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July 29, 2020
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Edited by Brian W. Everstine with Rachel S. Cohen, Amy McCullough, Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory and Shaun Waterman
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Airborne Tactical Advantage Company's F1 Mirage fighters, shown here, will provided adversary air training at Luke Air Force Base, Ariz., and Holloman Air Force Base, N.M., under new contracts awarded by Air Combat Command worth up to $240 million over four and a half years. ATAC photo. |
By Amy McCullough
Air Combat Command on July 21 awarded three companies contracts worth up to $433.6 million to provide 5,418 annual sorties of adversary air support at five bases over the next four and a half years, a command spokesperson told Air Force Magazine. The contracts with Airborne Tactical Advantage Company, Tactical Air Support, and Draken International are the first to be awarded under the larger Combat Air Force/Contracted Air Support indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity contract, which is envisioned to eventually include 40,000 hours of adversary air and 10,000 hours of close air support training with a final price tag worth up to $6.4 billion.
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By Brian W. Everstine
Personnel at Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar, and Al Dhafra Air Base, United Arab Emirates, briefly took cover after Iran launched ballistic missiles into the nearby Persian Gulf, which landed in the sea without incident on July 28, the U.S. military said this week. At about 5:30 a.m. local time, Iran launched missiles from within its borders as part of an ongoing exercise. An “initial assessment indicated a potential threat,” U.S. Central Command spokeswoman Maj. Beth Riordan said in a statement. “The incident lasted a matter of minutes, and an all-clear was declared after the threat indicator had passed,” Riordan said. “The safety and resilience of our service members and coalition partners is a top priority.”
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By Brian W. Everstine
Tracking and countering advanced cruise missiles developed by Russia and China needs to be a top priority for U.S. Northern Command, the nominee to lead the organization told lawmakers July 28. USAF Lt. Gen. Glen D. VanHerck, currently the director of the Joint Staff, said during his Senate Armed Services Committee confirmation hearing that, if confirmed, his No. 1 job will be developing improved “domain awareness” to counter cruise missiles. The response highlights an ongoing effort within North American Aerospace Defense Command and the Air Force to test modern radar systems, and to update how it handles missile threats.
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By Rachel S. Cohen
Army Lt. Gen. James H. Dickinson on July 28 outlined his plans to continue ingraining space operations expertise around the U.S. military, if confirmed as the next boss of U.S. Space Command. Dickinson, currently SPACECOM’s deputy commander, would be the first uniformed officer outside the Department of the Air Force to run the organization. SPACECOM oversees daily operations of military space assets like the GPS satellites and radars that warn of incoming ballistic missiles, which until recently have been Air Force missions. If confirmed, Dickinson would replace Gen. John W. Raymond, who also serves as the Space Force’s first chief of space operations.
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By Rachel S. Cohen
The Air Force’s top installations official warned this week that defense budget constraints make it imperative that the service take a smarter approach to rebuilding facilities struck by natural disasters. Targeted investments and storm preparation procedures can help avoid continued, costly recovery efforts after hurricanes and floods like those that recently hit Tyndall Air Force Base, Fla., Offutt Air Force Base, Okla., and JB Langley-Eustis, Va. “The doctrine in which we combat severe weather and combat severe weather threats is really no different than how we would combat a conventional adversary. We have to understand the adversary through intelligence, indications and warnings,” John W. Henderson, assistant Air Force secretary for installations,
environment, and energy said July 28 during the online AFWERX Fusion conference.
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By Shaun Waterman
Economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic threatens to undermine the growing U.S. commercial space sector and, potentially, U.S. space superiority, according to a new report by a panel of government experts released on July 28. Investors are pulling back to conserve cash at the very time this emerging industry needs it most, said Brig. Gen. Steven J. Butow, director of the space portfolio at the Defense Innovation Unit, who co-authored State of the Space Industrial Base 2020, with U.S. Space Force Chief Scientist Joel B. Mozer; Col. Eric J. Felt, director of the Air Force Research Laboratory's Space Vehicles Directorate; and Thomas W. Cooley, the directorate's chief scientist. The report goes well beyond the COVID-19 threat and includes 39 recommendations for
government and industry to ensure a robust commercial space industrial base.
