SSgt. Trevor Brewer, an airman from Gray, Tenn., received Germany’s highest civilian award for his role in helping to apprehend the Islamic extremist who shot two airmen to death in a cold-blooded bus attack last March at the main airport in Frankfurt, Germany. “I was definitely fearful, but I knew if I didn’t take action, the attack could have continued and someone else could have gotten hurt,” said Brewer, reported the Associated Press (via Fox News). Brewer received the Federal Cross of Merit from German Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich on Monday in Berlin, along with American Lamar Conner, a civilian airport employee, who also helped catch shooter Arid Uka. A jihadist-inspired Kosovar Albanian, Uka entered the bus for airmen on March 2, 2011, and began shooting, killing SrA. Nicholas Alden and A1C Zachary Cuddeback and wounding two other airmen. Uka turned his pistol on Brewer and fired, but the gun jammed. Uka fled and Brewer chased after him, according to AP’s account. Brewer accepted the cross on behalf of Alden and Cuddeback.
The United Kingdom’s Royal Air Force has unveiled a new electronic warfare drone designed to fly with fighter jets into contested airspace, including alongside its fleet of F-35s. RAF says it plans to develop models that draw on the U.S. Air Force’s approach of mating unmanned systems with crewed platforms.