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Thursday, April 16, 2026

US Army Trials Unmanned Hunter Wolf Robot With Gun, Radar In Combat Drills

 The U.S. Army is quietly putting armed robots through their paces alongside real soldiers - and new footage suggests these machines could soon be a regular sight on tomorrow’s battlefields.

Wolf-X robotic combat vehicle by HDT Global.Blade HDT

Fresh imagery dropped on Monday by the Defense Visual Information Distribution Service shows a Hunter Wolf unmanned ground vehicle rolling with the 101st Airborne Division during a full-on combat simulation at the Joint Readiness Training Center (JRTC) in Louisiana. The display amounted to a serious stress test in one of the Army’s roughest training environments - where ideas either prove they work or get ditched fast.

The Hunter Wolf’s appearance at JRTC marks a significant shift - as units aren’t just playing around with unmanned gear in isolated experiments anymore; they’re dropping it straight into realistic, chaotic scenarios. Elements of the 101st used the vehicle for logistics runs and security tasks throughout the exercise. Photos show it fitted with a remotely operated .50-caliber machine gun, which hints that the Army is testing it for more than just hauling supplies—it’s being eyed for actual tactical roles too.

The Hunter Wolf was originally picked up under the Army’s Small Multipurpose Equipment Transport program to take some of the crushing load off soldiers’ backs. But at Fort Polk, they ran it with a remote weapon station and EchoShield radar, turning it into a rolling set of eyes and teeth. The combo lets a unit push sensors and firepower forward without putting troops in the open. The robot can scout ahead, scan for threats, and even lay down fire while the soldiers stay under cover.

At the same time, it still hauls the basics - ammo, water, batteries, comms gear - so small units can stay mobile and supplied across wide, contested spaces. In today’s fights, logistics and security are blurring together anyway. A robot that can do both fits right in.

Defense analyst Teoman S. Nicanci (Army Recognition Group) points out that the real story here is the Army choosing a high-intensity training rotation like JRTC instead of a safe, staged test. It shows they’re serious about folding this tech into actual formations and missions, not just checking boxes.

For units like the 101st, where speed and mobility are everything, these unmanned platforms help keep that edge without burning out the troops or exposing them unnecessarily. Future battles are going to be packed with drones, artillery, and precision strikes—anything that cuts risk while keeping the pressure on is worth its weight.

Bottom line: the Hunter Wolf isn’t science fiction anymore. The Army is learning, right now, how to weave robots into the fight so soldiers can move faster, hit harder, and come home safer.

h/t Interesting Engineering

https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/us-army-trials-unmanned-hunter-wolf-robot-gun-radar-combat-drills

India's Central Bank Tells Oil Refiners To Stop Buying Dollars On Spot Market

 By Julianne Geiger of OilPrice.com

India’s central bank has told state-run oil refiners to stop buying dollars in the spot market and instead use a government-backed credit line.

That matters because oil is priced in dollars, and refiners are some of the biggest buyers of dollars in the country. When they all go into the market at once to pay for crude, it puts direct pressure on the rupee. That pressure has been building for weeks.

The Reserve Bank of India is now stepping in to manage the demand.

State refiners, including Indian Oil Corporation, Hindustan Petroleum Corporation, and Bharat Petroleum Corporation, have been asked to draw dollars through a special credit facility routed via State Bank of India. Together, these companies account for about half of India’s 5.2 million barrels per day of refining capacity.

Instead of going into the open market to buy dollars on the spot—meaning immediate purchase at current exchange rates—they can either access this credit line or buy dollars at a reference rate set by the central bank—potentially adding costs to India’s oil refiners.

The goal is simple: reduce visible demand for dollars in the market.

India’s currency has been under pressure. The rupee has fallen more than 3% this year and hit a record low past 95 per dollar in March, driven by higher oil prices and foreign capital outflows. Oil imports are a major factor. India imports the bulk of its crude, and every cargo requires dollar payments.

By centralizing those flows through SBI and shifting demand off the spot market, the RBI is trying to smooth out volatility and limit sharp moves in the currency.

The measures have been in place for about two weeks. Traders say activity from oil companies in the spot market has already slowed.

The move follows additional direction from India’s government in February, which asked refiners to consider buying more crude oil cargoes from the US and Venezuela, steering clear of Russian crude.

