With famed company test pilot Tony LeVier in the cockpit, Article 341, the prototype Lockheed U-2 high altitude reconnaissance aircraft makes an inadvertent first flight during a high-speed taxi test. The first official flight came three days later. Since then, pilots in full pressure suits alone, unarmed, and unafraid have flown the Dragon Lady to more than 70,000 feet over every flashpoint worldwide. From film cameras capturing images of Soviet medium-range ballistic missiles in Cuba to enhanced sensors allowing today’s real-time data collection and distribution, the U-2’s mission hasn’t changed—getting information to the decision makers who need it most.
The Space Force and NRO will build a large number of targeting satellites to go in low-Earth orbit, the USSF’s top intelligence officer said May 2—keeping with the service’s emphasis on proliferating its assets. For months now, the two organizations have been working on a program to develop satellites that will…