From Air Force Magazine <[email protected]>
Subject Daily Report, May 5: Interview: Space Force's Top Enlisted | Challenges With Arctic Ops | F-15C Emergency Landing
Date May 5, 2020 7:38 AM
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Air Force Magazine
Daily Report for May 5, 2020

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Edited by Amy McCullough with Rachel S. Cohen, Brian W. Everstine, Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory and John A. Tirpak

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Editor’s Note

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Q&A: Chief Master Sgt. Roger Towberman, Space Force Senior Enlisted Adviser
By Rachel S. Cohen

Air Force Magazine sat down for an exclusive interview with Chief Master Sgt.
Roger Towberman, Senior Enlisted Adviser for the Space Force and command senior
enlisted leader of USSPACECOM, to discuss everything from building a unique
Space Force culture to new opportunities for enlisted Airmen, and how policies
such as fitness standards might differ from the U.S. Air Force.

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Northrop Working on GatewayONE to Link Fourth-, Fifth-Gen Fighters
By John A. Tirpak

Northrop Grumman will test a system that will allow fourth- and fifth-generation
fighters to talk to each other, as well as “attritable” aircraft, during the
next iteration of the Advanced Battle Management System experiment. The system
could also be applied to the KC-46 tanker.

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NORTHCOM: More Training, Improved Comms Needed for Arctic Operations
By Brian W. Everstine

The Arctic is becoming a frontline for America’s homeland defense, but the
U.S. military needs to train more and improve its ability to communicate in the
region, the head of U.S. Northern Command said. In every other area of the
world, U.S. military units can deploy relatively easy and begin operating.
However, the Arctic provides unique challenges, and if the units aren’t
prepared, “they’re not going to be successful,” NORTHCOM boss USAF Gen.
Terrence O’Shaughnessy said during a May 4 Mitchell Institute for Aerospace
Studies virtual event. “We have to find a way to get the team out there
exercising and practicing” in the Arctic, he said.

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Oregon Guard F-15C Damaged in Emergency Landing at Andrews
By Brian W. Everstine

An Oregon Air National Guard F-15C on a May 2 homeland defense mission diverted
to Joint Base Andrews, Md., due to an in-flight emergency and skidded off the
runway, damaging the aircraft. The aircraft, from the 142nd Wing in Portland,
was assigned to the North American Aerospace Defense Command’s Operation Noble
Eagle homeland alert mission. Aircraft conducting that mission are usually armed
with air-to-air missiles. The F-15C was forced to divert around 1:30 p.m., an
Andrews spokesperson said in a statement. When it touched down, the aircraft’s
landing gear malfunctioned and the aircraft “came to rest on its fuselage.”

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29 Soldiers, 0 Airmen to Receive Purple Hearts for al-Asad Attacks
By Brian W. Everstine

Combined Joint Task Force-Operation Inherent Resolve approved 29 Purple Hearts
for Soldiers who sustained traumatic brain injuries in the January Iranian
ballistic missile attack on al-Asad Air Base, Iraq, but recommended against the
two packages submitted for Airmen. OIR Commander Lt. Gen. Pat White reviewed 80
award packages, including two for USAF. White recommended against awarding the
medal in 51 of those cases. Air Forces Central Command boss Lt. Gen. Joseph
Guastella Jr. was the final authority for the two USAF cases, according to U.S.
Central Command. “It is important to note that a Traumatic Brain Injury
diagnosis does not automatically qualify a service member for Purple Heart
eligibility or awarding, and the CJTF-OIR process was designed to be a fair and
impartial proceeding that evaluated each case in accordance with applicable
regulations,” CENTCOM spokesman Commander Zachary Harrell said in a statement.


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AFCENT Stops Releasing Airstrike Information as Taliban Talks Continue
By Brian W. Everstine

For the first time since the early days of the war in Afghanistan, Air Forces
Central Command is not providing a regular update on the number of airstrikes in
that theater, or from ongoing operations in Iraq and Syria. AFCENT, in a
statement, said it is not posting the monthly airpower summaries because of a
“multiplicity of diplomatic relational concerns, including how the report
could adversely impact ongoing discussions with the Taliban regarding
Afghanistan peace talks.” The monthly charts typically include a tally of the
number of weapons released, along with the number of mobility and intelligence,
surveillance, and reconnaissance sorties.

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Hill Reserve Squadron’s ‘Taxi Service’ Minimizes Aircrews’ Exposure to COVID-19
By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory

The Air Force Reserve’s 514th Flight Test Squadron has created a “taxi
service” aimed at delivering aircraft to and from the Ogden Air Logistics
Complex, Utah, without exposing aircrews to the new coronavirus. When an
aircraft is maintained or modified at Ogden, a pilot from the tail's owning base
usually flies it to Hill Air Force Base and back. After the pilot drops off the
aircraft—and then again when it’s time to pick it up—they usually fly
commercial. “With many units concerned about exposing their combat aircrew [to
COVID-19] due to travel, our ability to pick up and drop off aircraft also
enables their missions by decreasing their exposure," 309th Aircraft Maintenance
Group Commander Lt. Col. Nathan Litz said in a release.

