Air Force Magazine
Daily Report for Feb. 17, 2021
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Edited by Amy McCullough with Rachel S. Cohen, Brian W. Everstine and Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
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Air Force Seeks New Ways to Nip Extremism in the Bud
By Rachel S. Cohen
As Airmen and Guardians pause their daily routines to consider the spread of
white supremacy and other far-right ideologies in their ranks, their discussions
will fuel department-wide changes to how the Air Force responds to extremism.
“There are many offices involved with creating the content for … this
stand-down day, to include the Department of the Air Force Judge Advocate
General’s office, the Diversity and Inclusion office, the Profession of Arms
Center of Excellence, and the Inspector General’s office,” Air Force
spokeswoman Lt. Col. Lindy Singleton told Air Force Magazine. The department
could find new ways to track and respond to extremism among troops as result of
the talks.
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US Threatens Retaliation After Erbil Rocket Attack Kills 1, Injures 9
By Brian W. Everstine
U.S. officials are threatening a military response after a Feb. 15 rocket attack
on a base housing Americans in Iraqi Kurdistan killed one person and injured
nine others. About 14 107mm rockets were fired near Erbil late on Feb. 15, with
three impacting the air base, according to Combined Joint Task Force-Operation
Inherent Resolve. The rockets killed one non-American contractor and injured
nine—eight civilian contractors and one U.S. service member. It's not clear if
any of the wounded civilians are American. The base in the city of Erbil is one
of the largest remaining U.S. outposts inside Iraq and a launching point for
operations against the Islamic State group.
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DODIG: Pandemic Made CENTCOM Base Security Investigation Impossible
By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
The Defense Department Office of Inspector General is ending its analysis of
U.S. Central Command’s ability to protect key assets under its purview from
missiles and drones due to COVID-19-related travel rules, it announced in a
partially redacted memo published Feb. 11. The pandemic’s persistence impedes
the DODIG’s “ability to perform the project efficiently due to security
classification concerns,” wrote Andre M. Brown, acting assistant inspector
general for evaluations programs, combatant commands, and overseas contingency
operations, in the memo.
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AFSOC Boss: Armed Overwatch Procurement Decision May Come as Early as 2022
By Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
Air Force Special Operations Command expects to conduct an armed overwatch
flying demonstration “in the coming months” and U.S. Special Operations
Command may make a procurement decision as early as 2022, AFSOC boss Lt. Gen.
James C. “Jim” Slife said Feb. 16. “I think we can do that at relatively
low risk based on what we've seen from the vendors who have indicated that they
intend to bring platforms to demonstrate for us in the coming months,” he said
during an AFA Mitchell Institute “Aerospace Nation” virtual event.
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Nuclear Missile Program Passes Review, Moves Closer to Production
By Rachel S. Cohen
Northrop Grumman’s design for a new nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic
missile is moving forward after the Air Force signed off on the latest
development milestone in November, the company announced Feb. 16. The company
passed a benchmark known as the engineering and manufacturing development
baseline review, which looks at whether a program is on track to meet a basic
set of technical user requirements, data, and configuration specifications. The
review is the first step toward handing over responsibility for those criteria
to the Air Force.
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Lakenheath’s F-35s Get a Nickname: Valkyries
By Brian W. Everstine
The Air Force’s first overseas F-35A unit has a nickname: the Valkyries. The
48th Fighter Wing at RAF Lakenheath, U.K., announced Feb. 16 that Valkyries is
the winning nickname for the 495th Fighter Squadron, picked from about 700
different suggestions submitted by the public in fall 2020. The list was
whittled down to five finalists, with Valkyries beating out Archangels, Sabres,
Sentinels, and Swordsmen, according to a wing release.
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30 Years After Desert Storm: Feb. 17
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.
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Radar Sweep
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Austin to Press NATO Allies on Defense Spending
The news signals that Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III will not markedly
depart from former President Donald J. Trump's policy, itself a continuation of
former President Barack Obama's, to pressure NATO allies to put more resources
toward defense.
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The Drone Defense Dilemma: How Unmanned Aircraft Are Redrawing Battle Lines
Peter Roberts, the director of military sciences at the Royal United Services
Institute, said the world is waking up to the reality of modern warfare. “For
a while there was the romantic view that either drones or tanks or missiles
would win wars on their own,” he said. “There is no silver bullet on the
battlefield, and this is an era which is rediscovering that.”
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US, European Fighters in Mideast Share ISR Data Well
With potential French Rafale jet sales to Egypt and the UAE in the works, one
crucial issue arises, especially in the face of the Iranian threat: Can they
share data with the American fighters that pervade so much of the region?
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Report: Iran and Russia Begin Joint Naval Drill
The Iranian and Russian militaries have kicked off a joint naval drill in the
Indian Ocean aimed at boosting security of maritime trade in the region,
Iran’s state TV reported on Feb. 16. Units from Iran’s Navy and the powerful
Revolutionary Guard’s navy will take part in the exercise, dubbed
“Iran-Russia Maritime Security Belt 2021,” in the northern part of the
Indian Ocean, spanning a stretch of about 17,000 kilometers (10,600 miles).
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Despite Its Small Size, Space Force Plans to Have Its Voice Heard in the Pentagon
The Space Force is by far the smallest branch of the U.S. military and will have
to “punch above its weight” to get its share of military funding and other
resources, said Lt. Gen. B. Chance Saltzman, deputy chief of space operations.
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Sens. Mark Kelly, Tammy Duckworth, and Angus King Claim Armed Services Gavels
New power-sharing rules for Senate Democrats are shaking up the Senate Armed
Services Committee, with some junior authorizers taking prized subcommittee
chairmanships.
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Oversight Offices See Glimmers of Progress in DOD, VA Electronic Health Records
The Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs still have a very long way to go
before they achieve the long-sought objective of a fully integrated electronic
health record infrastructure. But a pair of recently released oversight reports
show that the multibillion dollar EHR programs, both of which had rocky starts,
have made meaningful progress in just the past year.
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Purdue to Co-Lead DOD-Funded Project to Advance Adoption of Lead-Free Electronics
A new consortium funded by an award from the U.S. Department of Defense has
selected Purdue University to co-lead its first project aimed at advancing the
adoption of lead-free electronics in defense systems. The Defense Electronics
Consortium, to be established and managed by the U.S. Partnership for Assured
Electronics, is designed to address the defense risks created by the contraction
of the U.S. electronics manufacturing sector over the last 20 years.
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Veterans Used Their Military Training to Plot Violence in Capitol Riot, Feds Say
Retired Navy Lt. Cmdr. Thomas Edward Caldwell had a plan leading up to the
violent Jan. 6 takeover of the U.S. Capitol, according to federal prosecutors.
The 66-year-old former Reserve intelligence officer wanted to transport weapons
into Washington, D.C., by boat—possibly with three four-man sniper teams who
could "go hunting after dark" for "cockroaches who prey on the weak." That's
according to new court documents that allege Caldwell and other veterans who
forcibly busted into the Capitol last month relied on military training to
prepare for the breach.
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One More Thing...
This Montage of Bad U-2 Landings Shows How Hard It Is to Tame the Dragon Lady
A veteran U-2 pilot describes what it takes to enter the elite cadre of Dragon
Lady drivers, including learning to land the notoriously touchy jet.
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