Many US Bases Still Lack Sufficient Tech to Track Drone Incursions: DOD Officials

Many US Bases Still Lack Sufficient Tech to Track Drone Incursions: DOD Officials

Pentagon officials overseeing homeland counter-drone strategy told lawmakers that even with preliminary moves to bolster U.S. base defenses, the military still lacks the capability to comprehensively identify, track, and engage hostile drones like those that breached the airspace of Langley Air Force Base in Virginia for 17 days in December 2023.

Members of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform voiced frustration during the April 29 hearing that the chaotic Langley episode paralyzed commanders’ ability to respond and ultimately forced F-22 fighters to be relocated to other bases. More drone incursions were later reported around other military bases, including USAF installations from Utah to the United Kingdom.

“There were over 350 detections of drones at 100 different military installations last year alone,” Rep. William Timmons (R-S.C.) said. “These incursions are not from hobbyists being blown off course. The multitude of drones reported flying over bases in the past several years revealed a coordinated effort by our adversaries to collect valuable intelligence and surveillance of some of our most sensitive military equipment.”

Timmons added that it shows that base commanders have “inadequate or nonexistent monitoring capabilities” and a lack of counter-drone capabilities.

Mark Ditlevson, acting assistant Secretary of Defense for Homeland Defense and Hemispheric Affairs, told lawmakers that defense officials have made progress identifying solutions designed to more effectively identify and understand “what is flying in our airspace and how to separate the negligent from the nefarious.”

The Pentagon is working with the Joint Rapid Acquisition Cell to rapidly acquire the right equipment and to give commanders better tools to “understand the operating environment and the ability to effectively conduct nonkinetic and kinetic mitigations.”

Despite the progress, Ditlevson admitted that responding to hostile unmanned aerial systems in the homeland is much more difficult than in war zones.

“The systems that have proven effective at countering UAS in the Middle East are not appropriate for the homeland given the intelligence collection required to enable these mitigation operations and the potential for collateral damage, [for example] radio frequency jamming can interfere with emergency responder radios and weather radar,” Ditlevson said in his written statement to the committee.

Rep. Suhas Subramanyam (D-Va.) asked Rear Adm. Paul Spedero, vice director for operations on the Joint Chiefs of Staff, if there are capability gaps when it comes to developing “technology for trying to address kinetic and nonkinetic” to engage advanced drone technology.

Spedero admitted that the technology for drones has “far outpaced” the tech to defeat them.

“It’s a much wider, broader, deeper market for drone application, for commercial and recreational purposes. So hence that technology has evolved very quickly from radio controlled drones to now fully autonomous drones that may or may not even rely on reception of a GPS signal, which would make it very challenging to intercept so on the counter drone activity,” Spedero said. 

“You have to come back to agencies that would be interested in that like the Department of Defense, Department of Homeland Security, FBI, you know, law enforcement agencies. So we have to partner, and we have to create that demand within industry to get technology back on pace to counter this ever increasing emergence of drone technology.”

Spedero told Timmons that the technology many commanders have to track drones over their installations “is not sufficient. The development and fielding of “domain awareness sensors is a critical first step.”

“Obviously, we need a method to exert command and control so that we can build a common operating picture, because it will take layers of different sensors, because one sensor may be better against certain UAVs and certain flight profiles, and you may have to rely on different sensors to round out the picture,” Spedero said.

“So yes, we do need more sensors. We are addressing the shortfall right now with the fielding of flyaway kits. So these will be kits that will be available for bases that have very limited capability to detect on their own and build domain awareness.”

Spedero added, however, that commanders would first have to request the capability from U.S. Northern Command and a “flyaway kit, as well as expertise and additional resources that would be required, would be immediately deployed to that location.”

Rep. Michael Cloud (R-Texas) said one of his biggest concerns over this issue is the amount of funding legacy aircraft programs are receiving as opposed to funding drone and counter-drone technology which already plays a significant role in modern warfare.

“It seems like we’re spending about $22 billion … in the last budget on fighter jets and maybe a billion dollars on drone and counter drone technology together,” said Cloud, explaining that his numbers may be “off a bit” because funding is coming from different buckets. 

“We’re talking about one drone coming and what we can or can’t do about it. I think from the American taxpayer who’s sitting at home going, we’re spending [more than] $800 billion roughly on defense, and we can’t shoot a drone down.”

Trump: Selfridge Getting F-15EX Fighters to Replace A-10s

Trump: Selfridge Getting F-15EX Fighters to Replace A-10s

Michigan’s Selfridge Air National Guard Base will become the home of 21 F-15EX Eagle II multirole fighters, a move that will enable the base to retain a fighter mission after the looming retirement of its A-10 attack planes.

President Donald Trump announced the move in a joint visit to the base with Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, and others April 29.

“As Commander-in-Chief, I’m proud to announce that very soon, we will replace the retiring A-10 Warthogs with 21 brand-new F-15EX Eagle II fighter jets—the best in the world,” Trump said. “This will keep Selfridge at the cutting edge of northern American airpower.”

Whitmer, a Democrat who visited Trump at the White House earlier this month, has been pushing for Selfridge to maintain a fighter mission along with other Michigan lawmakers. The Air National Guard previously passed over the base when it was deciding where to base its F-35A Lightning II multirole stealth fighters.

“I’m really damn happy we’re here to celebrate this recapitalization at Selfridge,” Whitmer said. “It’s critical for the Michigan economy, for our homeland security, and our future.”

