SIG SAUER - Never Settle

VA Undoes Decades-Old Wrong and Protects Veterans’ Second Amendment Rights

February 21st, 2026

WASHINGTON — The Department of Veterans Affairs today announced a major new step to protect Veterans’ Second Amendment rights. Effective immediately, VA will not report Veterans to the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System as “prohibited persons” only because they need help from a fiduciary in managing their VA benefits.

This corrects a three-decade-old wrong that deprived many thousands of Veterans in VA’s Fiduciary Program of their constitutional right to own a firearm without a legal basis.

After a thorough review, VA recognized that many Veterans had been deprived of their Second Amendment rights without hearings or adequate determinations that they posed a sufficient risk of danger to themselves or others. In consultation with the Department of Justice, VA has determined this practice violates both the Gun Control Act and Veterans’ Second Amendment rights. According to federal law, a decision by a judicial or quasi-judicial body is needed before someone can be reported to NICS.

A determination by the VA that a fiduciary is needed to help manage a Veteran’s VA benefits falls far short of this legal standard.

In addition to immediately stopping the reporting of VA Fiduciary Program participants to NICS, the department is working with the FBI to remove all past VA reporting from NICS, so no Veterans are unfairly deprived of their Second Amendment rights based solely on participation in VA’s Fiduciary Program.

“Many Americans struggle with managing their finances, and Veterans’ Second Amendment rights shouldn’t be stripped just because they need help in this area. But for too long, Veterans who needed the services of a VA fiduciary were deprived of their right to bear arms,” said VA Secretary Doug Collins. “Under the leadership of President Trump, we’re correcting this injustice and ensuring Veterans get the same due-process and constitutional rights as all Americans.”

The Department of Justice supports this action.

“It is both unlawful and unacceptable for Veterans who serve our country to have their constitutional rights threatened,” said Attorney General Pamela Bondi. “It has been my pleasure to partner with Secretary Collins on this project, and I am directing the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms to review its regulations and propose changes that will prevent current and future violations of our Veterans’ Second Amendment rights.”

– Veterans Administration

Creativity: The Art of the Possible

February 21st, 2026

Creativity is often described as imagination, inspiration, or artistic expression. In professional fields especially those tied to real-world consequences like tactical operations, engineering, or business creativity is something far more practical.  It is the disciplined art of making the possible real.

You start with a vision > You have the initiative to try > Now comes the hard part.

The Foundations of Practical Creativity.

Real creativity is not spontaneous. It is built on layers of competence and understanding. Before a solution can exist, certain conditions must be met.

You must have:

• Knowledge of the subject.

• Experience to understand its practical or tactical application.

• A clear understanding of the problem set.

• The technical ability to create a solution.

• The mental flexibility to see that solution before it exists.

• A defined and realistic end state.

Creativity is not just about inventing something new. It is about answering the right question.

Sometimes that question hasn’t even been asked yet.

Are You Solving the Right Problem?

Before building anything, you must understand the nature of the problem itself.

• Are you answering a question no one has recognized yet?

• Are you solving a clearly identified problem?

• Is the problem singular, or is it multi-layered?

• If you solve one part, will the rest fall into place?

• Or is each layer its own independent requirement?

Many failed designs are not failures of execution—they are failures of problem definition.

From Concept to Reality

Once the problem is understood, creativity shifts from abstract thinking to applied execution.

You must consider:

• Is the solution efficient?

• Can it be produced at scale, or only as a one-off?

• Does it actually improve the system, or just look different?

In tactical equipment design, creativity is not measured by novelty. It is measured by effectiveness.

A new concept must:

• Improve function

• Reduce complexity

• Increase survivability or efficiency

• Be producible and supportable in the real world

Otherwise, it is just an experiment or as some say it’s just a hobby.

Rethinking the Paradigm: Symmetry and Function

One example of practical creativity is the concept of load carriage symmetry.

Ergonomic symmetry exists when a task or tool allows the body to operate in a balanced, neutral, and repeatable manner—without forcing one side to compensate for the other.

