Daily Report

Aug. 25, 2022
collaborative combat aircraft

Collaborative Combat Aircraft May Still Help Bombers, Experts Say

Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall has backed off the idea of an unmanned bomber to pair with the B-21 Raider—but there could still be value in building low-cost, less sophisticated drones to accompany the B-21. That was the key takeaway from a recent three-day workshop conducted by the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies that gathered Air Force leaders, planners, and operators, along with industry partners, to study potential uses for what the Air Force is now calling “collaborative combat aircraft.”
Ukraine

Biden Directs $2.98 Billion Ukraine Defense Package to Build Future Force

President Joe Biden is making a bet on Ukraine’s ability to withstand war and deter Russia for years to come, announcing on Ukraine Independence Day, Aug. 24, a $2.98 billion defense package that builds out a future force with high-end air defenses, radar, and counter-unmanned aerial systems that may take years to deliver. A defense official also said combat jets "remain on the table" but are not part of the new package. The largest defense assistance package yet relies on a lengthier contracting process that buys targeted new weapons for Ukraine instead of drawing down existing U.S. stocks. It also refrains from the longer-range weapons Ukraine seeks to reach Russian supply lines as they adjust to greater stand-off distances.
submarines

Supply Chain, Workforce Worries Pose Risks to Modernization of Triad’s Sea Leg

The Navy’s program executive officer for strategic submarines said his service’s leg of the nuclear triad is facing workforce and supply chain shortages like much of the rest of the defense industry. “We need skilled trades feeding our industrial base right now,” said Rear Adm. Scott W. Pappano, arguing that the defense industrial base “is actually part of that integrated deterrence picture. … It ought to drive our ability to deter our peer adversaries.”

Radar Sweep

DOD Unveils Plan to Improve Service Members’ Brain Health

Federal News Network

After years of work and study, the Defense Department is finally releasing a cohesive action plan for all military services to follow regarding brain health and traumatic brain injuries. Medical professionals in the military have previously described the plan as a “paradigm shift” in the way the Pentagon approached brain health. The plan moves the military away from the old way of addressing dangerous impacts to the head as single, standalone incidents and instead considers those exposures in a broad spectrum over a service member’s career.

OPINION: Veterans May Be Key to Solving the Recruitment Crisis

Military Times

“America’s all-volunteer military force is in crisis, and our veterans and military families can help. With just two months left in the fiscal year, this promises to be the worst year for military recruiting since 1973, the year that the draft ended. The Air Force, which needs to replace about 50,000 members per year, was more than 4,000 recruits below where it should have been in late June,” writes Marine Corps Col. Matthew F. Amidon, director of veterans and military families at the George W. Bush Institute.

‘We Need to Own the Heat the Way We Now Own Night,’ Pentagon Climate Chief Says

Defense One

When future U.S. troops deploy to environments several degrees hotter than today’s hottest places, they’ll need special gear to help them train and operate, the Pentagon’s climate-adaptation chief said. And if the U.S. military can figure out how to operate in extreme heat, it could give troops an advantage similar to the advent of night vision.

New British Aid Package for Ukraine Includes Finger-Sized Scout Drones

Defense News

Britain is to supply a further package of weapons to Ukraine, including target-spotting micro-drones, outgoing U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced during a surprise visit to Kyiv. Ukraine’s independence day saw Johnson reveal the planned delivery of unmanned surveillance systems, anti-tank loitering missiles, and other equipment, adding to a long list of weapons contributed by the British government since Russia invaded its neighbor six months ago.

MH-139A Grey Wolf to Enter Developmental Testing

Air Force release

In mid-August 2022, the U.S. Air Force accepted ownership of four MH-139A Grey Wolf test aircraft—mere weeks after Boeing completed the final Federal Aviation Administration Supplemental Type Certification required for the MH-139A to achieve its Military Flight Release. These accomplishments allow the Air Force to conduct testing of critical military capabilities of the MH-139A as the program progresses toward Milestone C.

One-Third of Vets End Up Arrested at Least Once. Researchers Want to Find Out Why.

Military.com

A criminal justice think tank has announced that it will try to study why veterans are ending up behind bars at far greater rates than those who never served. It will have help from two former defense Secretaries. The Council on Criminal Justice, in its announcement, explained that “roughly one third of veterans report having been arrested and booked into jail at least once in their lives, compared to fewer than one fifth of non-veterans.”

‘State of the Space Industrial Base’ Report Calls for National Plan to Compete With China

SpaceNews

For four consecutive years, the “State of the Space Industrial Base” report has called out what it sees as outdated thinking in the U.S. government on the use of commercial technologies in space programs. The 2022 edition of the report, subtitled “Winning the New Space Race for Sustainability, Prosperity and the Planet,” was written by military and civilian officials from the U.S. Space Force, the Defense Innovation Unit, the Department of the Air Force, and the Air Force Research Laboratory.

One More Thing

How the Warrior Games Create a Special Bond for Military Athletes With Disabilities

Military.com

Moments after time expired for a wheelchair basketball team at the 2022 Department of Defense Warrior Games, the Marines and their Canadian opponents posed together for photos on the court at Walt Disney World near Orlando, Fla. It was an example of the camaraderie that unites the roughly 300 athletes spread across teams representing the Marine Corps, Army, Navy, Air Force, and Special Operations Command, along with competitors from Canada and Ukraine.