Daily Report

March 10, 2026

Air Superiority Is More Than Denial

Operations Midnight Hammer and Absolute Resolve demonstrated the remarkable flexibility and overwhelming force possible when nations command control of the skies. It’s an object lesson to all who, having watched the carnage over more than four years of Russia’s war on Ukraine, some of whom have come to the erroneous belief that air superiority is no longer necessary or even achievable, and that a strategy of denial is necessary in the future.

CCA’s AI Pilots Step into the Spotlight

Just one year ago, Collaborative Combat Aircraft took center stage as then-Chief of Staff Gen. David W. Allvin designated the two competing jets prototypes as the first unmanned fighters in Air Force history: General Atomics’ YFQ-42A and Anduril Industries’ YFQ-44A. Twelve months later, it’s the autonomy software that’s flying those aircraft garnering the attention. Autonomy software, more than hardware, may prove the most valuable and enduring element of the CCA program.

Radar Sweep

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Early Iran Strikes Cost $5.6 Billion in Munitions, Pentagon Estimates

The Washington Post

The Pentagon burned through $5.6 billion worth of munitions during the first two days of its military assault on Iran, according to three U.S. officials, a figure that underscores the deepening alarm among some on Capitol Hill over the speed at which U.S. forces have eaten into the scarce supply of America’s most advanced weaponry.

Trump Says ‘the War Is Very Complete,’ and He’s Considering Taking Over Strait of Hormuz

CBS News

In a phone interview with CBS News on March 9, President Trump said the U.S. war with Iran could almost be over. “I think the war is very complete, pretty much,” the president said, speaking from his Doral, Fla., golf club. “[Iran has] no navy, no communications, they’ve got no air force. Their missiles are down to a scatter. Their drones are being blown up all over the place, including their manufacturing of drones.”

Anthropic Sues Trump Admin over Supply-Chain Risk Label

POLITICO

Anthropic on March 9 sued the Trump administration for declaring the artificial intelligence company a risk to the Defense Department’s supply chain, a step that further escalates a standoff over the ethical limits on increasingly powerful AI.

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US and Israeli Military Campaign Tests Limits of Air Power

The Wall Street Journal

When President Trump voiced hope last weekend that the air war he was unleashing against Iran would topple the country’s regime, he was making a bet against history. Never before have warplanes, missiles, and bombs been enough on their own to remove one government and replace it with another. The U.S. military has upended governments in the past, but all of those operations have required troops or at least an indigenous force.

Meet the Startups Trying to Build Military-Specific AI

Defense One

The battle between AI model builder Anthropic and the Pentagon has exposed a huge gap between what AI tools the military wants and what companies like Anthropic, xAI, and OpenAI actually make: AI tools for use by everyone, not specifically for the military. A handful of veteran-run or -financed startups aim to fill that gap. Their pitch: AI for war should have some basic understanding of war, beyond reading Tom Clancy fan fiction.

PODCAST: Epic Fury: Key Insights and Analysis

The Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies

Join Mitchell Institute fellows for an in-depth conversation to better understand the strategic, operational, and tactical factors surrounding Operation Epic Fury. Heather Penney speaks with retired Lt. Gen. David A. Deptula on how to design an air campaign; Charles Galbreath on spacepower’s contribution to the fight; retired Brig. Gen. Houston Cantwell on the challenges involved with prosecuting high value targets; and JV Venable on the realities of fighting an air war in the Middle East.

NATO to Study What-If Scenarios That Could Cause Arctic Conflict with Russia

Defense News

NATO nations are sending troops to Norway for a cold-weather exercise this week, as alliance officials kick off a yearslong analysis into causes for conflict in the Arctic. As part of the planning effort, a U.S. and Norwegian-led research task force will compile a report by 2029 under the name “High North Scenarios for Wargaming and Analysis — Winter Storm 2030.”

Europe Leads Global Arms Imports Market as Demand Surges: SIPRI Report

Breaking Defense

Europe bought 33 percent of global arms imports over the last five years, making it the largest defense importer by region on the globe, according to a report from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Ukraine, Poland, and the United Kingdom were the three biggest European weapon system importers between 2021 and 2025, said SIPRI, with close to half of all supplies in the region, as a whole, coming from the U.S.

Air National Guard General Says Iran Operation Demonstrates ‘Wartime Readiness’

Task & Purpose

Troops taking part in the war with Iran are “writing history” and showcasing their “wartime readiness,” the acting commander of the Air National Guard told his forces. A letter to National Guard troops, dated March 5, was sent out by the National Guard Bureau and signed by Maj. Gen. Duke Pirak, the acting director of the Air National Guard, and Chief Master Sgt. Joshua Moore, command chief for the Air National Guard.

Trump Appoints Erika Kirk to Air Force Academy Board

Colorado Springs Gazette

President Donald Trump has appointed Erika Kirk, the widow of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, to fill a seat on the Air Force Academy’s Board of Visitors. Charlie Kirk, the founder of conservative group Turning Point USA, was a member of the Board of Visitors and attended a meeting before his assassination in September.