In equipment design, this often translates to:

• Three to four rifle magazine pouches centered on the torso

• Pistol magazines placed for rapid access

• Grenades, flashbangs, and mission items distributed evenly

• Ambidextrous access to critical equipment

This configuration promotes balance, consistency, and repeatable performance across a team. But symmetry is not always the answer. During special tasks or mission-specific operations, the real question becomes: Is visual or load symmetry more important than immediate access to the correct tool at the exact moment it is needed? In many cases, the answer is no. Creativity means knowing when to follow the paradigm and when to break it.

Understanding the business side of creativity is just as important as the technical side.

A great idea must:

• Reach the market

• Be produced reliably

• Be supported long-term

• Compete against other solutions

Creativity without execution is just theory

Case Study: The Mayflower UW Chest Rig Evolution

One example of creativity as an iterative, problem-solving process is the development of the Mayflower UW (Unconventional Warfare) chest rig series. These designs were not the result of a single flash of inspiration. They were the result of years of operational experience, observation, and incremental improvement.

Each generation solved a specific problem. I took the lessons learned from my designs for the DBT Low-Vis Chest Rigs and operationally improved them:

UW Gen I – The Baseline Concept, breaking the paradigm:

The Gen I represented a shift away from traditional load carriage systems that were either:

too minimal (CHICOM Chest Rig) or too complex (full vest systems replacing belt kit). The goal was simple: carry the essential fighting load in a compact, balanced, low-profile format.

The Gen I focused on: centerline rifle magazine carriage, integrated general-purpose storage, only what you need. A balanced, symmetrical layout, dual comms, ambidextrous and low bulk for vehicle and urban operations.

It established the core concept: self-contained, multi-missionfighting load in a simple chest-mounted platform.

UW Gen II & GEN II.V Refinement Through Use

The Gen II was not a radical redesign. It was a refinement.

Changes were driven by real-world feedback. Long-term wearand practical adjustments from field use.

Key improvements included:  H-Harness refinements, initially fixed but still range of motion/size adjustable then a quick don/doff capability was added.

The lesson from the Gen II was simple: small, thoughtful changes often produce the biggest performance gains.

UW GEN I “Custom” that led to future development (as it was worn in combat).
 
 
 
 

 

 

UW Gen III — The Standardization Phase

By the time the Gen III emerged, the concept had matured.

This generation focused on: refined magazine retention, a cleaner manufacturing processes, and a format suitable for broader adoption across units

The Gen III represented the transition from:

“a good idea” to “a scalable, supportable piece of equipment.” This is a critical step in creativity:

A solution is not complete until it can be produced, issued, and sustained.

UW Gen IV — Modularity and Integration

The Gen IV reflected changing operational realities.

Users increasingly needed, integration with armor, greater modularity, and compatibility with multiple mission sets

The Gen IV addressed this byimproving attachment options, increasing compatibility with plate carriers and allowing mission-specific add-ons

This generation acknowledged a key truth: The environment changes. The equipment must evolve with it.

UW Gen V — The next step

By the time the Gen V arrived, the original concept had been fielded in the tens of thousands.

This design focused on splitting the base in half to meet a different operational need (an open front), streamlined construction, matching H-Harnesses, similar construction techniques, optimized pouch geometry to meet operational requirements, magazine inserts for different calibers, improved materials and manufacturing methods.  Abalance between modularity and simplicity.

UW Gen VI “Pusher” — The Mature Concept

The “Pusher” chest rig represented the evolutionary development of the UW series—a single platform, multi-caliber capable, and configurable for use with or without armor. It was built as a plug-and-play system, allowing magazine pouches to be mounted on the lower back for prone use, the addition of a cold-weather jacket pouch, and the ability to carry a NODS-mounted helmet as required.

Lessons from the UW Series.

The evolution from Gen I to Gen VI demonstrates several key principles of practical creativity:

• Creativity is iterative; no design is perfect at the start. Each generation solves a problem the previous one exposed.

• Experience drives innovation; most improvements were not theoretical. They came from actual use, under real conditions.

• Simplicity is the end state, as a concept matures, unnecessary complexity is stripped away.