The central bank has also sold dollars from its reserves and tightened rules around certain currency trades. The rupee has since recovered about 2%, last trading near 93.20 per dollar.

For now, the strategy is focused on managing dollar demand at the source: oil imports

https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/indias-central-bank-tells-oil-refiners-stop-buying-dollars-spot-market

Iran-linked vessels continue Hormuz transits despite US blockade - report

 

At least eight vessels crossed the blockade line in recent days and are heading toward Iranian ports or preparing to load Iranian cargo, according to shipping data.


https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202604159162

US to step up role in efforts to disarm Hezbollah - report

 

The United States plans to play a more active role in efforts to disarm Hezbollah in Lebanon, a senior Israeli official told The Jerusalem Post on Thursday.

The official said the administration of US President Donald Trump intends to support Lebanese government efforts to curb Hezbollah’s military capabilities and is prepared to use American resources to achieve that goal.

“Trump wants this to happen, so this time the US will be far more involved,” the official was quoted as saying.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202604159162

US says naval blockade targets Iran’s ports, not Hormuz

 

The United States said on Thursday its naval blockade is targeting Iran’s ports and coastline, not the Strait of Hormuz, as American forces step up enforcement operations in regional waters.

"US forces are NOT blockading the Strait of Hormuz. More than 10,000 American service members, 12+ ships, and 100+ aircraft have enforced the blockade in regional waters, ensuring that no vessels violate the President's proclamation," CENTCOM posted on X.


https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202604159162

US Marines supporting enforcement of Iran blockade - CENTCOM

 

US Central Command said on Thursday Marines and Navy personnel are supporting ongoing operations to enforce a blockade targeting Iran, as Washington steps up military pressure in regional waters.

"US Marines from the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, and Sailors assigned to amphibious transport dock ship USS New Orleans (LPD 18) support blockade operations against Iran, April 16. US forces are ready and postured to enforce the blockade," CENTCOM posted on X.


https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202604159162

Trump’s Hostile Takeover of the World?

 by J.B. Shurk

Eminently quotable writer James Howard Kunstler sized up President Trump’s play in Iran a couple months back by concluding, “The art of the deal is not for sissies.”  That line aptly describes Trump’s whole presidency, doesn’t it?  

Trump makes moves that scare people.  Even his friends and allies require an occasional pause to digest exactly what he may or may not be planning.  When he threatened to “end” Iran’s civilization, did the president mean that literally?  Or was that his way of maximizing the size of the stick he held in his hands, while Pakistan played peacemaker with a ceasefire carrot?  Only time will tell.  

It does feel as if more Americans have come to accept that they must take a “wait and see” approach with the most unorthodox president of their lifetimes.  One of the few real American journalists writing today, Salena Zito, described Trump astutely back in September 2016 when she observed, “The press takes him literally but not seriously; his supporters take him seriously but not literally.”  Her insight — as succinct as it is clever — remains part of our cultural wisdom to this day.  

While CNN and MS-NOW-(What’s Its Name?) suggested to their dwindling audiences that Trump was about to drop nuclear bombs on Iran last week (a country about seven times larger than the United Kingdom), most Americans with common sense understood the president to be putting maximum rhetorical pressure on the surviving members of Iran’s Islamic terrorist regime.  

On the other hand, sometimes President Trump sends in Delta Force operators to black-bag narco-terrorist dictators in the middle of the night (How badly do you think Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro wishes he could go back and choose wealthy exile over solitary confinement in an American prison?).  A good poker player can’t bluff all the time.  Sometimes the cards have to back a confident bet.  

When it comes to handling adversaries of any kind, Trump enjoys keeping everybody guessing.  It makes him unpredictable.  His unpredictability leaves opponents unsettled.  While they’re looking left and right and turning around frenetically to see whether the president might be coming up from behind, Trump usually surprises them with a blow directly to the face.

That terrifies leaders all over the world who are not used to a street-brawler in the White House.  They would much prefer an American president who carefully unclasps his Rolex watch and daintily removes his dinner jacket before making any quick moves.  Instead, they get Trump — who comes out swinging, landing haymakers, throwing uppercuts, and knocking out teeth.  

