Daily Report

Aug. 21, 2025

Air Force Academy Keeps Majors Intact amid Faculty Cuts

Twenty-five faculty members—about 5 percent—have left the U.S. Air Force Academy so far this year, including those who opted into the federal Deferred Resignation Program, retired, or were not renewed for another term. Nearly 10 percent of the academy’s 1,500 or so civilian jobs were identified for elimination in 2025, the school said.

Drone Hype and Airpower Amnesia

The proliferation of small unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) has shaken up the military world, fueling concern that UAVs could revolutionize airpower concepts and even negate the need for air superiority as a fundamental objective of airpower strategy. These perspectives suffer from a collective airpower amnesia acquired over a 30-year period in which American airpower reigned supreme against a series of nonpeer rivals.

Radar Sweep

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What Russia Is Doing to Grab Ukrainian Land While It Still Can

The New York Times

On a map, the gains hardly seem noticeable, measured in hundreds of yards, not hundreds of miles. But as President Trump presses Ukraine and Russia to make a deal to end their war, President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia is pushing to capture as much land as possible along a frontline that stretches about 750 miles, almost the distance from Chicago to New York.

Pentagon Reductions Set Back Critical AI-Data Platform

Defense One

Personnel cuts are crippling progress on Advana, a Pentagon data platform that has been widely used in recent years to accelerate functions from logistics to finance to readiness—and which is key to the department’s AI plans, current and former defense and military officials say.

‘Rapper Bot’ Hit the Pentagon in at Least 3 Cyberattacks

DefenseScoop

The powerful “Rapper Bot” Distributed Denial of Service-for-hire botnet impacted the Department of Defense Information Network in at least three attacks between April and August—when U.S. government authorities gained control of the disruptive malware web, two officials told DefenseScoop.

US Navy Sailor Convicted of Spying for China

BBC News

A U.S. Navy sailor in California has been convicted of espionage for selling the force's secrets to a Chinese agent who recruited him through social media. Jinchao Wei, 25, was convicted of six charges, including espionage, conspiracy to commit espionage, and unlawful export of classified data about U.S. Navy ships.

Wilsbach, Former ACC Commander, in Running to Be Next Service Chief, Sources Say

Breaking Defense

Air Force Gen. Kenneth Wilsbach has emerged as a serious contender to be the next Air Force chief of staff, sources told Breaking Defense. Following Gen. David Allvin’s surprise announcement on Aug. 18 that he plans to retire in November, three people familiar with the discussions pointed to Wilsbach as high on the prospective list to succeed Allvin, with two of those sources indicating the former Air Combat Command head should be viewed as the front runner.

Airman Killed in Off-Base AK-47 Shooting Near F.E. Warren Air Force Base Identified

Military.com

An Airman stationed at F.E. Warren Air Force Base, who died after being shot by an AK-47 fired through the wall of an off-base apartment in Wyoming, has been identified by service officials. Senior Airman Joshua Aragon, a specialist assigned to the 790th Missile Security Forces Squadron at the base's 90th Missile Wing, died early Aug. 16, a statement released late Aug. 19 detailed.

One More Thing

Watch: Hurricane Hunters Fly into the Eye of Hurricane Erin

WWSB

The U.S. Air Force Reserve has released new video from a Hurricane Hunter aircraft as it flew through the eye of Hurricane Erin Aug. 16. “Last night, we flew into the eye of Hurricane Erin—and captured the breathtaking stadium effect,“ the 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron said on Facebook.