Daily Report

May 3, 2024

Allvin Unveils New Details of Integrated Capabilities Command, to Stand Up This Year

The Air Force plans to have its new Integrated Capabilities Command stood up by the end of 2024, Chief of Staff Gen. David W. Allvin said May 2, offering new details of one of the signature reforms announced by the service earlier this year. Allvin said around 500-800 Airmen will be working for Integrated Capabilities Command at the start, with “satellite locations” across the Air Force, though he cautioned his numbers were still in the works. For now, the Chief mainly hopes to get started with the command. "We cannot afford it to go so slow that it stalls and stagnates, and it makes it easier to go back,” Allvin told a small group of reporters at the Pentagon.

China is Having a ‘Strategic Breakout’ in Space Too, USSF Intel Boss Warns

A little less than three years after then-U.S. Strategic Command boss Adm. Charles Richard warned of China’s nuclear forces experiencing a “strategic breakout,” the Space Force’s top intelligence officer says the People's Liberation Army have done the same in space. “The PLA has rapidly advanced in space in a way that few people can really appreciate,” Maj. Gen. Gregory J. Gagnon said May 2 at the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies. 

Radar Sweep

Services Making Progress Putting the J in CJADC2: Vice Chief Grady

Breaking Defense

The military services are collaborating more closely to make the Defense Department’s Combined Joint All Domain Command and Control (CJADC2) a reality—with a bit of pushing from above in the DOD food chain, according to Joint Chiefs Vice Chair Adm. Christopher Grady. “I think increasingly the services are working together, although they have a different approach to it. But they are working together to bring capability that can be integrated,” he said.

Air Force, Navy Likely to Fall Short on Reserve Recruits in 2024

Air Force Times

Leaders from the Air Force Reserve and Navy Reserve told lawmakers in written testimonies May 2 that their forces are expected to fall short of this year’s fiscal year recruitment goals. In statements submitted to the House Appropriations defense subcommittee, the chiefs of the two components—whose members perform essential missions both at home and around the world—said a competitive environment to bring in new talent continues to remain a hurdle, although retaining troops who previously joined has been less of an obstacle.

Pentagon Technology Hub Sees Lower Transition Rate, Higher Value Deals

Defense News

The Defense Innovation Unit transitioned 10 projects from commercial prototypes to military capabilities in fiscal 2023—down from 17 the prior year and led by drones and autonomous technology projects, according to its annual report. The Pentagon technology hub said in the May 2 report that a smaller transition number doesn’t necessarily equal a lessened impact.

Space Force Flexes Muscle as Pentagon’s Smallest but Vital Branch

SpaceNews

The U.S. Space Force, despite being the youngest and smallest branch of the military, is emerging as a critical enabler for the Pentagon’s warfighting capabilities, a senior official said May 2. What was once a complementary space architecture is today the central nervous system of joint operations, said Brig. Gen. Robert Hutt, director of plans and programs for the U.S. Space Force.

How TRANSCOM Transformed to ‘Rapidly Adapt as Things Change Around the World’

DefenseScoop

With digital dashboards and analytics tools that integrate real-time military data and depict operational assets and potential threats, U.S. Transportation Command now has unprecedented visibility into the Pentagon’s vast arsenal of weapons and personnel it moves around the world for deployments, crisis response and high-priority missions, two senior officials told DefenseScoop.

Israel Is Shooting Down a Lot of Its Own Drones

The War Zone

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) are knocking down a substantial number of their own drones in the course of operations, a U.S. Marine Corps officer has disclosed. This underscores serious challenges that air defense forces in the U.S. military also face in telling friendly and hostile drones apart as uncrewed aerial systems (UAS), as well as loitering munitions, become ever more ubiquitous even in operations involving very small units.

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Marine Corps in Study Phase of CCA Plans

Aviation Week

The U.S. Marine Corps is in the study phase of its collaborative combat aircraft (CCA) effort, looking to figure out how the uncrewed system could fit into its fleet—operational or training—while the U.S. Air Force has charged ahead with contracts.

Pentagon Admits Airstrike Killed Civilian, Not al Qaeda Leader, in Syria Last Year

The Hill

The Pentagon acknowledged May 2 that it mistakenly killed a civilian in a 2023 airstrike in northwest Syria after U.S. service members misidentified the man as a senior al Qaeda leader. An internal investigation found American forces “misidentified the intended Al Qaeda target and that a civilian, Mr. Lufti Hasan Masto (Masto), was struck and killed instead,” according to a U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) statement on the findings.

One More Thing

The Best Military Movies and Shows Streaming Right Now on Netflix

Military.com

If you’re looking for the best military and war movies and shows on Netflix, we’re here to help you stop the scrolling, move past the algorithm, and find what you’re looking for. Netflix has a massive catalog of movies and shows, and sometimes it’s hard to find exactly what you want to watch. This list can help you cut through the war movie noise and get to the good stuff.