Having President Trump in the White House reminds me of a scene in the Winston Churchill biopic, Darkest Hour.  Churchill is drinking during a working lunch with King George VI, and he tells the king that he has always been “unwanted” in parliament.  “Perhaps it’s because you scare people,” the king replies.  “Who?” Churchill asks.  “You scare me,” the king insists.  “What nonsense,” Churchill retorts, before asking, “What could possibly be scary about me?”  King George VI answers directly, “One never knows what’s going to come out of your mouth next.  Something that will flatter, something that will wound…”  

That movie came out in 2017, in the first year of President Trump’s first term.  It probably could not be made today.  Firstly, as the United Kingdom turns itself into an Islamic kingdom, rejects its historical achievements, and “cancels” it great historical figures, Winston Churchill has become persona non grata in the nation he singlehandedly saved from becoming a Nazi vassal state.  Secondly, a lot of people who watched that movie immediately recognized the similarities between Churchill and Trump.  

The former governor of Arkansas and current U.S. ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, walked out of the theater in December 2017 and immediately made the comparison in a series of social media posts: “Churchill was hated by his own party, opposition party, and press.  Feared by King as reckless, and despised for his bluntness.  But unlike Neville Chamberlain, he didn’t retreat.  We had a Chamberlain for 8 yrs; in @realDonaldTrump we have a Churchill.”  Recommending the movie to Americans, Huckabee complimented both Churchill and Trump by arguing that this is “what real leadership looks like.”

Members of the “elite” corporate press did not like Huckabee’s comparison of former President Barack Obama to former Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain — the man whose arrogance, sense of entitlement, and fondness for appeasement betrayed his moral weakness and inability to do tough things.  But those “elite” propagandists were absolutely horrified that anyone with a significant number of social media “followers” could link Churchill to Trump.  People all over the world rightly remember Churchill as one of the twentieth century’s most consequential world leaders.  How could anyone, Hillary-supporters complained on cable news, see that kind of greatness in Donald Trump?

Ordinary moviegoers, on the other hand, understood exactly what Huckabee was saying.  Sure, Trump and Churchill have obvious differences.  Churchill was a functional alcoholic; Trump has been a teetotaler all his life.  Churchill spent most of his adulthood in debt and probably avoided bankruptcy only because of his celebrity; Trump is a billionaire.  Churchill was married to his wife, Clemmie, for fifty-seven years; Trump has been married three times.  For all their differences, though, these two men share a lot in common.

As was true of Churchill, President Trump has a larger-than-life personality that sucks up the oxygen from every room he enters.  Both men changed political affiliations over the course of their lives.  Churchill was comfortable insulting political foes, telling uncomfortable truths, and changing his mind whenever necessary.  He frequently argued against the prevailing opinions of his time, even when doing so made him unpopular.  Although, by title and privilege, Churchill was an Establishment “insider,” his independent nature, sometimes-abrasive personality, and fearless defense of controversial positions made him a consummate “outsider.”  It is not difficult to see why so many people went into movie theaters to see Winston Churchill brought back to life in the Darkest Hour and exited with the realization that there was something downright Churchillian about President Trump.

Perhaps the quality that most links these two world historical figures, though, is their willingness to fight while all around them are flailing.  Trump’s critics spend a lot of time accusing him of instigating chaos.  But there is an undeniable consistency to the policy objectives he pursues.  In his first term, he set America on a trajectory to be an energy powerhouse.  While Europe commits economic suicide by refusing to develop its own natural resources in its misguided war against the weather, Trump has pursued a relentless “Drill, baby, drill” policy.  He’s managed to partner with Venezuela both to enlarge America’s access to hydrocarbon energies and to block China from exploiting resources in the Western Hemisphere.  With the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed and energy exports from the Middle East severely crippled, the United States and the Russian Federation are best positioned to navigate the economic consequences.  

Will the energy crisis across Europe make the European Commission more or less likely to find a reasonable way to end the Russia-Ukraine War?  Will the energy crisis in China provide a new incentive for Xi Jinping to help the United States bring Iran to heel?  Will more people begin to realize that President Trump’s dismantling of Iran has as much to do with preparing for war with China as it has to do with establishing a new regional order in the Middle East?

Here’s the simple truth for corporate news mouthpieces too lazy or too fake to understand President Trump’s motivations: The man is always negotiating.  While his adversaries scream and shake their heads, Trump is preparing for the next hostile takeover.  Kunstler said it best: “The art of the deal is not for sissies.”

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2026/04/trump_s_hostile_takeover_of_the_world.html