Daily Report

June 30, 2026

Air Force Accelerates Sending B-21s to Ellsworth

The arrival of the Air Force’s B-21 Raider at its first operational base is fast approaching, and the service’s plans for its newest stealth bomber are coming into focus. In an exclusive interview with Air & Space Forces Magazine on June 26, Air Force Secretary Troy Meink said plans to bed down the first B-21 at Ellsworth Air Force Base, S.D., in 2027 are on track. The service has even pushed its schedule forward slightly, Meink said, though he would not detail by how much.

Radar Sweep

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Honeywell Aerospace CEO Says AI Works for Blueprints but Isn’t Ready for the Cockpit

The Wall Street Journal

Honeywell Aerospace has flown the nest. Long part of industrial conglomerate Honeywell International, the company completed its spinoff June 29 into a standalone manufacturer focused on things that fly—working on everything from cooling airplane cabins to guiding the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s Artemis II mission past the moon.

US and Iran Pause Strikes but Disagree over Next Steps on Talks

The Associated Press

The United States and Iran on June 29 separately announced they will send delegations to Qatar this week, though Tehran insisted it has not agreed to meet with the U.S. “at any level” after attacks across the Persian Gulf over the weekend challenged negotiations to end the war.

In a Bold Move, Rocket Lab Acquires Iridium Communications

Ars Technica

Rocket Lab announced on June 29 that it is acquiring the satellite communications company Iridium. The deal, made for cash and shares of Rocket Lab stock, values Iridium at about $8 billion. The deal pairs the launch company, founded and led by Peter Beck, with a decades-old profitable satellite company whose network of 80 satellites in low-Earth orbit provides telecommunications services.

Marine Corps Inks First Contract for Autonomous Ground Vehicle Production

Defense One

The Marine Corps will pay Overland AI $19.7 million to produce more than a dozen autonomous ground vehicles by early 2027. The vehicles, due to be delivered in about nine months, will be part of the Marine Air Defense Integrated Systems program, which is part of the service’s counterdrone approach, and support resupply missions.

Air Force Ponders Future for Red Hawk Beyond Pilot Training

National Defense Magazine

The Air Force won’t begin receiving its first production lot of Boeing-Saab T-7A Red Hawk jet trainers until 2027, but that has not stopped the service from exploring what else it could do with the aircraft beyond producing student pilots at Air Education and Training Command.

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Hegseth, Rubio, and Caine Had an Auto-Deleting Signal Chat

The Atlantic

The State Department last week released records ... in response to Freedom of Information Act litigation by Democracy Forward, which has filed more than 400 legal actions against the Trump administration since last January. The new release, which we reviewed, includes 13 Signal chats from the first six months of 2025 that have not been previously reported.

One More Thing

This Is What an Air Force Contingency Response Element Does

Task & Purpose

In the wake of two major earthquakes that hit Venezuela, the United States military is surging aid, personnel, and aircraft to help coordinate relief. Roughly 100 highly specialized Airmen from a contingency response element arrived in the country with the vital job of helping restart airport operations after the quakes.