Some 11 inches of rain dumped on parts of South Texas by Hurricane Dolly prompted the state to ask a neighbor for use of one of its Air National Guard RC-26 counter-drug surveillance aircraft. Texas Adjutant General Maj. Gen. Charles Rodriguez said, “I called [his counterpart in Mississippi] and requested that the aircraft be diverted [from assignment in Tennessee] to Texas for an immediate response, 72-hour-type mission to help with the life-threatening situation.” The approval was immediate, he said. Since their use after Hurricane Katrina, RC-26 aircraft have received system upgrades that enable them to download live video feeds. In Texas, the aircraft’s crew searched for stranded people and tracked the flooding threat, which had left many roads under water and disrupted power throughout the area. In one instance, the aircraft’s video feed told emergency responders that early reports of a dam failure were wrong, enabling officials to direct stretched resources elsewhere. (Texas Military Forces report by Sgt. Maj. Bob Dashman)
The Air Force announced a successful ejection seat test for its T-7A trainer, and an official told lawmakers the service expects the jet to achieve initial operating capability by November 2027—two signs of progress for the program.