F-15EXs will begin arriving in fiscal 2028 and will be on top of previous bases slated to receive the jets, Whitmer’s office said.

“According to the Department of Defense, the F-15EXs will begin arriving in FY28, and this basing decision will not overturn other F-15EX basing actions in other states, but is rather additive,” the Michigan Governor’s Office said in a statement.

The projected F-15EX fleet had been trimmed to 98 under the Biden administration. But the plane received a boost in recent days when the Senate and House Armed Services Committee released a reconciliation package that includes $150 billion in new defense spending in fiscal 2025. That package includes $3.15 billion for more F-15EXs and could be used to fund an additional squadron, expanding the fleet to about 125 aircraft.

The F-15EX, made by Boeing, will form the backbone of the Air National Guard’s fighter fleet along with the F-35.

Portland Air National Guard Base, Ore., has started to operate the F-15EX and the plane is coming to Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans, La., and Fresno Air National Guard Base, Calif. Now Selfridge is joining the club.

On the Active-Duty side, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., operates a test fleet of F-15EXs and Kadena Air Base, Japan, will eventually receive the aircraft to replace its aged-out F-15C/D Eagles.

A 142nd Wing F-15EX Eagle II takes off from Portland Air National Guard Base, Ore., on July 12, 2024, during a ceremony to welcome the aircraft. U.S. Air National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Nichole Sanchez

Selfridge’s fighter mission has consisted of the A-10s in its 107th Fighter Squadron, which are due to be retired over the next several years.

Some A-10s from Selfridge deployed to the Middle East last fall, according to imagery released from U.S. Central Command. Photos of some A-10s in the region sported Selfridge’s “MI” tailflash, and other photos showed Airmen from the 107th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron and the 107th Expeditionary Fighter Generation Squadron.

Selfridge is also due to get a new squadron of KC-46 Pegasus tankers as its fleet of KC-135s is retired. Trump also expressed support for that move, which was decided by the Biden administration.

‘Blind Trust’: Netflix Drops Trailer for Air Force Thunderbirds Movie

‘Blind Trust’: Netflix Drops Trailer for Air Force Thunderbirds Movie

An upcoming Netflix documentary promises an inside look at the Air Force’s premier aerial demonstration team. Premiering May 23, “Air Force Elite: Thunderbirds” will showcase the skill, trust, and hard work it takes to fly six F-16 fighters in tight formation nearly every week for eight months, judging by a trailer released April 29.

“If you don’t have blind trust, this show will not work,” Lt. Col. Justin Elliot said in the trailer. Elliot commanded the team from 2022 to 2023, before the current commander, Lt. Col. Nathan Malafa, took over in 2024. 

The trailer emphasizes the high stakes and slim margins of Thunderbird performance.

“Six jets flying 18 inches apart, nearly at the speed of sound … you are microseconds of lag from a life-threatening situation,” an interviewee says over scenes of the pilots strapping into the F-16s and taking off.

“They’re already the best combat pilots the Air Force has to offer, but air demonstration is a completely different animal,” Elliot added.

“We are always under a little bit of like, the ‘I’m going to die’ factor,” said then-Thunderbird 6, Maj. Eric Tise.

The 90-minute documentary comes exactly a year after the streaming premiere of Amazon Studios’ “The Blue Angels,” a documentary of the same length about the Navy’s flagship aerial demonstration team. One of the producers for that film was Glen Powell, who starred in the 2022 film “Top Gun: Maverick,” the sequel to the 1986 naval aviation classic.

“Air Force Elite: Thunderbirds” has an even higher-profile producer team: former President and First Lady Barack and Michelle Obama. Their company Higher Ground Productions has a history of working with Netflix on shows and movies, both fiction and nonfiction. 

The documentary was directed by Matt Wilcox, who has directed at least two basketball documentaries, according to the Internet Movie Database. That background may help with a documentary about the Thunderbirds which, like a professional basketball team, involves talented individuals working long hours to put on dazzling performances on a regular basis. Except with the Thunderbirds, any mistake can end lives.

“As a newbie, there’s immense amount of pressure to get this right,” Capt. Jacob Impellizzeri said in the trailer. “You don’t want to be the reason the team fails.” 

Like the Blue Angels documentary, “Thunderbirds” seems to take viewers into the no-holds barred post-practice debrief sessions.

“We’re going to pick apart everything that went wrong, and it’s going to feel like you’re getting crushed,” Elliot said in one of those sessions featured in the trailer. 

The United States Air Force Air Demonstration Squadron “Thunderbirds” perform at the California International Air Show in Salinas, Calif. Staff Sgt. Andrew Sarver

One reviewer called the Blue Angels documentary a “visually stunning recruitment ad,” but it was well-watched, topping Amazon Prime Video’s charts over Memorial Day weekend, according to The Aviationist. 

“Thunderbirds” appears to follow the same formula, and more exposure to Air Force aviation may help shore up a long-running pilot shortage that leaves experts wondering if the service has enough fliers to win a war. 

To what extent airshows help with that shortage may soon come under scrutiny: in December, federal lawmakers asked the Department of Defense to study how military air shows affect recruiting and readiness, and to look into performing at more rural areas across the country.

Congress Eyes Nearly $25B to Jump Start Golden Dome

Congress Eyes Nearly $25B to Jump Start Golden Dome

Lawmakers in Congress are working to inject tens of billions of dollars into President Donald Trump’s ambitious “Golden Dome” plan for comprehensive missile defense of the U.S. homeland in the coming months.

