The B-1B that came back: why America’s “boneyard” is really a strategic reserve
A retired B-1B Lancer has returned from storage to operational service. The story is not only about one bomber leaving the “boneyard.” It is about the U.S. system for preserving aircraft, reclaiming parts, regenerating airframes and keeping strategic options alive long after a platform appears to have left the force.
Week in the World of Business Jets: Strong Backlogs Meet a Harder Operating Environment
Business aviation entered May with strong demand signals from Bombardier, Gulfstream, Textron Aviation and Embraer — but also with a clear operational warning. OEM backlogs, fleet deliveries and new certifications point to a resilient market, while Europe’s fuel disruption shows that cost, routing and execution risk are becoming harder to manage.
MQ-25A Stingray First Flight: The US Navy’s Tanker Drone Moves from Concept to Carrier Air Wing Integration
The MQ-25A Stingray’s first flight marks more than a technical milestone for Boeing and the US Navy. It signals the practical arrival of unmanned carrier-based aviation as a force-multiplying capability — extending carrier air wing range, reducing the tanker burden on Super Hornets, and preparing the flight deck for a future of manned-unmanned operations at sea.
IRAN - US/Israel: The Pause Before the Next Phase?
The US–Israel–Iran conflict has entered a dangerous pause. Direct strikes have slowed, but the strategic contest continues through the Strait of Hormuz, maritime pressure, sanctions, Lebanon, and the wider role of Russia and China. This TSB analysis examines three possible paths ahead: a negotiated settlement, a frozen conflict, or a renewed phase of active operations.