NATO Charges Up Airborne Electronic Attack Capabilities

Luftwaffe A400M model

The Airbus A400M is one of the candidate platforms for a German Air Force standoff jammer initiative.

Credit: Robert Wall/AW&ST
NATO countries are reenergizing their airborne electronic attack ambitions after seeing how electronic warfare has become central in the war in Ukraine and recognizing that jamming would be heavility involved in conflict with China. The push spans everything from high-end, large standoff jamming...
Robert Wall

Robert Wall is Executive Editor for Defense and Space. Based in London, he directs a team of military and space journalists across the U.S., Europe and Asia-Pacific.

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