The Air Force anticipates beginning soon the process of eliminating out-of-service B-52 bombers and Peacekeeper ICBM silos so that they are not counted against the allowable US launcher totals under the New START agreement with Russia. “The treaty calls for us to eliminate what we call ‘phantom systems’ that weren’t accountable under the old [START] regime and now are accountable,” Maj. Gen. William Chambers, Air Staff lead for nuclear issues, told reporters last week at the Air Force Association’s Air & Space Conference held just outside of the nation’s capital. He continued, “They are not deployed systems. So it is getting rid of basically old bombers and old Peacekeepers.” Chambers said this is “a fairly simple process,” but will take some time to complete because of the number of phantom systems. “We are probably going to start this fall,” he said. Addressing the phantom launchers is one of the several drawdown actions that the Air Force will undertake—along with reducing the sizes of the current B-52H and Minuteman III ICBM forces—so that the United States meets New START’s launcher caps by February 2018.
Bell Textron has won DARPA's contest for a no-runway, high-speed drone that will prove out technologies useful for special operations forces and possibly the Air Force's Agile Combat Employment concept. Bell's design converts a tiltrotor to a jet-powered aircraft able to fly at up to 450 knots.