• Production matters; a design is only successful if it can be produced in quantity and supported over time.

The Business Reality of Creativity

Creative success brings its own set of challenges.

After achieving even moderate success, many designers and entrepreneurs experience a predictable cycle:

• Imposter syndrome: was this a one off or have I spent my creativity?

• Learning to deal with success

• Reconciling unconventional paths to achievement, no college degree versus experience

• Pressure to recreate the successful formula

• Pushing through self-doubt

• Selling your own strengths while trying to remain humble

• Regaining the drive to outperform competitors

The Next Chapter

At some point, you begin to recognize where your real strengths lie.  Not just what you can create, but:

• What problems you are best suited to solve

• What environments you perform best in

• What kind of impact you want to have

That realization marks the transition into the next chapter.  You stop trying to prove yourself = You start building with intent.  Creativity, at its core, is not about originality for its own sake. It is about:

• Understanding the problem

• Seeing a path forward

• Having the skill and discipline to make it real

That is the true Art of the possible.

About the author:  Travis Rolph is a retired Airborne Infantry and Special Forces veteran and founder of Mayflower Research & Consulting.

NSWC Crane’s New Low-Cost, ‘Drone Killer Cartridge’ Achieves 92-Percent Kill Rate in Demonstration Event

February 21st, 2026

Naval Surface Warfare Center, Crane Division (NSWC Crane) has designed and developed the Drone Killer Cartridge (DKC), a new and cost-effective family of ammunition for the warfighter that increases probability of hit and kill against drone threats while inherently reducing collateral damage.

“We’re enabling extended range, shotgun-style effects through automatic rifles and machine guns with nothing more than an ammunition change,” said Brian Hoffman, Man-Portable Weapons Chief Engineer at NSWC Crane.

DKC is an ammunition technology that disperses a cluster of projectiles upon firing—for rifles, automatic rifles, and machine guns—with far greater range than a conventional shotgun. These effects increase the probability of hit and kill against Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) threats in a way that also reduces the risk of collateral damage for any projectiles that don’t impact the target. During a recent demonstration at Camp Atterbury in Edinburgh, Indiana, DKC achieved a 92% success rate against drone targets.

Col. Andrew Konicki, Program Manager of Ground Based Air Defense for Program Executive Officer Land Systems, said the Marine Corps plans to broadly leverage DKC for its enhanced capabilities and implement at the operator-level.

“The Drone Killer Cartridge represents a pivotal shift in countering the pervasive threat of enemy drones,” said Col. Konicki. “This type of ammunition provides an immediate and significant improvement to our kinetic kill capabilities by using standard-issued weapons that are already in the hands of Marines. The collaborative work between NSWC Crane and the Marine Corps has positive impacts across the ecosystem of Homeland Defense as well as self-protection for our forward deployed troops in harm’s way. With DKC, we are adding capability well beyond conventional options, while also bending the cost curve for neutralizing drone threats, particularly to the individual Marine. Crucially, its design reduces the risk of collateral damage, making it a dominant and urgently needed solution that will fundamentally change the fight for every Marine.”

Unmanned systems are reshaping tactics, challenging established operations, and creating life-threatening threats for warfighters globally. To counter this rapidly evolving and critical threat, the Department is aiming to improve overall defense capabilities.  

“By design, DKC provides broader terminal coverage on and around the intended target, which increases effectiveness against stationary and moving drones by helping offset imperfect aim,” said Hoffman. “There’s a good reason why bird hunters use shotguns. We’ve applied a similar philosophy to killing drones while amplifying overall performance. DKC sub-projectiles exit the barrel at velocities typical of centerfire rifle ammunition. Those velocities, and associated energies, far exceed shotgun capabilities and serve to extend effective range while offering more devastating effects on target.”

DKC technology provides an improved defense capability at an affordable price, ensuring versatility for end-users with rapid integration for a variety of mission sets. Engineers and technicians developed DKC from internal NSWC Crane Naval Innovative Science and Engineering (NISE) funding and Department of Homeland Security and Marine Corps investment. Because use of DKC involves only an ammunition change, timeline to initial fielding can be accelerated as it does not require qualification of a new weapon system. As a beneficial side effect of that approach, DKC eliminates the need for warfighters to carry excess weight of an additional weapon dedicated to countering drones.