On April 29, the House Armed Services Committee passed a new $150 billion reconciliation package that includes $24.7 billion for Golden Dome in fiscal 2025. The package still faces many hurdles before it is approved, but at the same time, the Pentagon will soon release its 2026 budget request. Lawmakers have already started work on funding Golden Dome for that fiscal year—in February, Sens. Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska) and Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) proposed a bill earmarking nearly $18.5 billion in ’26 funds for the idea, then called Iron Dome for America.

While Sullivan and Cramer’s bill focused mostly on upgrading and expanding existing missile defense systems, the reconciliation package’s biggest adds for Golden Dome focus on developing a novel defense architecture in orbit and accelerating efforts to position additional satellites for sensing and tracking missile threats.

The package includes $5.6 billion specifically for the “development of space-based and boost-phase intercept capabilities,” a concept pursued over decades that Lt. Gen. Shawn W. Bratton, the Space Force’s top officer for strategy, plans, programs, and requirements, has called “no joke of a physical problem.”

Retired Space Force Col. Charles Galbreath, senior resident fellow at AFA’s Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies, explained that “from initial detection through relay, tracking, and targeting—all of that takes time, creating a very narrow window for either ballistic or hypersonic systems. If the Pentagon opts for a kinetic interceptor, it must also account for the object’s time of flight from space to the target.”

Given the substantial $5.6 billion allocation, the Department of Defense will likely at least invest in researching and demonstrating kinetic solutions, Galbreath said.

A more feasible option, however, might be non-kinetic interceptors such as directed energy weapons. The reconciliation package includes a separate $2.4 billion for non-kinetic missile defense programs.

“Directed energy reduces travel time, which gives you a bit more margin,” Galbreath said—an important advantage when the boost-phase window lasts only a few minutes. “That’s why in the 1980s and into the 1990s, there was strong interest in space-based lasers for boost-phase intercept; it was a logical path to pursue given the constraints.”

An artist’s concept of a Space Laser Satellite Defense System. U.S. Air Force illustration

Under President Ronald Reagan, the Strategic Defense Initiative spurred extensive research into advanced missile defense, including experiments with lasers, particle beams, and gamma rays to disable threats in their early flight phase.

The largest allocation in the new Golden Dome package is $7.2 billion for military space-based sensors—funding that could boost efforts already underway, led by the Space Development Agency through its Proliferated Warfighting Space Architecture program. This initiative aims to populate low-Earth orbit with cost-effective satellites for tracking missiles and relaying data.

The package also includes $2.2 billion to expedite the development of hypersonic defense systems, with Galbreath suggesting that much of this funding will likely bolster the command-and-control capabilities of these systems.

Another $2 billion is allocated for air-moving target indicator (AMTI) military satellites. The Space Force announced last year that it plans to begin deploying satellites capable of tracking airborne threats by the early 2030s.

Additionally, $1.9 billion is included to enhancing ground-based radar systems, including the SBX Radar managed by the Missile Defense Agency and the Patriot Radar used in the Army’s missile defense operations. The funding will help improve their range, sensitivity, processing power, and overall reliability.

Golden Dome is still in its infancy, however; the Pentagon is still assessing which existing capabilities to enhance and which new technologies to develop. The added funding is expected to provide with a much-needed boost for the project, enabling industry to begin demonstrating and testing new technologies.

In a statement touting the Trump administration’s accomplishments after 100 days in office, Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs and Senior Advisor Sean Parnell said the Pentagon has “submitted Golden Dome for America plans to the President.” A DOD spokesperson told Air & Space Forces Magazine the department had nothing else to announce at this time.

Space Force and Missile Defense Agency leaders have emphasized that organizational cooperation will be critical to the project’s success, given its scale and the need for cross-agency coordination. While both plan to host a summit in the coming months with commercial partners, no lead agency has yet been designated to spearhead the project.

Galbreath emphasized the need for a single, dedicated organization to take accountability for Golden Dome, warning that without it, the project could repeat the missteps of JADC2—the Pentagon’s effort to connect sensors across all military branches into a unified, AI-powered network. That initiative initially struggled due to the absence of a central coordinating authority, with parallel efforts by the Army, Navy, and Air Force leading to multiple incompatible systems.

Anti-Jamming GPS Upgrades Coming This Year

Anti-Jamming GPS Upgrades Coming This Year

Everything’s coming together to make 2025 a pivotal year in the Space Force’s long-running effort to make GPS more resistant to jamming, a senior service official said April 29. 

“That entire architecture is really focused now on meeting the anti-jam and spoofing threat,” said Cordell A. DeLaPena, program executive officer for military communications and position, navigation, and timing, said during a virtual Schriever Spacepower talk with AFA’s Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies. 

GPS remains the gold standard among Global Navigation Satellite Systems, DeLaPena said: “We’re the best in the world” in terms of accuracy, integrity, and availability.

But jamming and spoofing are growing challenges, highlighted by Russia’s aggressive electronic warfare in Ukraine as well as concerns about China’s potential to try to deny GPS access to U.S. and allied forces. GPS signals can be drowned out with powerful radio frequency signals broadcast at the same frequency, jamming the signals that users leverage to find their location. 

The Pentagon has been working on countermeasures by upgrading GPS satellites, software, and receivers, but each effort has been plagued by its own set of delays.  

Now the wait is almost over, DeLaPena promised. “All three of those lanes in the road … converge in 2025 and enable the warfighter to start depending and training with anti-jam,” he pledged. 

