From Air Force Magazine <[email protected]>
Subject Daily Report, September 16: NGAD Has Already Flown | Prepping for Budget Woes | Space Force BMT
Date September 16, 2020 7:38 AM
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Air Force Magazine
Daily Report for Sept. 16, 2020

View in your Web Browser: [link removed]
Edited by Jennifer Hlad with Rachel S. Cohen, Brian W. Everstine, Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory and John A. Tirpak

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Roper Reveals NGAD Has Flown, But Doesn’t Share Details
By John A. Tirpak

The Air Force is already flying a Next Generation Air Dominance combat airplane,
which was designed and prototyped using new digital methods, service acquisition
executive Will Roper said Sept. 15. The revelation was meant to assure people
that the new approach works, works quickly, and should be the template for new
systems of all kinds, he said, without revealing any programmatic details,
except that the type has set “lots of records.” Roper made a slick
presentation to AFA's virtual Air, Space & Cyber Conference, borrowing from the
movie “The Matrix” to highlight that USAF is at inflection point, demanding
that it embrace new realities or stick with potentially losing approaches to
fielding new gear.

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Air, Space Forces Brace for Bumpy Start to Fiscal 2021
By Rachel S. Cohen

Department of the Air Force leaders are preparing for a continuing resolution
that could curb spending for several months, Air Force Secretary Barbara M.
Barrett said Sept. 15. House Majority Leader Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said he
will bring CR legislation to the chamber floor for consideration next week,
shortly before the fiscal year ends Sept. 30, according to Reuters. A CR would
block the Air Force from investing in 54 new-start items affecting areas from
pilot training to cyber operations software, and Space Force Chief of Space
Operations Gen. John W. Raymond warned a CR will stunt the new service’s
growth as it tries to get on its feet.

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As Cuts Loom, 386 Combat Squadrons—in the USAF and USSF—is Still the Goal
By John A. Tirpak

Despite an anticipated flat budget for fiscal year 2022, the Air Force is still
holding onto the goal of building up to 386 combat wings, or their equivalent in
combat capability, senior leaders said in a press conference at AFA's virtual
Air, Space & Cyber Conference. The figure remains an “aspiration,” but the
top service officials couldn't predict when the Air Force and Space Force might
get there. Air Force Secretary Barbara A. Barrett noted that the figure was
established before Space Force was, which could alter the calculus.

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Space Force to Embark on First Basic Training Experiment
By Rachel S. Cohen

When the Space Force’s first seven enlisted recruits head to Basic Military
Training next month, they will become the guinea pigs in one of many experiments
underway in the new service aimed at building a better armed force. The service
is embarking on a series of what Chief Master Sgt. Roger A. Towberman, the
service’s senior enlisted adviser, calls “small-batch solutions.” “Do we
have to do basic training separately from anything?” he said. "Could we do
basic training as part of tech school and it's just called training and you just
show up and you do it all together in one location?”

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Space Force Eyes Promotion Boards for Enlisted Airmen
By Rachel S. Cohen

The Space Force plans to ditch its promotion tests for enlisted Airmen in favor
of promotion boards that shape well-rounded service members. The service wants
to measure how its members solve problems, not simply ask them to repeat what
they’ve learned, Chief Master Sgt. Roger A. Towberman, the Space Force’s
senior enlisted adviser, told Air Force Magazine. Instead of advancing the best
test takers to mid- and high-level ranks, the Space Force would set up promotion
boards “for every enlisted rank above E-4,” or senior Airman, Towberman
said.

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USAFE Still Targeting F-35s at Lakenheath by 2021, Despite Construction Delays
By Brian W. Everstine

The head of U.S. Air Forces in Europe is “convinced” the command will base
F-35As at RAF Lakenheath, U.K., on time in late 2021, despite some delays to
military construction and a possible slowdown in F-35 deliveries because of
COVID-19. “I am clear eyed that we’ve got a fair amount of work to do from
the infrastructure needed to get the facilities ready, and at the same time work
through the natural challenges of any bed down that has to do with the
appropriate connectivity, security clearances, and those types of activities
required to get an airplane in,” USAFE boss Gen. Jeffrey L. Harrigian told
reporters during a panel at AFA’s virtual Air, Space & Cyber Conference on
Sept. 14. “But, we’re looking at the end of ’21 as the target remains on
track for us to get the airplanes here.”