“When you compare the cost it takes to kill a drone using DKC versus some other solutions that are being employed, it’s a night-and-day difference,” said Hoffman. “The projectiles used in segmented DKC and pelletized DKC are both inert, meaning there is no energetic material in the projectile itself. The separation mechanisms are purely mechanical, and the cartridge case, primer, and propellant are common to other ammunition types already in production. These attributes combine to help keep it elegantly simple yet effective while ensuring low-cost producibility.”

All DKC products are NSWC Crane-designed and U.S. Government-owned intellectual property (IP) with U.S. nonprovisional utility patent applications and Patent Cooperative Treaty applications on file. The DKC family includes both Pelletized and Segmented product options.  There is functional overlap between the two, though each type maintains unique priority rankings for effective range, target area coverage, suppressor compatibility, and cost. Segmented DKC includes a one-piece projectile that mechanically self-separates into discrete, spin-stabilized sub-projectiles prior to muzzle exit whereas Pelletized DKC includes a projectile assembly containing a stack of high-density, spherical buckshot-sized pellets that are mechanically disbursed at muzzle exit.

Hoffman said the technology enables the end-user to quickly dispatch UAS threats.

“The intent with our ammunition was to simply give operators a better chance of killing drones with cost-effective products that can be used in existing weapons.  If you aren’t the world’s best shot or don’t have a lot of experience engaging aerial targets, your odds go up immediately with DKC.  As a bonus and since these products are already mature, you won’t have to wait years for product development in order to access DKC and put it to good use. 

Hoffman said the DKC team and NSWC Crane family are excited and motivated to fast-track these products to the field and fleet to help meet urgent needs – not just for the Navy, Marine Corps, and DHS – but for the other U.S. Military Services, Government Agencies, and select foreign partners.

“The demand signal for DKC is increasing dramatically given the current threat environment and the more we socialize these products and the technology,” said Hoffman. “There are obvious reasons why it resonates with military operators and Counter-UAS stakeholders who understand the urgent need. DKC is effective, it’s affordable, and it can be used immediately with weapons that are already in service.” 

To view some footage of drone kills using DKC, high-speed video of the sub-projectiles as they exit the barrel, and additional introductory content.

The Drone Killer Cartridge technology is available for licensing to commercial ammunition and defense manufacturing partners. Initially designed for military applications, there also are applications for home defense, personal protection, and hunting. To learn more about the IP and licensing opportunity, please visit TechLink.

Cubic Selected to Upgrade Romania’s Live Training System with Next-Generation Capabilities

February 20th, 2026

SAN DIEGO – February 19, 2026 – Cubic Defense, a recognized leader in live, virtual and constructive (LVC) ground training, has received an award from the United States Army, Capability Program Executive Simulation, Training and Instrumentation (CPE STRI) to support the Romanian Armed Forces’ existing live training system (LTS). This effort will modernize Romania’s existing live training capabilities while strengthening NATO readiness on Europe’s eastern flank. 

“Our team is proud of the trust this frontline NATO ally continues to place in Cubic,” said Alicia Combs, Vice President and General Manager of LVC Ground at Cubic Defense. “The upgrade will transform Romania’s existing live training system into a modern, world-leading capability that will enhance rigorous, data-driven training for years to come. Romania is investing in readiness, and we are honored to stand alongside them.” 

For more than 20 years, Cubic has supported the Romanian Armed Forces, delivering training systems capable of adapting to emerging threats, new operational concepts and alliance requirements. The current effort reinforces Romania’s long-term training readiness while contributing to broader NATO interoperability. 

At the core of the upgrade is Cubic’s CATS Metrix™ system, an advanced analytics and instrumentation suite that provides precise tracking, high-fidelity weapon effects simulation and data-rich after-action review. The enhanced system will give commanders greater insight into soldier and unit performance through real-time data capture and analysis. 

