Saturday, March 28, 2026

Containerized Autonomous Kitchen Expands Army Food Modernization to the Field

Building on the success of its Market 19 autonomous dining facility, the 19th Expeditionary Sustainment Command in Daegu, South Korea, is now testing a mobile version of the system that extends access to fresh, hot meals for soldiers operating beyond the garrison environment. 
 
The Sustained Autonomous Meals, or SAM, is a containerized extension of the Market 19 concept, designed to deliver on-demand meals in field environments, improving both operational flexibility and quality of life. 

A soldier wearing a camouflage military uniform retrieves a bowl of food from an outdoor military container kitchen.

"This is essentially the same autonomous cooking system, but now in a 20-foot container that can go where dining facilities can't," said Army Chief Warrant Officer 3 River Mitchell, a food advisor assigned to the 19th Expeditionary Sustainment Command. "It allows us to bring freshly prepared meals directly to soldiers, even in austere locations." 
 
Unlike traditional field-feeding methods that rely on scheduled mealtimes or prepackaged rations, the containerized system prepares meals to order using fresh ingredients. Soldiers can access hot meals based on their operational schedule, rather than being limited to fixed dining times. 
 
"I think the biggest value is that we're driving bottom-up innovation and transforming at the speed of industry," Mitchell said. "We're not waiting on long development cycles — we're testing, learning and improving in real time." 

A soldier wearing a camouflage military uniform loads a container of vegetables into an outdoor, mobile military container kitchen.

The system can produce over 120 meals per hour and can operate continuously with minimal personnel, requiring only a small team for ingredient preparation and oversight. Its mobility allows it to support a wide range of missions, from port operations to large-scale exercises and forward-deployed environments. 
 
For soldiers training on the system, the impact is already clear. 
 
"It's amazing; it's going to be a change in the future for us," said Army Staff Sgt. Darren Bailey, the noncommissioned officer in charge of Market 19. "I think the robot is going to be a great asset to us and really change the culture for ... our culinary specialists." 

Several large containers sit outside in a gravel area. Each is labeled with kitchen words such as “line,” “order” and “pickup;” the container on the right is labeled “SAM, sustained autonomous meals.”
A bowl of boiling water and ingredients sits on a stove in an outdoor, mobile military kitchen.
Inside the container, two robotic arms prepare and plate meals while a built-in holding system maintains the food at the right temperature, allowing for rapid service during high-demand periods. The system can store multiple completed meals while continuing to cook additional orders — increasing efficiency without sacrificing quality. 
 
Beyond convenience, the containerized kitchen supports broader Army modernization efforts by integrating commercial technology into sustainment operations. This approach reflects a shift toward faster innovation and adaptability in the field that senior Army leaders have emphasized. 

The system also directly contributes to soldier readiness by improving access to nutritious meals. Compared to traditional mass-prepared field feeding, freshly made meals better support performance and recovery in demanding environments.

For units operating in remote or resource-constrained areas, the impact can be significant. With fewer hands needed for cooking, smaller teams of culinary specialists can feed an entire company. The containerized system gives commanders an additional option to sustain their formations, reducing reliance on prepackaged meals and expanding access to fresh food. 
 
"The data we collect here will guide decisions about future locations and applications," Mitchell said. "We want to see how this can support sustainment both in the Pacific and eventually in the continental United States."

The SAM is currently in its initial testing phase on the Korean Peninsula. Over the coming months, soldiers and leaders will evaluate its performance, scalability and potential for wider use across the Army. 
 
As the Army continues to modernize its sustainment capabilities, initiatives like this represent a shift toward more agile, soldier-focused solutions — ensuring that no matter the environment, soldiers remain fueled, ready and resilient.

Coast Guard, Northern Mariana Islands Strengthen Maritime Security Presence in Western Pacific

Three men wearing life jackets and sunglasses pose for a photo on a pier with a small boat moored in the background.
Earlier this month, federal and local maritime law enforcement agencies patrolled the waters and ports in and around Saipan, the capital and largest island of the Northern Mariana Islands — a U.S. territory, boarding six small vessels and launching new coordination channels that expand the commonwealth's ability to monitor and respond to threats in its surrounding waters.

The U.S. Coast Guard Sector Boarding Team led joint underway and shoreside operations alongside local agencies, March 18-22. Teams engaged 12 vessel contacts and completed six small vessel security boardings, while a joint patrol of the port of Saipan marked the first combined shoreside operation between the Coast Guard and local customs and biosecurity.

The operation also brought together key agency leaders for the first time. Boarding team members met with an Immigration and Customs Enforcement representative, the assistant director of the Northern Mariana Islands' Department of Fish and Wildlife, and the newly appointed chief of the Saipan Marine Unit — reinforcing direct lines of communication and cooperation that strengthen maritime domain awareness across the commonwealth's waters and surrounding exclusive economic zone.

"The Marianas sit at the center of Western Pacific maritime activity: commercial traffic, fishing, small vessels moving between islands," said Coast Guard Lt. j.g. Thomas Forames-Su, supervisor of the boarding team. "These operations are about more than boardings. We're strengthening the relationships and shared awareness that let us and our partners act faster and more cohesively."

Maritime domain awareness is a shared responsibility across federal, local and community stakeholders. The islands' economy depends heavily on the free flow of maritime commerce, fishing and tourism, all of which require safe, well-monitored waters. Joint operations, like this one, strengthen the network of agencies and protect those interests every day.

Building on the momentum from these operations, the Coast Guard and local partners are planning additional joint patrols, dockside security boardings and coordinated cutter operations, like the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Frederick Hatch's recent patrol, in the waters around Saipan and to the north. Agencies are also working to deepen communication protocols and formalize interagency coordination agreements to expand joint response capabilities across the region.