|
|
Nov. 30, 2020
|
Edited by Amy McCullough with Rachel S. Cohen, Brian W. Everstine and Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
|
View In Browser |
The Air Force Research Laboratory is the primary scientific research and development center for the United States Air Force. AFRL graphic. |
By Rachel S. Cohen
A new space materials laboratory at Kirtland Air Force Base, N.M., is now open for business. The Air Force Research Laboratory’s space vehicles directorate opened the $4 million Deployable Structures Laboratory (DeSel) on Oct. 29. It plans to begin testing hardware in the next few months. “We're one lab and opening our doors to different programs and projects,” Benjamin Urioste, research engineer and lead for the team that will use the lab, told Air Force Magazine Nov. 23. “Whether they are large acquisitions or small acquisitions that want to come in and have an independent government assessment of their deployable structure, our lab facility is very capable of doing that.”
|
|
By Rachel S. Cohen
The U.S. Air Force Academy has long been the training ground for cadets headed for careers in military space. But with the creation of a Space Force, the Colorado school is looking to expand the opportunities available to space-minded students. USAFA's new Space Force detachment is creating mentorship and work experience programs as it vets candidates to become second lieutenants in the new service.
|
|
By Brian W. Everstine
The Air Force is finished evaluating the proposed “interim” fix for the KC-46’s troubled remote vision system, and is moving toward finalizing the design of the “2.0” overhaul of the system. The Air Force is more focused on the 2.0 overhaul, and “we’ve completed nearly every aspect of the design” except for how the image from the rear cameras will be projected to the operator, said Will Roper, the Air Force's acquisition boss, on Nov. 24.
|
|
By Brian W. Everstine
The Air Force’s aerial refueling fleet could be the first platform to adopt new technologies developed under the Advanced Battle Management System effort, integrating pods complete with advanced communications and data links to feed information, along with gas, to combat aircraft as early as next year. “If we try to do podded solutions to artfully move around legacy hardware, we can move pretty quickly,” Department of the Air Force acquisition chief Will Roper told reporters. “I think that’s something we can do within a year …. I think the tech has that level of maturity. Certainly within 18 months, I think we could have these platforms as true battle nodes.”
|
|
By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
Capt. Kelliann Leli, a Travis Air Force Base doctor who was deployed to the United Arab Emirates in support of Operation Freedom’s Sentinel, died in a “non-combat related vehicle accident at Al-Dhafra Air Base” on Nov. 27, a 60th Air Mobility Wing release stated. An investigation into the incident is underway, the wing wrote.
|
|
By Brian W. Everstine
Pacific Air Forces has studied “every single piece of concrete” across the Indo-Pacific as it looks to find new ways to forward deploy different types of aircraft in a contingency, and to solidify the service’s Agile Combat Employment concept. The command has surveyed available airstrips to see if they can host aircraft like F-22s, F-15s, and C-130s, said PACAF boss Gen. Kenneth S. Wilsbach. The goal for ACE is to be able to operate from an austere location with a skeleton crew of multi-capable Airmen. “We have a plan for all of those airfields, and some of them meet the criteria and they are therefore part of what we call clusters,” he said, adding that while specifics are classified, the command has identified existing airstrips that will serve as a hub
to reach other “spoke” locations.
|
|
By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
The Air Force on Nov. 25 publicly announced plans to house C-130Js at Air National Guard wings in Kentucky, Texas, West Virginia, and Georgia, pending environmental impact analyses. The tentative basing decisions were shared with Congress a day earlier, Air National Guard spokesperson Lt. Col. Devin T. Robinson told Air Force Magazine. The new tails will replace the selected wings' time-worn C-130Hs, the release added. However, House Armed Services Committee Chairman Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.) in a Nov. 24 statement criticized the choice as unnecessarily politicizing the C-130J basing process.
|
|
By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
More than 90 citizen-Airmen from the Kentucky Air National Guard’s 123rd Airlift Wing returned from a four-month Middle East deployment on Nov. 18, according to a wing release. The wing’s aircrews completed nearly 5,000 combat sorties, moving 15,000 people and over 10,000 tons of supplies within the U.S. Central Command region in support of Operations Inherent Resolve and Freedom’s Sentinel, the release stated.
|
|
|
|
Radar Sweep
|
|
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.