The upgraded live training system will deliver: 

  • Enhanced accuracy and reliability across force-on-force training 
  • Integrated CATS Metrix analytics for measurable performance insights 
  • Expanded interoperability with NATO partners 
  • Scalable architecture designed to grow with Romania’s future training needs 

Breakthrough for Seasnake: Sweden Becomes First NATO Customer

February 20th, 2026

The newest NATO member, Sweden, has commissioned Rheinmetall to supply eight Seasnake 30 weapon systems for the Swedish Navy. These systems will be the primary armament of the new Combat Boat 90 fast military assault craft. The first order under the framework agreement is worth around €63 million and was placed in February 2026. Delivery of the first system is scheduled for February 2028.


The framework agreement also includes airburst and 30 mm calibre training ammunition, with a term of four years. Spare parts and services are also included in the agreement. Additionally, the contract includes an option for up to 29 extra Seasnake weapon systems.

The Seasnake 30 is a state-of-the-art remote-controlled naval light gun designed for close-range defence. Alongside the weapon itself, the system incorporates modern daylight cameras, infrared sensors, and a laser rangefinder. It features automatic target detection and the ability to track multiple targets simul¬taneously. The revolver cannon’s nominal maximum rate of fire is 1,100 rounds per minute.

Thanks to its integrated airburst capability, the Seasnake 30 is particularly effective against air targets, such as drones. Its low silhouette and compact stealth design also make it difficult for enemy sensors to detect.

This order from Sweden marks an important market success for Rheinmetall, as it positions the Seasnake 30 with a NATO customer for the first time. This decision highlights confidence in the performance and future viability of Rheinmetall’s modern naval weapon systems. At the same time, the order reinforces the Group’s standing as a dependable provider of maritime defence solutions within the alliance.

ASI Awarded Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) Prototype OTA for AI-Enabled Joint Sustainment Decision Tool (JSDT)

February 20th, 2026

BOSTON, Feb. 19, 2026 — Air Space Intelligence (ASI), a pioneer in AI-powered decision support software for the world’s most demanding domains, today announced it has been awarded a contract by the Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) to configure and implement advanced logistics decision-support for leaders operating in complex, multi-domain operational environments.

Under the award, ASI will deliver its commercial software capability for decision support, capable of generating realistic and actionable courses of action (COAs) for decision makers facing operational uncertainty and adversary pressure. ASI’s solution will rapidly analyze evolving conditions, identify critical dependencies across the logistics kill chain, and present commanders with viable options that account for disruption, attrition, and constrained resources.

Modern military operations are increasingly shaped by the ability, or inability, to sustain forces. Adversaries actively target logistics networks, infrastructure, and decision timelines, turning sustainment into a decisive element of the fight. ASI’s solution reflects this reality by explicitly modeling logistics as an operational system, enabling commanders to understand how logistics decisions impact operational endurance, tempo, and risk over time.

“Commanders today must make decisions faster than ever, often with incomplete information and under persistent threat to the status, suitability and capacity of their nodes and distribution networks.,” said Mark Lepczyk, President of ASI Federal. “This award from DIU recognizes the need for AI-centric solutions that don’t just optimize a single plan, but help leaders explore multiple courses of action and understand how each one stresses or preserves the logistics kill chain.”

ASI’s commercial solution is designed to support decision-making in dynamic environments where traditional assumptions break down—where resupply is uncertain, infrastructure is contested, and degradation is the norm rather than the exception. By combining AI-driven analysis with domain-informed models, the solution helps commanders evaluate tradeoffs between speed, risk, sustainability, and mission outcomes.

This DIU award reflects the Department of War’s continued focus on becoming an “AI-First” warfighting force.  ASI’s work directly supports this mission by applying advanced analytics and machine learning to command-and-control and sustainment problems that increasingly determine operational success.