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USAF to Reactivate 495th Fighter Squadron as F-35 Unit
By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory

The Air Force will reactivate its 495th Fighter Squadron to support the F-35
mission at RAF Lakenheath, U.K., 48th Fighter Wing spokesperson Maj. Sybil V.
Taunton confirmed to Air Force Magazine via email on Sept. 15. “Overall we
will see a plus-up of roughly 1,200 personnel to operate and support two full
squadrons of F-35s,” she wrote, noting that the base's first Joint Strike
Fighters are still slated to reach the base late next year. The squadron, which
the 48th Fighter Wing History Office writes was deactivated in December 1991,
previously operated F-111F Aardvark aircraft, Taunton noted.

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ULA Ditched Chinese-Owned Supplier It Worried Could Be Spying
By Rachel S. Cohen

United Launch Alliance, America’s longtime space launch provider, recently cut
ties with one of its suppliers amid worries that the company’s Chinese owner
could steal sensitive information. ULA Chief Executive Officer Tory Bruno
discussed his “wake-up call” that the Chinese could access proprietary data
during the AFA’s virtual Air, Space & Cyber Conference. Kuka, the
Germany-based robotics firm acquired by China’s Midea Group in 2017, provided
ULA with tooling software that helps manufacture rockets like the future Vulcan
Centaur.

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Here’s What Tory Bruno Thinks About the Future of Space Launch
By Rachel S. Cohen

United Launch Alliance Chief Executive Officer Tory Bruno has made a career out
of building rockets that carry heavy objects across long distances. But 50 years
in the future, as the U.S. returns to the moon and pushes beyond, he expects a
new approach to ferrying cargo across the cosmos to emerge. Delivery from the
ground to low Earth orbit will become a commodified service, and will connect to
a still-emerging network of in-space transportation options, Bruno said Sept. 15
during the Air Force Association's virtual Air, Space & Cyber Conference.

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AFSOC Boss: Keeping Special Ops Wing in England Means New MILCON Likely
By Brian W. Everstine

The Pentagon’s decision to keep the 352nd Special Operations Wing at its
current home of RAF Mildenhall, U.K., necessitates new military construction to
update the base's neglected infrastructure for the Airmen, CV-22s, and MC-130s,
though it also means the wing can stay in a familiar training area. In 2015, the
Air Force announced plans to move the 352nd SOW and the 100th Air Refueling Wing
from Mildenhall to Spangdahlem Air Base, Germany, and ultimately close the East
Anglian base. That plan was delayed multiple times; then, until earlier this
summer, the Pentagon and U.S. European Command announced plans to withdraw more
than 11,000 troops from Germany, move Spangdahlem’s F-16s to Italy, and keep
Mildenhall open. AFSOC boss Lt. Gen. James C. Slife said Sept. 15 that AFSOC is
in full support of the plan, with the wing comfortable and used to operating in
the Mildenhall area. “Obviously we haven’t invested in infrastructure in
Mildenhall in a number of years in anticipation of a move to Spangdahlem, but we
recognize the change in policy and we’re supportive of that,” Slife said.

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USAF’s Goal of 220 Bombers a ‘Living Number,’ Can Evolve as B-21 Comes Online
By Brian W. Everstine

The Air Force still needs 220 total bombers, including about 100 new B-21s,
though that target is a “living number” that can change as the Raider comes
online and aging aircraft are modernized and outfitted with advanced weapons,
the head of Air Force Global Strike Command said. Gen. Timothy M. Ray, speaking
at the Air Force Association’s virtual Air, Space & Cyber Conference, said the
number as outlined in the service’s bomber roadmap is not set in stone. For
example, when the roadmap was first announced the planned total was 175, but
that number has since grown. Recently, Ray said he has presented it to the Armed
Services Committees on Capitol Hill and it has garnered support. “I think
we’ve put some real rigor into that, and it’s a real plan now,” Ray said.

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Space Force Ponders Changes to Fitness Tests
By Rachel S. Cohen

Physical fitness could look a little different in the newest branch of the
military, as officials consider more holistic, functional exercises and fewer PT
tests. “We could do it more efficiently,” Chief Master Sgt. Roger A.
Towberman, the Space Force’s senior enlisted adviser, told Air Force Magazine
on Sept. 11. “The focus shouldn't be on the test. The focus should be on the
process of being fit.” Towberman said the service needs to have a conversation
about the relevance and safety of situps and pushups, suggesting the Space Force
may favor planks to measure core strength instead.

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Virtual Events: AFA’s Virtual Air, Space & Cyber Conference
By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory

The Air Force Association’s virtual Air, Space & Cyber Conference continues
today as Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force JoAnne S. Bass delivers a
keynote address at 9 a.m. EDT. Conference attendance is free for military
members and defense civilians, and rates for industry participants are
discounted for AFA members (and from traditional rates for in-person
participants). <a
href="[link removed]">Registration is open
now</a> and space is limited, so early sign-ups are encouraged.

