Daily Report

April 13, 2009

Donley, Schwartz on F-22

Air Force Secretary Michael Donley and Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz offer their rationale for stopping the buy of new F-22 stealth fighters at 187 in an op-ed titled “Moving Beyond the F-22” in today’s Washington Post. In short,...

Airman Identified in Non-combat Death

The Pentagon announced April 11 that A1C Jacob I. Ramsey, 20, of Hesperia, Calif., died April 10 of injuries sustained from a non-combat related incident in Kabul, Afghanistan. Ramsey had deployed to support Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan from the...

“The Smell Test”

There is great discontent in Nebraska over the Air Force's selection of Barksdale AFB, La., as its preferred location to host the new nuclear-centric Air Force Global Strike Command. News of the outrage expressed by Nebraska elected officials has largely been supplanted by revelation of the budget axe Defense Secretary Robert Gates took to major Air Force weapons programs last week. We covered statements by the Nebraska Congressional delegation, calling the decision outrageous and contradictory. But we also find that, in addition to letters sent to the Air Force and DOD by Sen. Ben Nelson (D), Sen. Mike Johanns (R), and Rep. Lee Terry (R), Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman wrote an April 6 letter to President Obama, asking him to suspend the Air Force action. He writes: "The Air Force is ignoring its own evaluation process in not selecting Offutt Air Force Base. Offutt finished first in every evaluation category. This decision is unfair and unjust." In calling for an independent investigation into the matter, Heineman concludes, "This decision doesn't pass the smell test."

War Supplemental Goes to Congress

The Obama Administration submitted an $83.4 billion supplemental spending package for Fiscal 2009 to Congress on April 9 that includes $75.5 billion to sustain the US military’s operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. The White House’s bill summary indicates that this...

Soaring Ever Higher

The US military’s fleet of RQ-4 Global Hawk unmanned reconnaissance aircraft (i.e., Air Force and Navy assets) surpassed 30,000 total flight hours during the March 31 combat 22-hour sortie of an Air Force RQ-4 over Southwest Asia. Approximately 2.5 hours...

Good Recruiting, Again

The strong run in recruiting new enlistees for all the military branches and reserve components continued through March, according to the latest data released April 10 by the Pentagon. All elements met or exceeded their monthly goals, with the Marine...

Aerospace Extinction, Part 2

The number of US companies with the know-how to build combat aircraft will shrink again due to “budgetary limitations and recapitalization decisions” now being made. So says the Defense Department in its recently released annual industrial capabilities report to Congress....

Industrial Base Dominos

The Defense Department believes that prime contractors are generally healthy in the space and air-launched munitions sectors of the industrial base, according to DOD’s newly issued annual report to Congress on US industrial capabilities. (see above) However, in space programs,...

MOH Exhibit Opens

“Visions of Valor,” a collection of black-and-white portrait photographs of 140 Medal of Honor recipients went on display April 3 in the McDermott Library of the US Air Force Academy in Colorado. “These photographs are a wonderful homage to America’s...

Bronze Stars for Five Airmen

Bronze Stars for Five Airmen: The Air Force has awarded Bronze Star Medals to five airmen for their efforts while deployed to support operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. They are:

n Capt. James D. Couch, a security forces specialist assigned to the 349th Recruitment Squadron, Tinker AFB, Okla., received his medal for his work in training Iraqi National Police, serving as national police training coordinator, and helping to establish training camps—work that entailed conducting more than 30 combat missions to outlying sites and operating within a Baghdad hot zone. (Tinker release)

n TSgt. Timothy Bayes, 782nd Training Group Det. 6, Gulfport, Miss., served in Afghanistan as part of a provincial reconstruction team (PRT), making more than 190 convoys and marching through villages and fields under threat from improvised explosive devices and enemy forces. Both he and Snider below accomplished more than their required tasks. (82nd Training Wing release)

n TSgt. Brendan Brown, 87th Civil Engineer Squadron Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Flight, McGuire AFB, N.J., served as an EOD team leader in Baghdad, Iraq, where his team faced 43 emergency situations and destroyed more than 700 pounds of explosives, hundreds of IED components, and more than 3,000 ordnance items. (McGuire photo release)

n TSgt. Wendell Snider, 782nd TRG Det. 6, like his fellow instructor Bayes, served in Afghanistan with a PRT, risking the same life-threatening conditions to help Afghan civilians with power, agriculture, and economy issues. (see 82nd TRW release above)

n SSgt. Peter Arbelo, 87th Civil Engineer Squadron Explosive Ordnance Disposal Flight, McGuire AFB, N.J., served as an EOD team leader in Baghdad, Iraq, where his team carried out more than 51 combat missions critical to counter-insurgency operations. (McGuire photo release)

Briefer Briefs

Officials at the US Air Warfare Center at Nellis AFB, Nev., on April 6 formally opened the center’s Irregular Warfare Center of Excellence, which will evaluate, analyze, and train airmen and US allies in the means to integrate irregular warfare...

Air Sorties from SWA

Air Sorties in War on Terrorism, Southwest AsiaApril 8, 2009 Sortie Type OIF OEF OIF/OEF Total YTD ISR 30 21 51 3,828 CAS/Armed Recon 77 22 99 9,706 Airlift 150 150 13,040 Air refueling 44 44 4,423 Total 344 30,997...