Air Force Lt. Gen. Victor Renuart Jr. told Pentagon interviewers that both operational and strategic decision-makers now understand better the role of today’s unmanned aerial vehicles and that has led them to “collaborate much more” on using the information the UAVs provide. Renuart, who is slated to move from the Joint Staff to be military assistant to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, noted, for example, that Army and Navy special operators in Afghanistan are making use of “near-real-time or real-time information” data from Air Force Predators. “We’re dealing in tenths of seconds, as opposed to minutes, hours, or days, in some cases.” He added that UAVs “have become an accepted part of our inventory” and that “a lot of forward-thinking engineers” are looking to UAV technology to help solve the problems facing the US military over the next 15 years.
USAF’s Planned E-7 Fleet on Trump’s Chopping Block
May 13, 2025
The future of the Air Force’s acquisition of 26 Boeing E-7 Wedgetail aircraft is in doubt under spending plans that are being weighed by the Trump administration.