How Air Force Tankers, Transports Can Survive In High-Tech War

How Air Force Tankers, Transports Can Survive In High-Tech War
How Air Force Tankers, Transports Can Survive In High-Tech War

“We’re looking at airframes of the future that will have common cockpits, advanced propulsion systems, (and) signature management,” Miller said. The goal “really is understanding (how) to modify or build an airplane that allows us to operate through that threat environment.”

SpaceX’s Reusable Rockets Could Revolutionize Warfare

SpaceX’s Reusable Rockets Could Revolutionize Warfare
SpaceX’s Reusable Rockets Could Revolutionize Warfare

  If SpaceX founder Elon Musk’s can adapt his reusable rockets for international passenger travel, his company could soon send people and cargo around the world much faster than can the U.S. Air Force. Musk has realized that the same reusable rockets he is building for missions beyond Earth orbit can also be used to do…

US Needs More Tankers, Transports Since Russia & China Can Shoot Them Down

US Needs More Tankers, Transports Since Russia & China Can Shoot Them Down
US Needs More Tankers, Transports Since Russia & China Can Shoot Them Down

AFA: The Air Force needs more tankers and transports because a sophisticated enemy like Russia or China can shoot them down, the chief of Air Mobility Command said here. The current fleet size is based on war plans that only considered how much fuel, supplies, equipment, and troops the air fleet needed to move from…

KC-46 Faces 3 Category One Deficiencies; Two Affect Boom

KC-46 Faces 3 Category One Deficiencies; Two Affect Boom
KC-46 Faces 3 Category One Deficiencies; Two Affect Boom

AFA: The four-star chief of Air Mobility Command wants his new KC-46 Pegasus tankers “yesterday,” but the tanker’s boom has a nasty tendency to scrape up planes it’s trying to refuel, as well as two other category one deficiencies, and contractor Boeing has to fix those. The paint scraping problem — formally known as “undetected…

Korean War 2.0? The Signs To Watch

Korean War 2.0? The Signs To Watch
Korean War 2.0? The Signs To Watch

After threatening to rain four missiles around Guam, North Korea’s pudgy leader, Kim Jong-un appeared to back off today. The (spoof) official North Korean News Agency issued a fabulous tweet describing it, declaring: “Esteemed General Kim Jong-Un reprieves US colony of Guam, citing concern for ocelots and sea turtles. Fate of Los Angeles remains unclear.”…

Not Enough C-17s, Tankers Or Ships For Hot War: TRANSCOM

Not Enough C-17s, Tankers Or Ships For Hot War: TRANSCOM
Not Enough C-17s, Tankers Or Ships For Hot War: TRANSCOM

WASHINGTON: Believe it or not, the global command responsible for getting weapons, fuel, and food to troops had, until recently, never used a war game for planning. Nor did Transportation Command factor into its plans the possibility that transport ships would be sunk and transport planes would be shot down . On top of that, TRANSCOM…

SecAF James: Lessons From The Pacific

SecAF James: Lessons From The Pacific
SecAF James: Lessons From The Pacific

Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James traveled through Asia, visiting Indonesia, India, Singapore, and the Philippines at the end of the summer. We didn’t hear a great deal about the trip in the US at the time but her meetings with her defense counterparts clearly impressed. In this op-ed, James shares the lessons she learned. China…

Australia Crafts Its Own Anti-Access, Area Denial Strategy  

Australia Crafts Its Own Anti-Access, Area Denial Strategy  
Australia Crafts Its Own Anti-Access, Area Denial Strategy  

The Australian military is shaping a transformed military force, one built around new platforms but ones that operate in a joint manner in an extended battlespace. The goal is to extend the defense perimeter of Australia and create, in effect, their own version of an Anti-Access/Area Denial (A2/AD) strategy. They also recognize a key reality of 21st…

KC-46 Passes Milestone — Finally; Kendall OKs LRIP

KC-46 Passes Milestone — Finally; Kendall OKs LRIP
KC-46 Passes Milestone — Finally; Kendall OKs LRIP

WASHINGTON: After more than a decade of missteps by the Pentagon, the Air Force and Boeing, the airborne tanker program today took a major step forward as the KC-46 passed Milestone C. “The KC-46 is ready to take the next step,” Gen. Dave Goldfein, Air Force Chief of Staff, says in a statement announcing the approval…

How Big Will Boeing’s KC-46 Penalty Be?

How Big Will Boeing’s KC-46 Penalty Be?
How Big Will Boeing’s KC-46 Penalty Be?

WASHINGTON: Boeing blew one of the most important milestones for the KC-46 airborne tanker program last week. The question is, will Boeing be penalized and, if so, how big will the penalty be? The answer, at this point, is it ain’t clear. “The KC-46 contract does not contain pre-defined penalties for missing schedule deadlines,” Air…

Another Boeing Tanker Delay; How Long, Oh Lord?

Another Boeing Tanker Delay; How Long, Oh Lord?
Another Boeing Tanker Delay; How Long, Oh Lord?

WASHINGTON: When Boeing really, truly and finally won the airborne tanker competition by underbidding what was then EADS North America (now Airbus) by at least 10 percent, the chairman of the losing company, Ralph Crosby, said he believed it important that Boeing be watched closely to make sure they delivered at that price and on…

Sen. McCain: Keep the B-21 On Track

The Air Force’s new B-21 long range strike bomber acquisition program has encountered turbulence in recent weeks as Sen. John McCain, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, declared: “I will not authorize a program that has a cost-plus contract.” Justifying his position, the senator referenced his smart phone, explaining that: “Silicon Valley built the latest…

TransCom Rushes Buy Of Ebola Isolation Units; 60 Days From Idea To Test

TransCom Rushes Buy Of Ebola Isolation Units; 60 Days From Idea To Test
TransCom Rushes Buy Of Ebola Isolation Units; 60 Days From Idea To Test

WASHINGTON: The Pentagon’s Transportation Command — the folks who move most everything for the military from Point A to Point B — are testing a new isolation unit to fit in a C-17 or C-130 aircraft, just 60 days after issuing the requirement. The head of TransCom, Gen. Paul Selva, told reporters this morning at a…

The Reshaping of Pacific Defense: Interview With PacAF Gen. Hawk Carlisle

The Reshaping of Pacific Defense: Interview With PacAF Gen. Hawk Carlisle
The Reshaping of Pacific Defense: Interview With PacAF Gen. Hawk Carlisle

We interviewed Gen. Hawk Carlisle, the commander of Pacific Air Forces, at the Air Force Association’s Pacific Forum in Los Angeles, about the challenges facing the U.S. and its allies in shaping a 21st century Pacific defense strategy. The general emphasized the central role engaging our allies is playing for the Air Force in the Pacific. “The chief…