IN Defence issue 1 launches amid industrial strain

IN Defence issue 1 launches amid industrial strain

IN Defence launches as defence manufacturing pressure moves firmly upstream. The first issue tracks the industrial arguments behind current security tempo, from drones and batteries to cyber resilience.


The first issue of IN Defence is live, and it arrives at a point when the sector is akin to an industrial stress test. The opening weeks of 2026 have sharpened the mood considerably. Supply depth, sovereign capability, electronics resilience, procurement speed, and manufacturing throughput have all moved much closer to the centre of the conversation, because once operations escalate in frequency, backlogs and single-source dependencies stop being abstract problems.

The first issue spans drone-driven redesign of armoured vehicles, UK PPV manufacturing quality, sovereign battery supply, cyber compliance risk, and the growing role of the dismounted soldier as a sensor node.

The sentiment running through the issue is that defence is becoming more technologically dense, more supply-chain sensitive, and much less forgiving of industrial weakness. We’ve known this for some time. We haven’t, however, been in such a time where the frequency of conflict has stretched those modern mechanisms to such a degree.

For readers who want to follow those lines more closely, IN Defence offers a useful view of the sector — one grounded in manufacturing reality, procurement pressure, and technical consequence.

Click here and subscribe to read the first issue in full.


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