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Virtual Events: AEI Hosts “Disinformation Pandemic” Webinar, and more
By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory

Today, the American Enterprise Institute will host a webinar entitled
"Disinformation pandemic: Russian and Chinese information operations in the
COVID-19 era" from 10 a.m.-11 a.m. EDT. The event will be livestreamed <a
href="[link removed]">here</a>,
and you can visit the same webpage to RSVP to attend.

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Radar Sweep

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Snapshot: DOD and COVID-19

Here's a look at how the Defense Department is being impacted by and responding
to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Virtual Conference Unites 19 Air Forces on Pandemic Response

Air Chiefs and leadership representing 19 air forces across five continents came
together for a video teleconference hosted by Pacific Air Forces Commander Gen.
Charles Q. Brown Jr. on April 29. “Like the symposium that brought many of us
together in person just a few months ago, this gathering is grounded in the
shared belief that collaboration is required to meet the global challenges,”
he said. “From cooperation to conflict and, now, through COVID-19, we remain
stronger together.”

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NPC Determined to Be a Successful Proof of Concept

Culminating with an in-flight demonstration on April 30, the Negatively
Pressurized Conex (NPC) proof of concept prototype successfully proved its
capability to potentially transport individuals with infectious diseases, such
as COVID-19. Air Force Materiel Command and Air Mobility Command leaders
quickly joined forces in early April to invite creative materiel and
non-materiel solutions to address a Joint Urgent Operational Need to move large
numbers of COVID-19 patients should the need for that capability arise.

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Warren Raises Doubts on Pentagon Bid to Get Cash to Contractors

Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) is questioning whether the Defense
Department’s policy of increasing payment rates for contractors—intended to
keep assembly lines humming during the coronavirus outbreak—has sufficient
oversight and is helping the companies that need it most.

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Lockheed Martin's Accelerated Payments to Suppliers Now Total $365 Million

Lockheed Martin said May 1 it advanced another $110 million in payments to
suppliers this week, bringing the company's total to $365 million of its $450
million goal. Additionally, the contractor said it added new employees and now
has hired more than 2,100 since the coronavirus crisis began.

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Air Force F-15s Race Across Atlantic to Complete Tricky 'Tail Swap' with Reduced Crews

A pair of F-15E Strike Eagles sprinted across the Atlantic earlier this month,
not because they were called to war, but because they were in dire need of a
tune-up all the way back in the United States. And maintenance crews at Robins
Air Force Base, Ga., were able to get the pilots back in the air with a new set
of twin-engine fighters, plus an additional F-15C Eagle, in just three days
flat.

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Rapid Acquisition & Sustainment

The Air Force and U.S. defense establishment are breaking down barriers and
injecting speed, innovation, and creativity into the procurement system. Check
out our new page to learn more about these efforts.

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Defense Innovation Board’s Josh Marcuse heads to Google

Josh Marcuse, the head of the Defense Innovation Board, is leaving his job as a
champion of tech in the military to join Google’s public sector shop. Marcuse
has served as executive director of the innovation board since 2016 and in a
number of other innovation policy positions. In the director role, he organized
the board and its meetings, and facilitated its recommendations to the
Department of Defense.

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Boeing Ramps-Up Red Hawk Testing

Boeing has ramped-up flight trials of the T-7A Red Hawk jet trainer, noting its
"busiest week ever" on May 1. According to the manufacturer, the production
representative jets flew 11 engineering and manufacturing development test
flights out of its St. Louis production facility in Missouri.

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SEAKR Moving Forward with DARPA’s Pit Boss Project

SEAKR Engineering will continue developing the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency’s Pit Boss as the sole prime contractor, the company announced
April 28. Pit Boss is the autonomous mission management system that will be used
for DARPA’s Project Blackjack, an initiative to demonstrate the value of a
proliferated low earth orbit constellation that takes advantage of off-the-shelf
commercial satellite technologies for military uses.

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Citing Cyber Threats, Trump Orders Ban on Buying Energy Sector Equipment from Foreign Adversaries

President Trump has tasked the Energy secretary with issuing rules that would
ban U.S. entities from procuring foreign equipment that the administration said
could make the nation’s electricity systems vulnerable to cyberattacks. “The
bulk-power system is a target of those seeking to commit malicious acts against
the United States and its people, including malicious cyber activities,” he
said declaring a national emergency in an executive order issued May 1.

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CyberPatriot XII Nationals Champions Announced

The Air Force Association's CyberPatriot program announced this week the winners
of the twelfth season of its National Youth Cyber Defense Competition.
CyberPatriot XII began in October 2019 with nearly 7,000 registered teams among
the Open, All Service, and Middle School divisions of the competition.

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One More Thing...
NASA Names Companies to Develop Human Landers for Artemis Moon Missions

NASA has selected three U.S. companies to design and develop human landing
systems for the agency’s Artemis program, one of which will land the first
woman and next man on the surface of the Moon by 2024. NASA is on track for
sustainable human exploration of the Moon for the first time in history.

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