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Radar Sweep

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WATCH: Virtual Air, Space & Cyber Conference Day Two Highlights

The Space Force swears in hundreds of new members and promises a test-free
advancement system. The Air Force takes the “red pill” and a giant leap
toward enabling JADC2. Next Generation Air Dominance breaks flight records ...
and more. Air Force Magazine Editor-in-Chief Tobias Naegele and News Editor Amy
McCullough highlight the key takeaways from AFA's virtual Air, Space & Cyber
Conference.

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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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US Military Seeks Authority to Expand Counterterrorism Drone War to Kenya

Draft rules for potential airstrikes, drawn up after an al-Shabab attack at a
base in January, are said to be limited and would require Kenyan assent.

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Trump Says He Wanted to Assassinate Syria’s Assad

President Donald J. Trump on Sept. 15 acknowledged that he wanted to assassinate
Syrian president Bashar al-Assad for using chemical weapons in 2017,
contradicting his own previous denial of the incident and undercutting a recent
assertion that he stops war-hungry Defense Department leaders from starting new
wars.

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Next Corona Meeting to Flesh Out Gen. Brown’s Call to Change

Less than a month into his tenure as the Air Force’s new chief of staff, Gen.
Charles Q. Brown Jr. put his commanders on notice that they will have to change
quickly to prepare for the next war—or risk losing to an adversary such as
China or Russia. The details of Brown’s call to “accelerate change or
lose” will begin taking form at the Air Force’s fall meeting of its most
senior leaders, called Corona.

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Air Force to Demo Updating Software on a Jet in Flight, Official Says

One of the Pentagon’s key software development leaders said the Air Force is
getting ready for a significant showcase of the service’s ability to push out
software updates to warfighters in the coming weeks. “We're working on pretty
cool announcements coming in the next few weeks with the ability to update the
software of a jet while flying,” Nicolas Chaillan, chief software officer for
the U.S. Air Force, said during a Sept. 15 webinar. “So that’s the kind of
stuff that will be game changing.”

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Jon Stewart to Pentagon: The F-35 Can Wait, but Troops Dying from Burn Pit Exposure Can't

Flanked by veterans, their families, and advocates, Jon Stewart, the former host
of Comedy Central's “Daily Show,” spent several minutes of a Sept. 15 press
conference in Washington railing against the federal government's insistence
that building a fleet of newfangled jets (some of which don't work) is a better
use of taxpayer dollars than caring for our war-wounded and ill.

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Schmidt Departs as Chairman of Defense Innovation Board

Eric Schmidt, the former chief executive of Google, has stepped down as the
first chairman of the Defense Innovation Board, with former Sierra Nevada
executive Mark Sirangelo taking over as head of the influential panel.

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DISA Takes Inspiration from Commercial Environment for Network Modernization

The Defense Information Systems Agency is on the forefront of federal network
development and is considering how Software Defined Wide Area Networking
(SD-WAN) can help it provide network capabilities across the Defense
establishment.

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AFA's StellarXplorers Program Seeks Operations Director

The director is responsible for the successful and efficient administration of
key functions of the StellarXplorers Program, a national high school space
challenge, including business and competition operations for all competitions,
camps, and new initiatives as they may develop. The director provides oversight,
support, and guidance to the managers and coordinators who execute program
development, outreach, and competition management, as well as support and
maintenance for all aspects of technical support and required hardware and
software.

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Polar Launches from Cape Won’t Affect Future of Vandenberg

Despite the successful demonstration of a launch to polar orbit from Cape
Canaveral, Fla., the U.S. Space Force doesn’t foresee shifting launches to
those orbits there from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif.

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Proposed Rule Change for Burial at Arlington Would Exclude More Veterans, Service Members

Active-duty service members who die from an incident that was not in support of
combat operations would no longer be eligible for burial at Arlington National
Cemetery under a new proposed rule posted Sept. 15 to the Federal Register.

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Amid Postal Delays, Senator Wants Assurances on Military Absentee Voting

Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), ranking member of the Senate Rules Committee, has
written the Defense Department's director of the Federal Voting Assistance
Program for reassurances that the Pentagon is doing what it can to encourage and
support voting among deployed service members and those stationed abroad.

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One More Thing...
Trump Awards Army Aircrews Who Rescued Hundreds During California Wildfire

President Donald J. Trump awarded seven California National Guard Soldiers the
Distinguished Flying Cross on Sept. 14 for rescuing 242 campers trapped by the
massive Creek Fire in the Sierra Nevada Mountains on the afternoon of Sept. 5
and into the early morning hours the next day.

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