Satellites 

At the end of May, the Space Force plans to launch the eighth of 10 GPS III satellites, just a few months after launching the seventh spacecraft in the series. USSF is using a new rocket—SpaceX’s Falcon 9—and accelerating integration and readiness checks. 

The seventh through 10th satellites in the constellation were built months ago and put into storage as the Space Force waited for the original launch vehicle, ULA’s Vulcan Centaur, to be certified.  

The GPS III birds take full advantage of M-code, a more robust, encrypted, jam-resistant signal for military use. While other GPS satellites can transmit M-code, GPS III can beam the signal at target areas. But the real key is having a large enough constellation.

With seven spacecraft in orbit, “we have sufficient on-orbit capacity for anti-jam,” DeLaPena said. The remaining two satellites in the series will be launched over the next year and a half.  

After that, comes GPS III Follow-On, which will have even better anti-jamming tech. 

“The next era of anti-jam: a higher power, tighter beam called RMP, which stands for regional military protection,” said DeLaPena. “And because GPS is occurring in L-band, optimized for that orbit, we counter jamming by concentrating our power and we blast our way through it. That makes it very, very hard for our adversary to go against that power, because they’d have to build multiple, enormous jammers that are vulnerable in other areas as well.” 

With M-code and RMP, the Space Force will be “almost all the way” to having a jam-resistant capability. Beyond that, DeLaPena said his office is exploring new technologies through contracts with the Space Force’s innovation incubator SpaceWERX. 

OCX 

While GPS III satellites started going up several years ago, the software system to control them proved bedeviling. The Next-Generation GPS Operational Control System, or OCX, has been a “tough, tough program,” said DeLaPena, who first started managing programs in 1990. “I’ve been in this business a while. … OCX is the hardest I’ve ever worked.” 

Since contractor Raytheon was tapped for OCX in 2010, the program has been delayed again and again and even incurred a “Nunn-McCurdy” breach due to soaring costs. 

Former Space Force acquisition executive Frank Calvelli called the failure to deliver OCX his biggest regret, but DeLaPena says it’s coming soon. 

“Raytheon is scheduled to submit their DD-250 within the next 30 days, which will allow government testing and operational testing,” DeLaPena said, referring to the form that signals the Pentagon has accepted ownership of a system. “And the PEO will certify it’s ready to transition to operations by the end of the year. Huge milestone.” 

MGUE 

The last pieces in the puzzle are the terminals that receive the GPS signal. The Pentagon has been working on its Military GPS User Equipment program for more than a decade, another of the the programs Calvelli bemoaned as “problem children” in his portfolio. 

The first increment of MGUE terminals are being tested now. “We’re flight testing with an Army UAV, we’re taking it to the jamming range. Next week, we’ll fly it against the jammers, and we’re scheduled to certify the final variants of MGUE Increment 1 in July of 2025,” he said. 

MGUE is needed to receive M-code, making it part of the anti-jamming solution. And moving forward, DeLaPena said a second increment will help even more by allowing users to tap into position, navigation, and timing signals from non-GPS satellites. 

“What increment two brings is incorporation of other PNT sources, not only just U.S. GPS, but it’ll incorporate some alternate PNT sources that the Army uses,” DeLaPena said. “It’ll incorporate international GPS, multi-GPS from space, things like from our allies, incorporating the Europe solution, incorporating the Japanese solution, and it’ll blend those solutions.” 

The key to doing so is moving toward software-defined receivers, with antennas that can be reprogrammed quickly to tap into more signals. Flexibility in general will be key to future anti-jamming efforts, DeLaPena said. 

“In the future, we’ll look at making sure that we’re not designing our anti-jam solution to be optimized just in one orbit in one waveform,” he said. “We need diversity in terms of the spectrum to allow flexibility into the other orbits as well, and a lot of that can come through these software-defined terminals that are being investigated across all the services.” 

Lawmakers Eye $7.2B for New Fighters, CCAs and More—but Nothing for F-35

Lawmakers Eye $7.2B for New Fighters, CCAs and More—but Nothing for F-35

Within the $150 billion reconciliation package unveiled by top lawmakers this weekend, Air Force and Navy aviation accounts would receive $7.2 billion.

Those funds would go to everything from accelerated work on advanced stealth fighters and Collaborative Combat Aircraft drones to buying more F-15EX fighters, electronic warfare jets, and tactical airlifters; from connectivity improvements for the mobility fleet to funds to keep operating older F-22 and F-15E fighters the Air Force has asked to retire.

Yet the F-35, the Pentagon’s current premier fighter program, received no increase.

The reconciliation package is effectively a supplement to the fiscal 2025 budget, separate from the usual appropriations process and the upcoming 2026 defense budget request. Any elements of the reconciliation bill that conflict with the Fiscal Responsibility Act take precedence.

House Armed Services Committee chair Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Ala.) and his counterpart Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) are touting the spending package as a “generational investment in our national defense.”

For aviation in particular, the plan would inject extra dollars into a wide-ranging set of projects.

Fighters

The F-15EX, Boeing’s new-production version of the F-15, was the biggest winner of the congressional package, with $3.15 billion going to increase the fleet size from the 98 aircraft the Air Force proposed in the fiscal 2024 budget. Depending on what’s included, those monies could fund more than an additional F-15EX squadron, bringing the F-15EX fleet up to about 125 airplanes.

