Thirty-nine security forces personnel recently were awarded the Air Force Combat Action Medal for their actions defending US and coalition bases during an insurgent attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, in July. Maj. Gen. John McMullen, commander of the 9th Air and Space Expeditionary Task Force-Afghanistan, presented the medals to the airmen during a Sept. 2 ceremony at FOB Oqab, Afghanistan, states a base release. In the early morning hours of July 17, 2014, insurgents “launched more than a dozen rocket-propelled grenades and fired automatic rifles” at a NATO base, the Afghan Air Force’s Kabul Air Wing, and Oqab, all located at Kabul Airport, from a multi-storied building nearby, states the release. Security forces retaliated from guard towers and launched quick-reaction forces with carbines, launchers, and machine guns, unloading more than 3,000 total rounds on the insurgents. The battle ended after for more than five hours “when an Afghan-led quick reaction force—enabled by the suppressive fire from Air Force and Afghan forces on the base—arrived at the attackers’ position and cleared the building, eliminating the threat,” states the release.
Why DARPA Thinks Stealth Is Obsolete in Future Wars
June 25, 2025
The stealth technology that gave the U.S. its airpower edge over the last 30 years is being overcome by new sensors that will make it hard for anything to hide, putting a premium again on speed and maneuverability, the deputy director of DARPA told AFA's Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies.