Daily Report

Feb. 5, 2026

USAF to Security Forces Airmen: Sharpen Up Your Greetings

Senior Air Force leaders have a message for security forces Airmen: Set a better example. “To security forces: you are expected to set the example by upholding standards and enforcing rules with integrity," states a Jan. 30 memo from Chief of Staff Gen. Kenneth S. Wilsbach and Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force David R. Wolfe, himself a former security forces Airman.

Radar Sweep

Israel Strikes Across Gaza, Killing 24, and Says Militants Attacked Its Soldiers

The Associated Press

Israeli strikes pounded Gaza on Feb. 4, killing at least 24 Palestinians, including two babies, according to health officials in the territory, where a fragile ceasefire is under increasing strain. Israel said it killed three militant leaders and others who posed a threat to its forces, and that some strikes came in response to a Hamas attack that seriously wounded one of its soldiers.

HASC Chair Seeking $450B for Defense in Reconciliation

Breaking Defense

The fiscal 2027 budget season has barely started, but the head of the House Armed Services Committee is setting two major goals for the year: securing $450 billion for defense in an upcoming reconciliation bill, and using the next defense policy bill to expand the defense industrial base.

COMMENTARY: Perfidious Planes? Think Again

Lawfire

“Recently, the New York Times and the Washington Post published stories that can leave readers with the impression that U.S. military members are war criminals. In this instance, it’s for allegations of perfidy with respect to a Sept. 2, 2025 strike on an alleged drug boat that killed 11 people. The authors include reporters I’ve known and respected for years, yet for whatever reason, the stories stumble over the law (which, admittedly, does have nuances) and omit facts pertinent to analyzing alleged perfidy,” writes retired Maj. Gen. Charles J. Dunlap Jr., the former deputy judge advocate general of the Air Force.

F-35s Caught in Trade Crossfire Between US and Canada

The Hill

Canada is reevaluating its planned purchase of U.S. F-35 fighter jets over the escalating trade tensions between Washington and Ottawa in what has become a flash point in bilateral relations between the two allies.

US Air Force Tests New, Rapidly Developed Cruise Missile

Defense News

On Jan. 21, the Air Force conducted a live warhead test of a new standoff cruise missile that was developed in less than a year and a half. The Extended Range Attack Munition, or ERAM, is an air-launched cruise missile that is designed to allow the Air Force to strike high-value fixed targets from standoff range with precision guidance, at an affordable cost.

Navy’s T-45 Replacement Will Not Be Capable of Making Carrier Landing Touch and Goes

The War Zone

The U.S. Navy has shown no signs of reversing course on major changes to its pipeline for new naval aviators in its latest draft requirements for a replacement for its T-45 Goshawk jet trainers. The Navy has already axed carrier qualifications from the syllabus for prospective tactical jet pilots and has plans to significantly alter how other training is done at bases ashore.

Gift link

RTX to Increase Missile Production Under Pentagon Deals

The Wall Street Journal

RTX’s Raytheon division committed to surging its missile output after months of pressure from Pentagon officials. The defense contractor said Feb. 4 it reached agreements with the Defense Department to speed deliveries and increase production capacity of Tomahawk missiles, AMRAAM missiles, and multiple versions of its Standard Missiles.