Sign Up Now for the 3rd Annual Samsung Solutions & Partner Expo

February 20th, 2026

Samsung is co-hosting the 3rd Annual Samsung Partnership Day with Juggernaut, on April 2nd, 2026. This collaborative technology and emergency-response showcase is designed to highlight how strategic partnerships across the public sector, private industry, and the Department of Defense enable mission-critical operations. Modern response efforts rely on seamless integration; without one component, the others cannot achieve full effectiveness. This event brings together technology providers, solution integrators, and government agencies to demonstrate how coordinated systems, platforms, and communication tools work in unison to accomplish complex tasks.

This year’s theme focuses on multi-level emergency response, emphasizing how local, state, federal, and military partners collaborate during crisis events. Through live demonstrations, scenario-based simulations, and expert discussions, we will explore how these partners coordinate—from initial incident and situational awareness to resource deployment, on-scene operations, and long-term recovery.

Attendees will see firsthand how technologies such as mobile communication platforms, command and control systems, secure data-sharing solutions, and field-level devices intersect to support a unified response effort across all jurisdictions and military components. All of this will take place in a casual, mixed indoor/outdoor setting overlooking the McDowell Mountains.

Companies exhibiting

When:

Thursday, April 2, 2026

7:30 AM – 4:00 PM

Where:

Juggernaut HQ

9229 E Verde Grove View

Scottsdale, AZ 85255

Sign up here.

Mehler Protection Presents “Omega Jaw”: First Mandible Guard with AK47 Protection Meeting VPAM 6

February 20th, 2026

FULDA, GERMANY (19.02.2026)

With the “Omega Jaw” mandible guard, Mehler Protection is introducing a new generation of face and jaw protection specifically designed for threats from AK47 MSC projectiles in accordance with VPAM 6, while fully maintaining system compatibility with Mehler Protection’s ultra-lightweight high-cut helmets. “This development underlines our ambition to drive innovation in our industry. Our products are based on operational requirements and are designed to provide optimum protection and genuine reliability,” explains Dr Mario Amschlinger, CEO Mehler Systems.

Homogeneous head protection against rifle ammunition

With Omega Jaw, Mehler Protection is transferring its long-standing expertise in ballistic body armour to face and jawprotection. Whereas conventional helmet/face protection combinations generally provide only limited protection against handgun ammunition and basic fragmentation protection, the system achieves a maximum protection level against AK47 MSC projectiles at a velocity of 720 m/s (VPAM 6 level) with minimal frontal deformation. This closes a critical protection gap and, for the first time, enables logically coordinated, complementary face protection.

The ballistic high-cut helmet of the Omega series can be upgraded to protection level VPAM 6 by attaching ultra-lightweight plates made from ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE). These ugradeable plates are an essential component of the holistic VPAM 6 protection architecture. In combination with the mandible guard, the reinforced helmet provides homogeneous all-round head protection.

“In line with the current trend towards enhanced protection for face and head areas, Omega Jaw is a real game changer,” say the mandible guard designers, Dr Christian Rödel and Marie Schmidt. “For the first time, operators have access to a face and jaw protection solution that provides protection against AK47 rounds, integrates seamlessly into our ultra-lightweight high-cut helmets and at the same time maintains compatibility with mission-critical accessories. This is a decisive step towards homogeneous head protection for highly critical operational environments.”

Seamless integration into high-cut helmets with no design modifications

Omega Jaw is attached to the high-cut helmet shell via a specially developed U-profile that locks onto the helmet rim. This ensures secure and rapid system integration without altering the basic helmet design. The three-piece plate structure deliberately incorporates overlaps both between the plates and at the helmet interface in order to minimise vulnerabilities and ensure the most continuous protective surface possible. Despite the extended protection area, Omega Jaw is engineered for full compatibility with common hearing protection and communication headsets such as Peltor systems and can be used in combination with the Mehler Protection helmet visor.

Modular textile and plate concept with tactical interfaces

The textile cover concept allows the integration of different protective plates, supporting scalable protection levels as well as future material upgrades. At the same time, the design offers valuable mounting options on Picatinny rails, enabling users to attach tactical equipment without compromising protection. The system can be quickly donned and doffed using hook-and-loop straps and is designed for compact stowage during transport or when not in use.