Daily Report

March 2, 2026

AMC Boss: New Airlifter, Connectivity Are Top Problems to Solve

Air Mobility Command’s interim boss said the Air Force is behind on modernizing its airlift fleet, to include selecting a Next-Generation Airlifter to replace the service’s fleet of C-5 and C-17 workhorses—a project that faces stiff competition for resources in the service’s modernization portfolio.

Radar Sweep

Trump Says US Destroyed 9 Iranian Warships

Axios

President Trump said March 1 the U.S. military destroyed nine Iranian warships and is in the process of destroying the rest of Iran's navy. The U.S. strikes target Iran's ability to close the strategic Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which roughly a fifth of the world's oil supply flows.

US Races to Accomplish Iran Mission Before Munitions Run Out

The Wall Street Journal

When the U.S. military’s top general laid out the risks to President Trump of launching a major and extended attack on Iran, one of the issues he flagged was America’s stockpile of munitions. Now that is being put to the test, as the U.S. races to destroy Iran’s missile and drone force before it runs out of interceptors to fend off Tehran’s retaliation, current and former officials and analysts say.

Shahed Drone Meets Clone in US War on Iran

Defense One

Overnight, robot-vs.-robot warfare spread from Europe to the Red Sea. The U.S.-made LUCAS, a low-cost attack drone modeled on the Iranian Shahed-136, made its combat debut in Feb. 28’s strikes on Iran, and drew a wave of Shahed attacks in return.

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Push from Saudis, Israel Helped Move Trump to Attack Iran

The Washington Post

President Donald Trump launched Feb. 28’s wide-ranging attack on Iran after a weekslong lobbying effort by an unusual pair of U.S. allies in the Middle East—Israel and Saudi Arabia—according to four people familiar with the matter, as Israeli and U.S. forces teamed to topple Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei after nearly four decades in power.

Here’s How Cyber Could Have Been Used to Target Iran in Operation Epic Fury

Breaking Defense

The opening of Operation Epic Fury, the joint U.S.-Israel operation to topple Iran’s government, has been defined by surprise kinetic strikes and Iran’s retaliation to its neighbors. But underneath the visible attacks, there may have been invisible strikes brought about through cyber operations.

PODCAST: Top Spacepower Insights: AFA’s Warfare Symposium

The Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies

Join Mitchell Institute’s Spacepower Advantage Center of Excellence team to for their key takeaways from the Warfare Symposium, which just took place last week in Denver. Charles, Jen, and Kyle also discuss the biggest takeaways from the panels they moderated. These are the behind-the-scenes observations and the conversations you didn’t hear on stage.

Putin’s Friendship Has Limits—as Iran Just Found Out

POLITICO

As Tehran was being pounded by U.S. and Israeli bombs on Saturday morning, its top diplomat dialed Moscow’s number. On the other end of the line, according to an official Russian statement, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov offered his Iranian counterpart sympathy and promised his—verbal—support. Iran, thus, became the latest country after Syria and Venezuela to feel firsthand what partnership with Russia does, and doesn’t, mean.

OpenAI Announces Pentagon Deal After Trump Bans Anthropic

NPR

President Trump ordered the U.S. government to stop using the artificial intelligence company Anthropic's products and the Pentagon moved to designate the company a national security risk on Feb. 27, in a sharp escalation of a high-stakes fight over the military's use of AI. Hours after the president's announcement, rival company OpenAI said it had struck a deal with the Defense Department to provide its own AI technology for classified networks.

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OPINION: What Both Anthropic and the Pentagon Get Wrong

“AI is poised to be the most transformative technology of our generation, perhaps of any generation, and we need to ensure the government and the private enterprises that develop these technologies have a constructive and mutually beneficial relationship consistent with American values,” writes former Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall.

One More Thing

Air Guard and Reserve Troops Say New Air Force Rules Add to Confusion over Benefits

Task & Purpose

The Air Force says a new policy will streamline access to health care for reservists and Air National Guardsmen who are hurt on duty. But Airmen and veterans with firsthand experience say the new policy does little to address the actual roadblocks that many encounter trying to collect health care and longer-term benefits.