New chip fabs are being planned nationwide—but without power, permitting, and people, they may never run. In Part 3 of our semiconductor resilience series, Christian Cabaniss, military operations analyst at SPA and USMC Col Ret, highlights the massive infrastructure challenges behind domestic chip production. From 20-year permitting timelines to critical labor shortages, this piece details why c

What’s the difference between risk and uncertainty—and why does it matter for national security? In Part 2 of our series, Christian Cabaniss makes the case that static planning models are failing America’s semiconductor strategy. From Taiwan’s outsized role to fragile, global supply webs, the reality is more complex than risk assessments suggest. This piece offers a blueprint for resilienc

For most Americans, semiconductors remain invisible—embedded in smartphones, appliances, cars, and computers without a second thought. But for those in national security and defense policy, the global semiconductor industry is now front and center, tied to questions of military readiness, economic resilience, and geopolitical competition.

The space domain has transformed in scale, scope, and strategic consequence. What once was a benign operational backdrop is now a contested warfighting domain. China and Russia continue to develop and demonstrate counterspace weapons—from direct-ascent ASATs and co-orbital platforms to jammers and directed energy systems—explicitly designed to undermine U.S. freedom of action in space.