Welcome to The Ruck
Onward đ
It's so hard to make sense of everything happening in the national security world today.
U.S. troops and Pentagon leaders alike are keeping a close eye on China's recent threats against Taiwan. Ukraine is now fighting a war of attrition backed by billions of dollars in American firepower intended to weaken Russia one day at a time. And here in the United States, senior military leaders who rose through the ranks battling insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan are now charged with preparing everyone from lance corporals to lieutenant colonels for a vastly different kind of conflict: a war between great powers in which Americans may fight and die in the frigid Arctic or the Pacific on remote islands most people canât locate on a map.
Future wars will be different from those of the past. As Mick Ryan, a retired Australian Army major general, observes in War Transformed, âWarfare will employ a mix of old and new technologiesâsome ancient, and others almost magical in their technological sophistication.âÂ
The U.S. militaryâlong accustomed to having an enormous technological advantage over low-tech yet still-deadly insurgentsâmust now learn to fight on a more even playing field. Roadside bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan are less of a concern; these days, the Pentagon is considering a future war in which unstoppable missiles can take out strategic outposts in the Pacific and computer programs can find Navy ships and submarines anywhere on the planet using artificial intelligence. And as the war in Ukraine has demonstratedâdrones, long-range weapons with pinpoint accuracy, hacking, and information warfare will pose challenges to American forces in future conflicts.
Maybe you already knew all this. But most Americans do not. Headlines touting inflation and our shared national anxiety over a troubled economy may have something to do with it. We need to pay our mortgages, put gas in the car, and take care of our familiesâwhatâs happening with the troops in the field or the generals in Washington is not exactly top of mind.Â
So the âcivilian-military divideâ continues to grow. And Americans are losing trust in their own military so dramatically that the future of the all-volunteer force is in doubtâall as the Pentagon faces a âconsequential strategic competitorâ in Beijing that is getting more aggressive and is more likely to oppose democracies, arm Americaâs enemies, and threaten global trade and stability.
Is it possible to keep up with it all?
Over the past two decades, I've been doing just thatâstarting as a U.S. Marine infantryman after 9/11, then as the military & defense editor at Business Insider, executive editor of We Are The Mighty, founder and editor of the influential military satire publication Duffel Blog, and most recently as editor-in-chief of Task & Purpose. But after four years of leading the incredible T&P newsroom as its top editor, I am returning to what I enjoy mostâreporting and writingâto launch a new publication that goes beyond the daily military news cycle, examines the future of war, and helps all of us think more deeply about national security.Â
Welcome to The Ruck. Iâm so thrilled youâre here.
Why you should sign up for The Ruck

The Ruck is devoted to unpacking the future of national security for everyoneâwritten by me, Paul Szoldra, a military veteran and journalist who has covered national security for over a decade.Â
I first entered this world as a U.S. Marine infantryman, sleeping in the dirt and carrying a rucksack on patrol in forests, jungles, deserts, and mountains. After one such patrol in Afghanistan in 2005, I wrote to a high school friend: âThis isnât much of a war these days, and I have to ask myself all the time what the hell Iâm doing here.â
That was before a truck in front of me exploded and jolted into the air, landing with both front tires trapped in a crater made by a bomb in the road no one had suspected was there. I came home, was made a combat instructor, and trained thousands of my fellow grunts on infantry tactics, patrolling, and marksmanship. The most important lesson was always left unsaid: just get home alive. Some of them did not.Â
National security leaders have a long history of being "100% right 0% of the time" about where U.S. troops may end up next in combat. But the U.S. military almost certainly isnât prepared for the rise of China, advances in artificial intelligence, or the stunning proliferation of drones worldwide. It now struggles to convince a dwindling recruiting pool to sign up and replenish the ranks. And despite a Pentagon budget fast approaching $1 trillionâyes, $1 trillion in taxpayer dollarsâservice members have computers and software that often donât work, aircraft overhead designed with the utmost inefficiency the federal government can buy, and leaders who canât protect them from mold or military-grade poison.Â
Here at The Ruck, I plan to explain these topics, provide vital insight from my network, and present original analysis and reporting on the U.S. military's role now and in the future. My goal: Unpack the future of national security with clarity, skepticism, and witâfree of confusing jargon, unchallenged government talking points, military acronyms, scare-mongering, aggravating ads, or clickbaitâdelivered straight to your inbox each week.
Subscribers to The Ruck will receive my original reporting and analysis every Thursday.
But to get the full experienceâcoverage of events as they happen, weekly issues with extra reporting you won't find anywhere else, access to exclusive comment threads, and moreâI ask that you support my work by contributing $7 per month or $75 per year as a Ruck Insider.Â
Since this is an independent publication, I answer only to readers. I hope we can create a community for learning, exchanging ideas, and discussing the triumphs and trials of national security. And hopefully, we can avoid that future war altogether.
Thanks for reading,
đđ» Please send your tips, questions, and comments to paulszoldra@protonmail.com. And if you know someone who might like The Ruck, consider forwarding this email or sharing it on social media. It would mean the world to me. Thank you!