A B-1B bomber operating with the 34th Expeditionary Bomb Squadron in Southwest Asia on June 12 eclipsed 10,000 flight hours, becoming the first B-1 to accumulate this many hours. The aircraft, airframe number 85-0087, reached this milestone during a 14-hour mission in support of coalition operations in Afghanistan. “The recent 10,000-hour milestone demonstrates the B-1 has evolved into a multi-purpose weapon system that has come of age over the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan as the backbone of the combat air forces,” said Lt. Col. Steve Beasley, 34 EBS commander. He credited the skill of B-1 maintainers for the aircraft’s historically high mission capable rates and combat mission effectiveness. B-1s have been rotating into Southwest Asia since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and since August 2005 they have been a continuous presence there. (379th AEW report by SrA. Spencer Gallien)
The Space Force relies entirely on data—but it lacks the systems and tools to analyze and share that data properly even within the service, let alone with international partners, officials said May 1.