Security forces personnel at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, are using a firearms training simulator, dubbed FATS, that lets them fire virtual bullets—actually beams of light—out of modified versions of real pistols, rifles, and light machine guns to help them prepare for qualification testing and deployments. Since most security forces “rarely get the chance to practice firing or even handle their weapon,” said SrA. Caleb Loposser, a trainer with the base’s 88th Security Forces Squadron, “this system gives us a cost-effective and safe way to work on the basics and help airmen successfully qualify the first time.” With FATS, airmen shoot the modified weapons at computer-aided video projectors that offer a wide range of training scenarios. Loposser said the FATS weapons even use compressed air “to simulate weapon recoil and give a completely realistic experience.” (Wright-Patterson report by Daryl Mayer)
Advancements in commercial space technology could make President Donald Trump’s proposed “Golden Dome” missile defense network far more likely to succeed than the failed “Star Wars” strategic umbrella initiative of the 1980s, U.S. Space Command’s top general said May 22....