|
|
Feb. 5, 2021
|
Edited by Amy McCullough with Rachel S. Cohen, Brian W. Everstine, Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory and John A. Tirpak
|
View In Browser |
President Joe Biden delivers remarks to State Department employees at the U.S. Department of State in Washington on Feb. 4, 2021. State Department photo by Freddie Everett. |
By John A. Tirpak
President Joe Biden outlined a return to a diplomacy-intensive foreign policy in a speech at the State Department Jan. 4. He pledged to “push back” against Russian and Chinese aggression, and said the U.S. will no longer aid Saudi Arabia in its war in Yemen, to include withholding “offensive” arms sales. The U.S. will again stand against human rights abuses and authoritarianism, and make its alliances its top military priority, Biden said.
|
|
By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory and Brian W. Everstine
The Defense Department on Feb. 4 issued an order requiring all service members and civilians on U.S. military installations—whether indoors or outdoors—to wear a mask to try to limit the spread of COVID-19, with limited exceptions. However, vaccines against the new coronavirus remain voluntary, and a number of military family members have told Blue Star Families they don't plan on getting a shot.
|
|
By Rachel S. Cohen
The Air Force Research Laboratory is kicking off 2021 with plans to forge closer ties with the fledgling Space Force and a new focus on digital engineering. AFRL boss Brig. Gen. Heather L. Pringle laid out the lab’s priorities in a Feb. 4 talk with AFA’s Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies. As AFRL now covers science and technology initiatives for two of the armed forces instead of just one, she said they’re working to align programs with Chief of Space Operations Gen. John W. “Jay” Raymond’s top research needs: space security, space domain awareness, combat power projection, information mobility, and mobility and logistics in space.
|
|
By Rachel S. Cohen
Congressional defense committees are moving forward on their work in 2021 with the addition of a few new faces and subcommittees. Senate leadership has hammered out the details of an organizing resolution that dictates how the evenly divided chamber will operate, opening the door for committee chairmanships to flip to Democratic control and for members to shuffle on and off the legislative panels. And the House Armed Services Committee is bringing on more than a dozen new members and splitting an existing subcommittee into two new groups.
|
|
By Brian W. Everstine
U.S. and coalition aircraft closed out 2020 with a slight increase in airstrikes against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria, as the group lingers in the region and attempts to regain power. Between Dec. 1 and Dec. 31, 2020, coalition aircraft conducted 25 strikes, consisting of 41 engagements. This included 10 strikes against ISIS in Iraq, consisting of 25 engagements killing 49 ISIS fighters and destroying one defensive fighting location, according to a Combined Joint Task Force-Operation Inherent Resolve release. In Syria, the coalition conducted 15 strikes, totaling 16 engagements. This compares to 14 total airstrikes in Iraq and Syria in November, according to OIR data.
|
|
By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
“An unauthorized individual” breached Joint Base Andrews, Md., on Feb. 4, a base spokesperson confirmed to Air Force Magazine via email. The Air Force Office of Special Investigations is leading the investigation into the incident, they said.
|
|
In commemoration of the 30th Anniversary of Operation Desert Storm, Air Force Magazine is posting daily recollections from the six-week war, which expelled Iraq from occupied Kuwait.
|
|
|
|
Radar Sweep
|
|
Two Guardsmen Dead of COVID-19 Complications, Bringing Military’s Total to 19
Military Times
California Army National Guardsman Sgt. Goran Dimovski, 40, died Jan. 31, spokesman Lt. Col. Jonathan Shiroma told Military Times. Alabama Air National Guardsman Master Sgt. Darryl Lovell, 58, died Jan. 28, spokeswoman Maj. Jacqueline Witt said.
|
|
Turkey Prepares to Extend the Life of Its Massive F-16 Fleet after F-35 Embargo
The Drive
Forbidden from receiving F-35s, and with its indigenous fighter far from ready, the venerable F-16 is set to soldier on in Turkish service.
|
|
Air Force Will Not Run F-16 Training Flights over Gila, Expanding Existing Space Instead
Las Cruces Sun-News
The U.S. Air Force signaled last week that it will likely expand existing airspace for F-16 fighter pilots taking off from Holloman Air Force Base in Alamogordo, N.M., rather than establish new operation areas over the Rio Grande Valley and Gila wilderness.
|
|
Skyborg Could Develop Multiple Drones for Many Missions
Breaking Defense
The Air Force is "driving toward" 2023 for initial operating capability for Skyborg, says Air Force Research Laboratory Director Brig. Gen. Heather L. Pringle.
|
|
China Claims It Has Conducted a New Midcourse Intercept Anti-Ballistic Missile Test
The Drive
China is developing multiple ballistic missile interceptors, some of which could also double as anti-satellite weapons.
|
|
US Military Space Commanders Expect Broad Continuity in DOD Space Policy
SpaceNews
The Biden administration's national security space policy is not expected to depart significantly from the previous administration’s guidelines.
|
|
|
|
Colorado Presses Biden to Reverse Trump Space Command Move
The Hill
Colorado Gov. Jared Polis and a bipartisan group of state leaders have joined an attempt to reverse a Trump administration decision to move U.S. Space Command headquarters from Colorado Springs to Alabama.
|
|
What the Space Force Is, and Isn’t
POLITICO
While cosmic ambitions are the long-term vision of some military space strategists, the Space Force’s primary mission these days seems to be separating fact from fiction, and often science fiction.
|
|
OPINION: Five Progressive Reasons Why President Biden Shouldn’t Cut The Pentagon Budget
Forbes
“[President Joe] Biden faces a tough challenge holding together razor-thin Democratic majorities in Congress, so there may be some sentiment within the administration for throwing the left a bone by moderating military spending,” writes Loren Thompson, the chief operating officer of the nonprofit Lexington Institute and CEO of Source Associates. “However, trimming military outlays might not have the positive impact that progressives expect.”
|
|
AFRL Awards Invictus $98M Contract for Cyber Resiliency M&S Technology
Inside Defense
The Air Force Research Laboratory has awarded Invictus International Consulting a $98 million contract for modeling, simulation, and testing of cyber technologies to support both the service and wider Defense Department.
|
|
AFA’s Mitchell Institute Launches Second Podcast Series
“Aerospace Nation” podcast on Podbean
The Air Force Association’s Mitchell Institute is adding another podcast channel to its virtual content offerings by expanding its “Aerospace Nation” video interview series into the podcast format. So if you’d like to hear what top leaders in the Air Force and Space Force are saying while you are on the treadmill or on the road, tune into this new outlet. This offering will join Mitchell’s highly successful “Aerospace Advantage” podcast via all podcast distribution outlets and may also be found on Mitchell’s website.
|
|
One More Thing
Mattis Explains What Every Leader Should Know about Leading Troops into Combat
Task & Purpose
Former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis has advice for military officers getting ready to lead troops in combat: Listen to your noncommissioned officers, be physically tough, and know your troops. Do that, and they’ll make you proud on the battlefield.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|