Another major add was $400 million to “accelerate” the Air Force’s new F-47 Next Generation Air Dominance fighter, the contract for which was awarded to Boeing in March. The Navy’s counterpart program, the F/A-XX, would receive even more with $500 million, even though the winning contractor for the program still has not been announced. Boeing and Northrop Grumman are the finalists.

The package also includes some $488 million to help the Air Force keep operating fighters that Congress refuses to let them retire—$127.5 million to continue operating 14 F-15Es, and $361.2 million to keep flying 32 of its oldest and least-improved F-22s.

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F-22 Raptors spent several months in 2024 deployed to the U.S. Central Command AOR as part of a rotation to address threats posed by Iran and Iranian-backed groups. USAF

The CCA program—the Air Force’s major push to build semi-autonomous drones that fly alongside manned fighters—would see a boost of $678 million.

The Air Force could be poised to get more of its new electronic warfare/electronic attack jet, the EA-37B Compass Call, with an add of $474 million. The service has a requirement for between 12 and 20 of the systems, built by L3Harris and BAE Systems on a converted Gulfstream G550, but it trimmed the program to 10 due to budget constraints. The Air Force was potentially going to put more EA-37Bs on its Unfunded Priorities List for 2026. 

The Lockheed-built F-16 fleet would also get $50 million for an electronic warfare upgrade.

Mobility Fleet

An Air Force goal of equipping its mobility aircraft as “internet providers in the sky” for allied forces would get a significant boost under the deal, which provides $116 million to add connectivity upgrades to the C-17 fleet and $84 million in similar gear for the KC-135 tanker fleet.

Congress is clearly not ready to stop buying C-130J tactical airlifters for National Guard units, and added $440 million to keep production going.

Lawmakers also provided $100 million to “accelerate” the Boeing MQ-25 carrier-based autonomous tanking aircraft program and $160 million to accelerate improvements to the Bell-Boeing V-22 fleet’s engine nacelles, which have been faulted in a series of accidents with the tiltrotor transport.

Secret Air Force aviation programs would get $300 million under the reconciliation, while the Navy would get a $230 million boost for its classified aviation efforts.

No F-35

The conspicuous absence of any adds—or even reference—to the F-35 in the reconciliation is “very, very worrisome,” said Mark Gunzinger, director of future concepts and capability assessments at AFA’s Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies.

The F-15EX “is a great aircraft,” Gunzinger said, able to carry hypersonic missiles externally and other air-to-ground weapons needed to close long-range kill chains.

“Great. We need that capacity. Buy them as fast as we can,” he said. “But neglecting the F-35 does not make sense, given that what is now rolling off the line” has the Tech Refresh 3 upgrade to its processors, and “the software is almost there as well. So, pushing F-35 buys to the right or decrementing doesn’t make sense, given the requirement. They are in production, they’re what we can buy now to enhance deterrence, to create a much more capable force.”

A U.S. Air Force F-35A Lightning IIs assigned to the 421st Expeditionary Fighter Squadron, Hill Air Force Base, Utah, taxi after landing at Kadena Air Base, Japan, April 24, 2025. U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Arnet Tamayo

Todd Harrison of the American Enterprise Institute said the F-35’s absence from the package speaks volumes about the how members of Congress feel about the fighter.

“If you step back and think about it, it’s the largest acquisition program in DOD. Congress gets an extra $150 billion, and they don’t put any of it towards that program? That says something about the sentiment around the F-35,” he said.

A former Air Force official said there is “widespread frustration” with the F-35 for its litany of challenges, ranging from sustainment costs to testing delays, and a “general lack of awareness of just how bad the decline in the size of the Air Force really is.” Meanwhile, he said, the reconciliation bill includes a huge boost to shipbuilding, a result of the Navy having been “much more vocal” about “the plight of shipbuilding” than the Air Force has about “the plight of its force structure.”

Air Force Rethinks Having Trainees Carry Real Rifles in Boot Camp

Air Force Rethinks Having Trainees Carry Real Rifles in Boot Camp

Young Air Force and Space Force recruits in Basic Military Training will not be trading in their non-firing M4 carbines for live M4s anytime soon. After leaders previously said they wanted to make the switch, Maj. Gen. Wolfe Davidson said it may not be necessary for Airmen to carry real M4s throughout BMT.

“Right now, we don’t see much benefit to [issuing] live weapons” to recruits to carry through BMT, Davidson, commander of the Second Air Force told Air & Space Forces Magazine. Davidson, who oversees BMT and technical training, is a career special tactics officer who has led air, space and special operations forces during various operations including Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan.

“We will continue to evaluate, but in the near term we are not going to transition to real M4s … for the entirety of basic training,” said Davidson. Last summer, the Air Force began issuing inert M4s, marked by red flash suppressors, to future Airmen and Guardians to carry throughout the majority of boot camp. The carbines have all the parts of a real M4, except for a hammer so they cannot be fired.

“The replicas they have can be fully broken down; fully assembled … just like a standard M4, so they are learning all those aspects of it,” said Davidson, adding that trainees “certainly use real M4s in portions of their training.”

In September, Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force David Flosi said the goal of the program was to have young Airmen and Guardians carry real M4s to better prepare them for the growing threat of war with a near-peer adversary such as China.

Garrett Exner, a former Marine Corps special operations officer with combat experience in Iraq who is now a fellow with the Hudson Institute, touted the importance of such preparation.

“We’re in an explosion in this time period [of] gray-zone conflict, conflict below the threshold of war with our adversaries, our near-peer competitors. … Clearly we’re butting up against our adversaries in a number of different areas,” said Exner.

