Air Force Magazine
Daily Report for Feb. 18, 2020
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Edited by Amy McCullough with Rachel S. Cohen, Brian W. Everstine, Amanda Miller and Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
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Help the Space Force Name Its Troops
By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
The Space Force wants Air Force space professionals to help it name its forces,
operational units, and ranks. Now through Feb. 24, individuals with USAF Common
Access Cards who have Air Force Portal access can join in the conversation,
according to a Feb. 13 Air Force release. USSF is particularly interested in
hearing from Airmen who’ve been assigned to the sixth service, as well as
those who think they may join it later on. USSF officials also plan to reach out
to Army, Navy, and Marine Corps military space professionals.
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Space Traffic Transition to Commerce Hits Speed Bumps
By Rachel S. Cohen
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif.—Handing off responsibility for space traffic
management from the Space Force to the Commerce Department is proving slower
than expected, a military official told Air Force Magazine. Mark Daley, the
Commerce Department’s operations deputy in the Office of Space Commerce,
joined the Combined Space Operations Center here last year. But
lower-than-planned funding in 2020 is hindering Commerce’s ability to take
over as an orbital traffic cop of sorts, as commercial companies want to
exponentially grow the number of satellites in space. “We would have imagined
four or five personnel here by now to be able to go through training,” CSpOC
boss Col. Scott Brodeur said in a recent interview.
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Empowering Disaster Response and Recovery From Space
When a natural disaster or emergency occur, an immediate and seamless response is necessary to
save lives. Operational and situational awareness becomes increasingly important to responders.
If critical infrastructure is down in the disaster zone, then the systems and networks required for
powering the relief efforts are compromised. Ground operations must look to space to solve their
communication needs. Read the full story.
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USAF to Start Buying ‘Extreme Range’ JASSMs in 2021
By Brian W. Everstine
The newest variant of the Air Force’s advanced, stealthy Joint Air to Surface
Standoff Missile-Extreme Range will start low-rate initial production next year,
with deliveries beginning in 2024, according to the service’s budget request.
The Air Force’s fiscal 2021 request includes $506 million total for JASSMs,
including $60 million in initial funding for 40 AGM-158D variants—previously
known as the JASSM-XR, or “Extreme Range.” While the JASSM-Extended Range
can reach about 500 nautical miles, the new variant is expected to have a range
of about 1,000 miles.
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Cope North Underway in the Pacific
By Brian W. Everstine
One of the Air Force’s biggest exercises in the Pacific is underway, with
2,000-plus personnel and more than 100 aircraft training together through the
end of February. During Exercise Cope North—headquartered at Andersen AFB,
Guam—USAF, Japan Air Self-Defense Force, and Royal Australian Air Force troops
will train together on humanitarian assistance and disaster relief scenarios, as
well as strike missions. The second half of the exercise will focus on air
combat tactics and large-force employment, according to a Pacific Air Forces
release.
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Results of Starliner Review Expected in February
By Amanda Miller
An independent review team investigating the first in-space test of Boeing’s
Starliner astronaut capsule should have its review wrapped up by the end of
February. Boeing and NASA are conducting the review jointly. They already plan
to recheck all 1 million lines of Starliner’s software code after the capsule,
flying crewless for the test, failed to reach the International Space Station
and dock there, a requirement for NASA’s human spaceflight certification. A
future flight test with a three-person crew, expected to include retired Air
Force Col. Edward Michael Fincke, is also part of the plan for human
certification.
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Radar Sweep
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Arizona Lawmakers Vow to Fight Air Force Plan to Retire Some Older A-10s
Arizona lawmakers are vowing to fight a plan by the Air Force to start retiring
some of the nation’s fleet of A-10 Thunderbolt II ground-attack jets—a major
operation at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base—as part of a plan to drop some
older, legacy weapon systems to help pay for new programs.
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F-35 Gets Thumbs Up from Singapore’s Air Chief
Singapore’s Air Force chief has given his vote of confidence in the Lockheed
Martin F-35 fighter jet amid the country’s efforts to buy new fifth-generation
aircraft. However, he acknowledged that challenges still remain in the
acquisition process, particularly in regard to logistics.
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Air Force to Kick Off E4-B Replacement Competition in 2021
The Air Force intends to issue the first contracts for replacing the venerable
E-4B “Doomsday” plane in 2021, with a budget of $76.4 million—more than
six times the $12.7 million approved by Congress in 2020.
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Northrop Grumman to Develop Jam-Resistant Payload for U.S. Military Communications Satellites
Northrop Grumman was awarded a $253.5 million contract by the Space Force to
develop a cyber-secure communications payload that could be deployed on a
military or commercial satellite. The Space Force’s Space and Missile Systems
Center announced Feb. 12 that Northrop Grumman was the first vendor selected to
build a prototype payload under the Protected Tactical Satellite Communications
(PTS) program that the U.S. Air Force started in 2018.
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Opinion: Hackers Could Shut Down Satellites—or Turn Them into Weapons
“Amid all the fanfare, a critical danger has flown under the radar: the lack
of cybersecurity standards and regulations for commercial satellites, in the
U.S. and internationally,” writes William Akoto, a postdoctoral research
fellow at the University of Denver. “As a scholar who studies cyber conflict,
I’m keenly aware that this, coupled with satellites’ complex supply chains
and layers of stakeholders, leaves them highly vulnerable to cyberattacks.”
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14th FTW Innovation Flight Augments Pilot Training through VR Technology
Columbus Air Force Base’s innovation flight has continued its efforts to
integrate virtual reality technology into pilot training, creating quality
pilots for the Air Force faster. The innovation flight created a flexible
syllabus containing the essential building block approach of basic mission
elements to accommodate each student’s different learning habits while still
hitting the intangible aspects of a successful aviator.
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Defense Secretary Defends Proposed Stars and Stripes Funding Cuts
During a news conference at NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, Defense
Secretary Mark Esper responds to a question about the decision to cut federal
funding for Stars and Stripes in favor of other priorities, including nuclear
programs and hypersonic missiles.
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Commander in Chief Congratulates Air Force’s Newest Members at Daytona 500
The Total Force mass enlistment took place on stage in the center of the track
at the Daytona 500. Lt. Gen. Brad Webb, Air Education and Training commander,
conducted the oath to the Air Force’s newest members. Moments later the group
moved to a private gathering where the President gave a brief speech before the
race.
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One More Thing...
Video: Falcon Stadium Honors WWII Vet
Retired Col. Oliver “Ollie” Cellini, who at 107-years-old is Colorado’s
oldest living World War II veteran, was honored before the L.A. Kings and
Colorado Avalanche game at Falcon Stadium on Feb. 15. The Air Force Academy’s
all-male a Cappella group, In the Stairwell, also sang the National Anthem.
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