The Airborne Laser (formally the YAL-1A attack laser) is back at Edwards AFB, Calif., where it will undergo tests that include firing—for the first time—its two solid-state illuminator lasers. The lasers will fire at a target board on a missile-shaped image painted on the NC-135E Big Crow to verify that the system can track an airborne target. The aircraft recently underwent modification at Boeing’s Wichita, Kan., facility to install the beam control and fire control illuminators, among other additions.
House, Senate Unveil Competing Proposals for 2026 Budget
July 11, 2025
Lawmakers from the House and Senate laid out competing versions of the annual defense policy bill on July 11, with vastly different potential outcomes for some of the Air Force’s most embattled programs.