During a special ceremony last week at Randolph AFB, Tex., TSgt. Israel Del Toro, who had been severely burned after his vehicle hit an improvised explosive device during a 2005 deployment to Afghanistan, reenlisted even though he has a 100-percent disability rating. He was burned over 80 percent of his body and remained in a coma for three months, and, if he survived, doctors believed he would not walk again. Del Toro, who not only survived but also is running in 10K races, persisted for more than four years to remain in the active duty service. A medical board finally offered the Tactical Air Control Party airman two choices: medically retire and train TACP airmen as a civilian or remain in the service, training TACPs. He said, “I could have gotten out and made more money; but it wasn’t about the money.” (Randolph report by Sean Bowlin; also read ABC News report)
The Space Force's first planned satellite launch to begin a new missile warning constellation in medium-Earth orbit has slipped from late 2026 to spring 2027 as a key component remains unproven. But the service is making progress and moving forward with plans for new batches of satellites, the Guardian in charge…