Explosive ordnance disposal specialists on Tuesday destroyed a World War II-era white phosphorous grenade discovered at Yokota AB, Japan, during construction on the east side of the base. They disposed of the unexploded ordnance via a controlled detonation. “Safety was paramount for us in responding to today’s events,” said Col. Bill Knight, 374th Airlift Wing commander. Construction workers found the UXO on Monday, according to Yokota officials. Base officials established a safety cordon and requested assistance from a Navy EOD team from Yokosuka, southeast of the base. The Navy team brought the UXO to a secure location on Yokota’s flight line before destroying it. This is the second UXO discovered and detonated at Yokota since December. The phosphorus grenade was significantly smaller in comparison and therefore had minimal impact on base residents and operations, said Yokota officials. (Yokota release)
Unmanned aerial vehicles and autonomous aircraft may provide a solution to operating in heavily contested domains such as the Taiwan Straits, according to a panel of expert who suggested operationalizing artificial intelligence for such purposes sooner rather than later. The group gathered virtually to help launch the Mitchell Institute for…