Colin Clark

Colin Clark

Contributing Editor (At Large)

Colin Clark, the founding editor of Breaking Defense, is now our Indo-Pacific Bureau Chief, based in Sydney, Australia. In addition to his foundational efforts at Breaking Defense, Colin also started DoDBuzz.com, the world’s first all-online defense news website. He’s covered Congress, intelligence and regulatory affairs for Space News; founded and edited the Washington Aerospace Briefing, a newsletter for the space industry; covered national security issues for Congressional Quarterly; and was editor of Defense News. Colin is an avid fisherman, grill genius and wine drinker, all of which are only part of the reason he relishes the opportunity to live in Australia. cclark@breakingmedia.com

Stories by Colin Clark

NGA Chief Moves $Millions To Build Futuristic Intel Tools: The Globe

NGA Chief Moves $Millions To Build Futuristic Intel Tools: The Globe
NGA Chief Moves $Millions To Build Futuristic Intel Tools: The Globe

TAMPA: It’s the stuff of science fiction: intelligence analysts hands spinning a shimmering virtual globe and pulling strands of complex streams of data over it to build a three-dimensional planning model which they can share with soldiers on the battlefield. It’s clear the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency is nowhere near deploying such capabilities, but its…

Pentagon OKs F-35 Flights At Farnborough, RIAT

Pentagon OKs F-35 Flights At Farnborough, RIAT
Pentagon OKs F-35 Flights At Farnborough, RIAT

UPDATED: Adds British Defense Minister’s Statement On F-35 Flights; Hagel and Hammond Discussed TAMPA: I should have run this story weeks ago when it looked almost certain that the F-35 would fly to the Farnborough Air Show and its cousin, the Royal International Air Tattoo. Instead, my colleague Andrea Shalal reported it this morning. Tip of…

DNI Recommends Higher Resolution Imagery To White House

DNI Recommends Higher Resolution Imagery To White House
DNI Recommends Higher Resolution Imagery To White House

TAMPA: The head of the Intelligence Community, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, told the world’s biggest intelligence conference that he has recommended to the White House that it approve significantly higher resolutions for the nation’s one remaining commercial spy satellite company. Currently, the United States limits the sale of commercial imagery to half a meter. The…

F-35’s Stealth, EW Not Enough, So JSF And Navy Need Growlers; Boeing Says 50-100 More

F-35’s Stealth, EW Not Enough, So JSF And Navy Need Growlers; Boeing Says 50-100 More
F-35’s Stealth, EW Not Enough, So JSF And Navy Need Growlers; Boeing Says 50-100 More

WASHINGTON: Stealth is being outpaced by software, radar and computing power, so electronic warfare and cyber attacks are growing in importance. While the F-35 may possess excellent — if circumscribed — electronic attack and cyber capabilities, it needs help from the Navy’s EA-18G Growler electronic attack aircraft. That means, Boeing and the Navy are arguing,…

DoD Withholds $25.7M Payment To Pratt & Whitney For F135

DoD Withholds $25.7M Payment To Pratt & Whitney For F135
DoD Withholds $25.7M Payment To Pratt & Whitney For F135

CAPITOL HILL: As F-35 program officials prepared to testify to the Senate Armed Services Committee, they announced they were keeping back some $25.7 million, or 5 percent, of payments for the F135 engine used in the Joint Strike Fighter. “Due to decertification of their Earned Value Management Process by the Defense Contract Management Agency, Pratt &…

V-22 Update: Readiness Up 25%; Flight Hour Costs Down 20% Since 2009

V-22 Update: Readiness Up 25%; Flight Hour Costs Down 20% Since 2009
V-22 Update: Readiness Up 25%; Flight Hour Costs Down 20% Since 2009

SEA-AIR-SPACE: At least one important operating unit of the V-22 is sustaining impressive readiness rates “in the high 80s,” according to Col. Dan Robinson, the new program manager. But Robinson, asked by me and some of my colleagues, also said he didn’t have fleet-wide numbers and offered some unconvincing chatter about different units having different…

Hard Corps: Marine’s ‘Expeditionary Force 21’ To Be ‘Fast, Austere, & Lethal,’ And Expensive

Hard Corps: Marine’s ‘Expeditionary Force 21’ To Be ‘Fast, Austere, & Lethal,’ And Expensive
Hard Corps: Marine’s ‘Expeditionary Force 21’ To Be ‘Fast, Austere, & Lethal,’ And Expensive

