
Trump Grants Kyiv Licence to Produce Patriot Interceptors at NATO Summit
Washington agreed to let Ukraine build the coveted air-defence missiles domestically, days after a record barrage on Kyiv.
Modern warfare · Military technology · Frontline reporting
Jack Seurat is Conflict Correspondent at Times of Pol, covering the wars, insurgencies and territorial disputes that define the contemporary security landscape. His reporting tracks not only the fighting itself but the ways war is changing — how cheap drones and constant surveillance have rewritten the rules of the battlefield, and how those changes ripple outward into strategy, industry and politics.
He has spent much of his career close to the front, and his work is animated by a determination to explain conflict without glamorising it. He is as interested in the logistics, economics and technology of war as in its drama, on the conviction that understanding how modern conflict actually works is the first step toward taking its human cost seriously.
His coverage centres on the war in Ukraine and its lessons for modern combat, the world's reheating "frozen" conflicts, military build-ups and arms competition, and the growing role of unmanned systems and network-centric warfare. He follows the arms industry and defence procurement closely, believing that industrial capacity increasingly shapes battlefield outcomes.
Jack writes with a reporter's respect for detail and a healthy scepticism toward the claims of all combatants. He treats war as a subject to be examined rigorously rather than sensationalised, and he is careful to distinguish what is known from what is asserted. His aim is to give readers an accurate, unflinching picture of how conflicts are fought and why they matter.

Washington agreed to let Ukraine build the coveted air-defence missiles domestically, days after a record barrage on Kyiv.

A weapon costing a few thousand dollars can now destroy a tank worth millions. Inside network-centric warfare.

Long-dormant territorial disputes are heating up as external powers test old ceasefire lines.

Defence budgets are climbing worldwide. What the new spending says about how states see the decade ahead.
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