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By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
The official portrait of former Air Force Secretary Heather A. Wilson unveiled July 28 at a socially distant ceremony breaks with tradition: While it looks like an oil painting, it's the result of digital production, a special finishing technique, and an Airman's original photograph. The Air Force Association commissioned, paid for, and gifted the portrait, which is unique among the Air Force's Pentagon portraits in multiple ways.
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By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
Today, AFA's Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies, in partnership with the Advanced Nuclear Weapons Alliance Deterrence Center, will present a Nuclear Deterrence Forum with Charles Verdon, deputy administrator for defense programs at the National Nuclear Security Administration, as part of their NNSA Series. Event video will tentatively be posted on Mitchell’s website and YouTube pageafter the event. Additionally, Day 2 of the 2020 AFWERX Fusion event will kick off at 11 a.m. EDT, and Air Force Materiel Command will host a virtual town hall on its Facebook page at 2:30 p.m. EDT.
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Radar Sweep
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Snapshot: DOD and COVID-19
Air Force Magazine
Here's a look at how the Defense Department is being impacted by and responding to the COVID-19 pandemic.
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DOD, HHS Preparing for Large-Scale Manufacturing of COVID-19 Treatments
Nextgov
The Defense Department and the Department of Health and Human Services—using an other transaction authority contract through Army Contracting Command—want to ensure therapeutic COVID-19 treatments can move from prototype to large-scale manufacturing and are developing a program to demonstrate such capabilities.
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More than 2,000 Veterans Affairs Patients Have Now Died from Coronavirus
Military Times
More than 2,040 VA patients have died from complications related to the virus since early March, when the first death at a department medical center was reported. That total translates into about 17 patient deaths a day for the last four months.
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Military Stolen Valor Cases on the Rise, Investigators Say
Military.com
Investigators at the National Archives have taken steps to make their research resources more available to federal and local law enforcement to deal with what they suspect is an uptick in "stolen valor" cases to obtain benefits or loans during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Wilson Becomes Longest Serving Vice Chief in History: Analyzing, Innovating, Succeeding Along Way
USAF release
When Gen. Stephen W. “Seve” Wilson stepped into his new job as Air Force Vice Chief of Staff in July 2016, he arrived as a “man of action” with more than 4,600 flying hours, including 680 combat hours, a former Global Strike commander and deputy commander of U.S. Strategic Command, among other distinctions. That record is worth noting now, when, by punching in for work July 26, Wilson began his fifth year in the job, thus becoming the longest serving vice chief of staff in Air Force history.
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US Space Force and UK Ministry of Defense to Hold International Space Pitch Day
Space News
U.S. and U.K. defense agencies plan to award $1 million to startups at the first International Space Pitch Day in November during the Defence Space Conference in London. The event, backed by the U.K. Defence Science and Technology Laboratory, Royal Air Force, U.S. Space Force, and NATO, is designed to identify commercial technology with military space applications.
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How One Component Improved US Navy F/A-18 Fleet Readiness
Aviation Week Network
The U.S. Navy’s F/A-18 and EA-18G fleets have experienced a dramatic turnaround. In 2017, less than half of the Navy’s Boeing F/A-18 Super Hornets were able to fly. Now, 80% of its carrier-based fighters are ready for missions. The solution involved fixing a single component within the General Electric F414 engine.
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The Blue Angels Have Officially Received Their First F/A-18E Super Hornet
The Drive
The famous flight demonstration team is set to get a total of 18 Super Hornets to replace its existing F/A-18 Hornets by the end of the year.
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Inhofe Places Hold on FCC Commissioner Nomination
Inside Defense
Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.) announced July 28 he has placed a hold on the nomination of Mike O'Rielly for another term as a commissioner on the Federal Communications Commission until O'Rielly publicly commits to vote to overturn the FCC's decision to approve Ligado Networks' L-band network.
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Should US Pay Semiconductor Makers to Compete Vs. China?
Breaking Defense
The Senate voted to subsidize domestic manufacturers of vital computer components. Will national security concerns overcome a longstanding aversion to government-led industrial policy?
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One More Thing
Space Force Makes History with All-Female 2 SOPS Crew
Space Force release
Schriever Air Force Base’s 2nd Space Operations Squadron, the providers of GPS signals to billions of users worldwide, made history July 23 when a crew of eight women space operators gained satellite control authority of satellite vehicle number 76.
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