|
|
OPINION: Stop the Budgetary Bleeding to Get the Air Force We Need
Defense News
“The time has come to openly articulate what is required to meet national security requirements,” writes Douglas Birkey, executive director of the Air Force Association’s Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies. “That is what the 386 operational squadron goal is all about. It comes down to acknowledging what Airmen will need to fly into harm’s way, get the job done, and come home safe. This takes both capability and capacity. It is time to rebuild the Air Force we need.”
|
|
In Call with Troops, Trump Basks in Space Force Achievement
SpaceNews
During a video teleconference with members of the military on his last Thanksgiving as Commander in Chief, President Donald J. Trump touted his efforts to establish the Space Force, calling the newest branch of the armed services “a very important thing to me.” Trump spoke Nov. 26 from the White House Diplomatic Reception Room with officers representing units from the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Space Force, and Coast Guard.
|
|
Readout of Acting Secretary of Defense’s Visit with U.S. Troops and Contractors in Djibouti and Somalia
Defense Department release
Acting Secretary of Defense Christopher C. Miller celebrated Thanksgiving with U.S. military personnel and contractors at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti, and in Mogadishu, Somalia. He recognized their commitment to mission and relayed his gratitude for the sacrifices they and their families make to protect the freedoms we enjoy and the American way of life.
|
|
Climate Change, Terrorism Top List of Challenges Facing US Military
Military.com
The Defense Department Inspector General's annual list of challenges for the military in the coming year features a newcomer: the long-term threat to installations and operations from climate change.
|
|
The DODIG Outlined the Pentagon’s Top Challenges. Here’s Where Tech Fits In.
Nextgov
Two new challenges added this year focus on technological dominance and data as a strategic asset. Tech like hypersonics, microelectronics, AI, 5G, and biotechnology were also highlighted.
|
|
Pentagon's AI Ethical Priorities to Be Embedded into Its Coming Data and Development Platform
Nextgov
The JAIC’s new director recently offered fresh details on the joint common foundation.
|
|
|
|
Joint All-Domain Awareness
Air Force Magazine
Get a better sense of the drive for greater connectedness between air, space, cyber, land, and maritime forces. Catch up on all-things JADC2 now.
|
|
Mitchell Institute Launches ‘Aerospace Advantage’ Podcast
AFA release
AFA’s Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies will release the first in a new podcast series titled “The Aerospace Advantage” on Nov. 30. Hosted by former Air Force Weapons School instructor and Thunderbird pilot retired Lt. Col. John “Slick” Baum, the series will delve into all aspects of air and space warfare, emphasizing firsthand accounts from current experts in the field.
|
|
Northrop Grumman Awarded $4.8B for Global Hawk Development, Modernization, Retrofit, and Sustainment
Janes (Subscription Required)
The 10-year award, announced by the Defense Department on Nov. 25, covers activities for all U.S. Air Force Global Hawk variants, and will run through Sept. 30, 2030.
|
|
Court Overturns Ruling that Germany Must Press US on Drones
The Associated Press
Germany’s top administrative court has ruled the country’s government can’t be forced to ensure that U.S. drone strikes controlled via an American military base on German territory are in line with international law.
|
|
Podcast: Military Aircraft Opportunities in Europe
Aviation Week’s “Check 6” podcast
In addition to a planned uptick in defense spending in the UK, nations across Europe are planning to overhaul their fighter fleets in the coming decade.
|
|
Guard Chaplains Reflect on Floyd Protests, Lessons Learned
The Associated Press
National Guard troops were deployed during this summer’s widespread unrest over racial injustice following George Floyd’s death in police custody in Minneapolis, and again this fall in the city as a surge in violent crime collided with heated debate over law enforcement and race. Now the chaplains say they’re working on two main lessons learned from those tumultuous times: Building bridges within tense communities and bringing faith-grounded calm and comfort to the front lines whenever they may be mobilized again—possibly as soon as next March, when the officers charged in Floyd’s killing go on trial.
|
|
One More Thing
Take a Look at This Documentary about the Skunk Works’ History and the Birth of the SR-71 Blackbird
The Aviationist
Back in 2015, it was decided to move the SR-71 Blackbird exhibited at the Virginia Aviation Museum, which was about to close a year later, to the new gallery of the Science Museum of Virginia to “inspire the future of invention”. The story of the Blackbird is, in fact, still taught today as a roadmap to true innovation. Producer Todd Hervey, after learning about the museum’s plans, decided to document the move and tell the story of the innovation brought by the SR-71 and the Skunk Works.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|