use of UAVs. India successfully targeted infrastructure within Pakistan with minimal risk to personnel or major platforms, said KCL's Ladwig. For Pakistan's military, which claimed to have struck Indian defence facilities with UAVs, drone attacks allow it to signal action while drawing less international scrutiny than conventional methods, he noted. CHEAP BUT WITH AN ACHILLES HEEL Despite the loss of many drones, both sides are doubling down. "We're talking about relatively cheap technology," said Washington-based South Asia expert Michael Kugelman. "And while UAVs don't have the shock and awe effect of missiles and fighter jets, they can still convey a sense of power and purpose for those that launch them." Indian defence planners are likely to expand domestic development of loitering munitions UAVs, according to an Indian security source and Sameer Joshi of Indian UAV maker NewSpace, which is deepening its research and development on such drones. "Their ability to loiter, evade detection, and strike with precision marked a shift toward high-value, low-cost warfare with mass produced drones," said Joshi, whose firm supplies the Indian military. And firms like ideaForge, which has supplied over 2,000 UAVs to the Indian security forces, are also investing on enhancing the ability of its drones to be less vulnerable to electronic warfare, said Saxena. Another vulnerability that is harder to address is the Indian drone program's reliance on hard-to-replace components from China, an established military partner of Pakistan, four Indian dronemakers and officials said. India continues to depend on China-made magnets and lithium for UAV batteries, said Drone Federation India's Shah. "Weaponization of the supply chain is also an issue," said ideaForge's Saxena on the possibility of Beijing shutting the tap on components in certain situations. For instance, Chinese restrictions on the sale of drones and components to Ukraine have weakened Kyiv's ability to produce critical combat drones, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies think-tank. A spokesperson for China's Foreign Ministry said in response to Reuters' questions that Beijing has always implemented export controls on dual-use items in accordance with domestic laws and regulations as well as its international obligations. "Diversification of supply chain is a medium to long term problem," said Shah. "You can't solve it in short term." ($1 = 85.0470 Indian rupees) (Additional reporting by Saeed Shah in Islamabad, Adnan Abidi in New Delhi, Nivedita Bhattacharjee in Bengaluru and Liz Lee in Beijing; Writing by Devjyot Ghoshal; Editing by Katerina Ang)

India and Pakistan's drone battles mark new arms race in Asia

India and Pakistan's drone battles mark new arms race in Asia By Devjyot Ghoshal, Ariba Shahid, Shivam Patel NEW DELHI/ISLAMABAD (Reuter...

 

ISG POLITICS © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com