“This is actually the best time to get them indoctrinated into a warfighting mindset, when they first come … into basic training,” Exner added.

Marine Corps and Army trainees carry live weapons throughout basic training. Navy recruits do not.

Air Force training officials say issuing inert M4s to trainees has resulted in greater confidence and increased weapons proficiency when they learn to shoot actual M4s in Combined Arms Training and Maintenance, or CATM, in their fourth week of training. Trainees shoot 70 rounds of live ammunition in CATM, which includes zeroing the weapon and qualification. 

“We have seen an uptick in marksmanship capabilities and just more confidence, confidence with the weapon,” said Tech Sgt. Anthony Hayes, a master training instructor in BMT who is also a security forces specialist.When they get to CATM, it’s not the first time they have had the weapon in their hands.”

Currently, trainees secure their inert M4s in lockers when they are in the dormitories, a practice that would have to change with a transition to real M4s, said Davidson, describing the security and logistical challenges that would come with live weapons.

“Obviously there are a lot of logistical challenges to going to real M4s in terms of security and controlling them and all of those types of things,” he said. “There are arms rooms, there are weapons requirements … there are protection requirements, so if you have more than so many weapons, you have to have live weapons guarding them.”

“Then you have to arm your instructors with weapons, so there are lots of challenges from that perspective,” Davidson added.

The Air Force first began requiring trainees to carry inert M4s from 2005 to 2012 before reviving the program last July, said Chief Master Sgt. Whitfield Jack, the senior noncommissioned officer for the 737th Training Group.

Jack, who was a staff sergeant and a BMT instructor during the first iteration of the program, said he has seen how it improves the level of quality and professionalism among trainees. 

“We are in the profession of arms,” Jack said. “I understand we are not Soldiers and we are not Marines, but at the end of the day, we are in the profession of arms. So for our Airmen and Guardians to familiarize themselves with a weapon and carry it and use it, I think is absolutely beneficial. And I’ve seen it. I’ve seen the mindset shift as they touch and feel and know what this weapon is about.”

Ramstein Airmen Work Together to Change ‘Lie to Fly’ Culture

Ramstein Airmen Work Together to Change ‘Lie to Fly’ Culture

The 86th Operations Group at Ramstein Air Base in Germany is pioneering a new program that could help improve mental health outcomes for aviators across the Air Force.

The Military Aviator Peer Support (MAPS) program is a group of 32 air crew members trained to be a helpful, confidential ear for peers to discuss challenges in their personal or professional lives. The idea is to give Airmen an opportunity to talk with someone who understands their situation and who will not mark it in their records.

“The special skillset of a peer program is to allow you to speak freely to someone who understands the operational environment that you are telling your story from,” said Lt. Col. Sandra Salzman, a pilot-physician with the 37th Airlift Squadron at Ramstein who is helping spearhead MAPS.

Health care is a challenge for aviators, who often misrepresent or withhold health information from flight surgeons out of fear that they might lose their flying status. A 2023 review found that out of 264 military pilots, 190 (72 percent) reported a history of health care avoidance, 111 (42.5 percent) misrepresented or withheld information on a written health care questionnaire, 89 (33.7 percent) flew despite experiencing a new physical or psychological symptom that they felt probably should be evaluated by a physician, and 30 (11.4 percent) reported a history of undisclosed medical prescription use.

Air Force pilots said in a study last year that fear of being taken off flight duty; worries about judgment from peers and leadership; concern that providers might over-diagnose symptoms; lack of available appointments; and lack of education about health treatment for aviators were among the factors discouraging them from seeking mental and physical health care.

“Pilots attempted to ‘feel out’ responses from peers by explaining a condition as a joke or broadly talking around an issue to see what kind of response they would get,” the study said. “One pilot explained that he/she received an ‘all right, good luck’ response from a peer, which he/she perceived as negative, influencing his/her decision to not go to a clinic.”

Then-Maj. Sandra Salzman, 37th Airlift Squadron C-130J Super Hercules pilot-physician, flies a C-130J aircraft over Germany, March 31, 2023. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Megan M. Beatty)

Indeed, the prospect of going to a clinic was another intimidating factor: talking with a flight surgeon in the usual squadron buildings made the pilot “feel less trapped” than formally scheduling an appointment at a separate facility.

Military pilots are not alone: a 2022 study found that 56 percent of 3,756 civilian pilots reported a history of health care avoidance behavior due to fear of losing flying status. But the civilian pilots have an advantage: airlines and associations across North America and Europe have adopted peer support programs for pilots and flight attendants to get advice on stressful challenges before they can metastasize into a problem that risks lives or careers.

“These are people facing one of life’s usual stressors: divorce, a sick child, maybe a pilot promoted from first officer to captain, and they have a really challenging schedule flying a lot at nights, and there’s discord at home,” said Capt. William Hoffman, an Air Force neurologist and aeromedical researcher with the 59th Medical Wing at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas. Hoffman also co-authored the three studies cited above and has advocated to change “lie to fly” culture for years.

“It’s a really hard job, and to connect with another pilot who understands what that’s like and can provide an empathetic, non-judgmental ear is incredibly valuable,” he added. “In the clinical literature, sometimes it matters less what strategy you use in therapy, and it’s more about a trusting relationship with your therapist.”

That may be even more true in the military, where aviators can’t always tell friends or family everything in order to preserve operational security.