WASHINGTON: In a move with major implications for the defense budget, defense contractors, and inter-service politics, the Marine Corps is set to publish a new “capstone concept” — leaked to Breaking Defense — that will guide the entire service for the next decade. From the title on, Expeditionary Force 21 paints an emphatic, uncompromising picture of a future Marine…

Pentagon Mulls Building All-American Rocket Engines, Dropping Russian RD-180s

Pentagon Mulls Building All-American Rocket Engines, Dropping Russian RD-180s
Pentagon Mulls Building All-American Rocket Engines, Dropping Russian RD-180s

CAPITOL HILL: The Pentagon’s top space officials told Congress today they have launched a study to ascertain if the United States can build its own rocket engines so expensive and large spy and GPS satellites don’t have to be launched using Russian rocket engines, as they are now. Gen. William Shelton, head of Air Force Space…

SpaceX Turns Up Heat On ULA; Sen. Feinstein Writes SecDef

SpaceX Turns Up Heat On ULA; Sen. Feinstein Writes SecDef
SpaceX Turns Up Heat On ULA; Sen. Feinstein Writes SecDef

WASHINGTON: Ever since the Air Force restructured its launch contracts for the Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) program with the United Launch Alliance and SpaceX, the underdog, Elon Musk, has cried foul and is pressing his case on Capitol Hill and in the media. The stakes got higher this morning during a sparsely attended hearing of…

Long Troubled Tanker Program May Be Turning Corner; Costs Down Half Billion Dollars

Long Troubled Tanker Program May Be Turning Corner; Costs Down Half Billion Dollars
Long Troubled Tanker Program May Be Turning Corner; Costs Down Half Billion Dollars

PENTAGON: One of the most screwed up programs in Pentagon history, the airborne tanker, may have turned a corner, with the KC-46 program cutting more than half-a-billion dollars from its projected costs, with $386.9 million of those savings coming in fiscal 2015. Some of these details will doubtless be discussed at the Wednesday afternoon House Armed…

GAO’s F-35 Estimate Plunges $11.5 Billion; EELV Costs Soar $28.1 Billion

GAO’s F-35 Estimate Plunges $11.5 Billion; EELV Costs Soar $28.1 Billion
GAO’s F-35 Estimate Plunges $11.5 Billion; EELV Costs Soar $28.1 Billion

WASHINGTON: The most expensive conventional weapons program in history just scored a major win, with the F-35 program’s estimated acquisition costs plunging $11.5 billion. This is no program estimate that critics might savage. This comes from the Government Accountability Office’s definitive annual Assessment of Selected Weapons Report. The GAO did not mince words in identifying…

Air Force Cans 9 ICBM Launch Officers In Cheating Scandal, Unveils Nuke Recommendations

Air Force Cans 9 ICBM Launch Officers In Cheating Scandal, Unveils Nuke Recommendations
Air Force Cans 9 ICBM Launch Officers In Cheating Scandal, Unveils Nuke Recommendations

UPDATED: Malmstrom Commander Resigns; Two Senior Officers, 7 Others Fired CORRECTED Name Of Head of Air Force Global Strike Command 8:02 pm PENTAGON: The Air Force has fired two senior officers and seven other commanders as part of its “unprecedented” bid to fix the troubled nuclear missile force and accepted the voluntary resignation of the commander of…

Bogdan Says F-35B’s Modifications Main Risk To Marine IOC

Bogdan Says F-35B’s Modifications Main Risk To Marine IOC
Bogdan Says F-35B’s Modifications Main Risk To Marine IOC

CAPITOL HILL: And we all thought software was the biggest risk faced by the Marine’s F-35C as Lockheed Martin and the military get it ready for IOC, its first warfighting configuration. But no. Air Force Lt. Gen. Christopher Bogdan, head of the F-35’s Joint Program Office, told the House Armed Services air and land subcommittee…

Why The Navy Really Wants 22 More Growlers

Why The Navy Really Wants 22 More Growlers
Why The Navy Really Wants 22 More Growlers

CAPITOL HILL: After several years of appearing to dislike the F-35C, or at least appearing lukewarm to buying it, the Navy today finally revealed why it wants to buy more F-18Gs from Boeing. Basically, it all boils down to the fact that the F-18G, known as the Growler, emits a broader set of electronic warfare…

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