У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно Tech Innovation in the Battlespace | Lessons from Ukraine for U.S. Defense & Industry или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
How does battlefield innovation actually happen at speed - and what must the U.S. change to keep up? Moderator Nataliya Bugayova leads Gen. David Petraeus (Ret.), Major Gen. (Ret) Charlie Cleveland (Ret.), CW5 (Ret) Joey Gagnard and Alec Bierbauer in a fast, practical discussion on drones and counter-drones, swarm autonomy, air & missile defense, battle-management software, and fixing the procurement bottleneck. Drawing on frontline observations from Ukraine, the panel unpacks what’s working, what isn’t, and how public–private teams can field “60% solutions” and iterate to advantage. What you’ll learn • Why the future fight is unmanned, networked, and algorithmically piloted—and why swarms change everything • How Ukraine’s garage-to-factory surge built millions of FPV drones and a rapid feedback loop between engineers and operators • The counter-drone problem set: air & missile defense, high-power microwave/laser point defense, and scaling against mass • Inside Ukraine’s digital backbone: Delta/iStar battle management, sensor-to-shooter compression, and unit-level “app stores” • How U.S. acquisition must evolve: from rigid “requirements” to problem statements, embedded engineers, and rapid fielding • What adversaries (Russia, China, Iran, North Korea) are learning - and why not engaging industry is the bigger risk Speakers • Nataliya Bugayova – Moderator • Gen. David Petraeus, USA (Ret.) • Major Gen. Charlie Cleveland, USA (Ret.) • Joey Gagnard – SOF veteran; U.S.–Ukraine defense industrial collaboration • Alec Bierbauer – Co-architect of the armed Predator program Chapters 00:00 Opening & frame: innovation as combat power 01:17 Petraeus: Unmanned & algorithmic warfare; preparing for swarms 02:16 Air & missile defense lessons; counter-drone urgency 03:22 Evolving threats (Shahed variants) & the action–reaction race 06:35 To Joey: U.S.–Ukraine industrial collaboration—what’s working 07:12 The Ukrainian feedback loop & garage-to-frontline iteration 11:01 “Battlefield labs” and engineer–operator teaming 12:51 Delta platform, unit-level catalogs, and incentives 14:42 Sensor-to-shooter compression; why software wins 17:15 Cleveland: Make adaptability the central competence 21:26 Bierbauer: Predator origins, problem statements over specs 27:32 Rapid fielding: send it, learn fast, iterate 29:40 Integrating at scale: turning innovation into advantage 33:43 Palantir & embedding with units; why it succeeded 39:28 Public–private partnership and managing risk 40:52 Threat-driven signals: short-range air defense & low-cost counters 42:07 Strategy add-ons: sanctions & choking the war economy 43:30 Audience Question- Ralph Goff: What adversaries are learning from Ukraine 45:51 Close Key takeaways • Speed beats pedigree: field, learn, iterate beats waiting for perfect • Put builders with users: embed engineers at the edge. • Write problem statements, not shopping lists. • Software-centric C2 (Delta/iStar) is now a weapon system. • Adversaries are studying the same lab - move faster. If you found this valuable, like & subscribe for more expert conversations from The Cipher Brief Threat Conference. Share your thoughts or questions in the comments. #DefenseInnovation #UkraineWar #UnmannedSystems #CounterDrone #BattleManagement #ProcurementReform #NationalSecurity #TechInWarfare #CipherBrief #ThreatConference