“It’s really hard to explain to your spouse or your friend, ‘you know, I was flying into a dangerous place, and we were watching for these dangerous things. And also, this person keeps pumping this button,’” Salzman said. “So to have somebody that already understands the environment, you can just be like, ‘they kept keying their mic every time I tried to talk.’ Just to say it out loud and get it off your chest and have someone say, ‘I’d be upset too,’ can help you feel better.”

Then-Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force JoAnne Bass said in 2024 that only two out of every 10 Airmen who seek mental health need clinical support, according to mental health providers. “The other eight just need to know someone cares,” she said.

There are no formal scientific studies of whether these peer support programs work, Hoffman said, but informal experience suggests that perhaps as many as 95 percent of pilots who seek peer support help don’t require escalation to a mental health provider. 

“All those people would probably otherwise just forgo care altogether, or get worse until they actually need to see a mental health provider,” Hoffman said.

Capt. Johnny Murphy and Capt. Lukas Pulice, 37th Airlift Squadron pilots, discuss mental health resources during Military Aviator Peer Support wingman face-to-face training at Ramstein Air Base, Germany, Feb. 19, 2025. U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Jared Lovett

Bringing It to the Air Force

Salzman was inspired to bring aviator peer support to the Air Force after seeing Hoffman and civilian aviation peer support leaders present about the topic at an Aerospace Medical Association conference last June.

“I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, we’ve got to have one of these,’” she recalled.

Salzman worked with Hoffman, the 59th Medical Wing, and Stiftung Mayday, an aviator peer support program based in Germany. Stiftung Mayday began in the 1990s, building its program off skills taught by the U.S. Air Force sexual harassment/assault response and prevention team stationed at Ramstein Air Base. Stiftung Mayday serves civil aviators across the European Union, the lieutenant colonel said. It came full circle when Stiftung helped Salzman design a training program for Air Force peer support wingmen.

The training takes about two days and involves both computer-based training and in-person role play.

“A moderator helps you reframe issues to see actionable options with positive side effects and get comfortable with asking difficult questions and then shutting up to hear the answer,” Salzman said. “That is the hardest part of all: being quiet and listening.”

The program started in November and there are now 32 peer support wingmen: about 10 peer support wingmen per squadron at the 86th Operations Group, including pilots, loadmasters, flight attendants, and air traffic controllers. A list is published in the group’s electronic flight bags, along with contact information and where to find them.

Group members “can reach out to them via any of the ways that they have listed on there, and ask them, ‘Hey, can I chat with you for a few minutes?’” Salzman said.

lie to fly
Participants of the Military Aviator Peer Support wingman face-to-face training pose for a photo at Ramstein Air Base, Germany, Feb. 19, 2025. U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Jared Lovett

MAPS is the latest in an ecosystem of support programs, including crisis action teams, finance teams, and substance abuse counselors, Salzman explained. But since MAPS is made up of fellow aviators who work alongside their peers, they serve as a first line of defense for addressing life’s problems, and as a way to point to other resources if needed.

“It is so easy to de-escalate a brewing issue if you can just get it off your chest,” Salzman said.

Ground rules are important: MAPS does not keep records of its conversations to preserve confidentiality. Peer support wingman also must report any “red flag” events, such as having suicidal or homicidal intent or breaching operational security. MAPS wingmen can also talk with Salzman or Lt. Col. Darrell Zaugg, a psychiatric flight surgeon co-leading the effort.

“They don’t have to name names, that way I’m not putting stress on them,” Salzman said. “I don’t want them to go to sleep with a secret that makes them uncomfortable.”

Stiftung Mayday had just 24 meetings in the first year of its program. By comparison, about 50 people consulted with MAPS in its first six months, and about 40 percent of them discussed flying-related issues, Salzman estimated. Only a few of the 50 needed professional help.

“Commanders have come to me and said, ‘I can tell that what you’re doing is having an impact for the better within the morale of the squadron,’” the lieutenant colonel said.

“Typically our community is very stoic: everything is fine and you herk the mission and you don’t complain,” she explained. “So to pull people from their shells and say, ‘it’s all right, if you’re having a thing, I know you can still fly. What can I do to help?’ That means a lot, and it changes the culture a little bit.”

U.S. Air Force Capt. William Hoffman, 59th Medical Wing Office of Science and Technology neurologist and aeromedical researcher assigned to Joint Base San Antonio – Lackland, Texas, gives a speech during a Military Aviator Peer Support wingman face-to-face training at Ramstein Air Base, Germany, Feb. 19, 2025. U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Jared Lovett

Next Steps

Hoffman said cultural change and buy-in from leadership is ultimately needed to replace “lie to fly” with something more proactive in terms of treating mental and physical health.

“Commanders at the front telling stories of what success looks like is going to be where I think real progress is going to be made,” Hoffman said, pointing as an example to former Air Mobility Command boss Gen. Mike Minihan’s efforts to reduce the stigma around mental health treatment.

“When there’s a leader like that who is clearly mission-focused, but acknowledges that people are also living their life, and it’s normal to have feelings and challenges, I think that really brought the narrative forward in a major way.” Hoffman said.

For now, Salzman plans to study for a year how many people use the program and what support agencies are most needed. Depending on the data, she’ll make a recommendation to Air Force Medical Command whether the program should expand beyond Ramstein. Salzman has an exportable package for starting up similar programs in other units. The only cost would be possibly paying for a license to a United Kingdom-based software company for the computer-based training, should MAPS be scaled up across the service.

“Beyond that, it is the lowest cost program that I’ve ever seen that can make a cultural shift in a flying unit, which is really hard to do,” she said.

Hoffman said the next step is a larger-scale feasibility study for expanding peer support in the Air Force, but it would require funding. That funding may have to come from the operational community, since peer support does not look like typical medical treatment and there is little foundational research to serve as the basis for a formal medical study, he said.

“It’s not really a medical problem, it’s an operational problem,” Hoffman explained. “So we really need the operational community to sponsor work on this.”

By improving aviator well-being, Salzman said, MAPS should also make flying safer.

“Mutual support is something aviators understand in the air,” she said. “When we’re provided with the tools to apply that on the ground as well, it only makes our units stronger and it decreases our operational risk factors by an unmeasured amount.”

Congress Unveils $150B in New Defense Spending for 2025

Congress Unveils $150B in New Defense Spending for 2025

The heads of the House and Senate Armed Services committees unveiled a plan for $150 billion in new defense spending in fiscal 2025 as part of a package of spending measures designed to advance President Donald Trump’s agenda. 

“This legislation represents a generational upgrade for our nation’s defense capabilities, including historic investments in new technology,” said Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), chair of the SASC, in the April 27 announcement. Added Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Ala.), his counterpart in the House: “With this bill, we have the opportunity to get back on track and restore our national security and global leadership.”

Still to come is the president’s 2026 budget request, which the Trump administration is expected to unveil in May. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has promised the first ever $1 trillion defense budget in ’26. The reconciliation package won’t be part of that; its funds are being counted toward fiscal 2025 and can be spent through fiscal 2029. 

But first, Congress must deal with fiscal 2025 spending. The newly proposed bill would inject billions in additional funds into major Air Force priorities like nuclear modernization, aircraft sustainment, and exercises in the Indo-Pacific, and set aside $24.7 billion to fund the president’s “Golden Dome” missile defense initiative, much of it for Space Force satellites and weapon systems. 

The biggest Air Force initiatives in the package include: 

  • $4.5 billion to accelerate production of the B-21 bomber 
  • $3.15 billion to increase planned production of the F-15EX fighter 
  • $2.12 billion for “readiness packages to keep Air Force aircraft mission capable,” a major underfunded priority
  • $678 million for Collaborative Combat Aircraft, the autonomous unmanned jets being developed to fly alongside manned fighters 
  • $532 million for Pacific Air Forces to host major biennial exercises 
  • $500 million extra for the F-47 Next-Generation Air Dominance fighter 

Experts say the proposed funds, which still face a lengthy process to approval, only start to address longstanding funding issues that date back years. 

“The Air Force needs sustained growth in its budget,” said Mark Gunzinger, a retired USAF colonel and former deputy assistant secretary of defense now with AFA’s Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies. “One-off increases in budget allocation for the Air Force is not going to address long-term readiness, insufficient force structure, insufficient flying hours, and so forth.”

Gunzinger co-authored a set of recommendations for the Trump administration calling for an extra $45 billion a year to the Air Force and Space Force. He called the proposed legislation “a very positive signal that [Congress] is sending about the need to rebuild our Air Force.” 

An F-15EX Eagle II takes off from Portland Air National Guard Base, Ore., last July. The new congressional spending plan would increase investment in the jets, one of just two U.S. fighters currently in production. U.S. Air National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Nichole Sanchez

Todd Harrison, a budget analyst at the American Enterprise Institute, called the proposal a “down payment” that needs to be the start of a “sustained effort.”  

Gunzinger echoed that point: “You have to applaud the Congress for doing it, but at the same time you have to say, it’s the start, but we need follow through.” 

Delineating how the new funding breaks down between the different services and combatant commands is difficult. Lawmakers specifically noted $7.2 billion for air superiority efforts, $12.9 billion for nuclear modernization, and $11.1 billion for activities in the Indo-Pacific, though all of those sections include non-Air Force programs. A rough accounting of USAF programs adds up to about $18 billion, not including joint missile procurement with the Navy, and considerably less than the $33.7 billion lawmakers want to invest in revitalizing Navy shipbuilding. That total includes $5.4 billion for two guided missile destroyers, $4.6 billion for an extra attack submarine, and $3.7 billion for an amphibious assault ship.

Harrison and Gunzinger agreed that the Navy was a clear benefactor from the spending package. 

“They’ve got a lot of big-ticket things … and I think there is pretty broad support within the Republican Party for shoring up the shipbuilding industrial base [and to] try to grow the Navy,” Harrison said. 

Gunzinger said “to an extent, that makes sense, because a conflict with China in the western Pacific, God forbid, that’s probably going to be an air, maritime, space, and cyber fight.” But he also credited the Navy for “very successfully informing the Hill” about its needs. “The Air Force has just recently begun talking about the need for more Air Force, which is exactly correct,” he added. 

What’s Next 

The new legislation now faces a long, complicated process, called “reconciliation,” to become law. The House and Senate first adopted respective concurrent resolutions directing their various committees to draft legislation either cutting or adding spending; the Armed Services panels were each told to “change laws within its jurisdiction,” and empowered to add up to an extra $150 billion. 

Now that Wicker and Rogers have done so, the House will markup the initial bill, and other committees will work through their respective chambers’ budget committee. All the measures will be rolled up into one massive package, which then must each be approved by the full House and Senate. 

Top congressional Republicans have said they want to finish the process in the coming months—Speaker of the House Rep. Mike Johnson has said he wants his chamber to pass a completed bill by Memorial Day.