Daily Report

April 5, 2024

Allvin, Kendall Tour Pacific Islands to See Progress on ACE

Top Air Force officials including Secretary of the Air Force Frank Kendall and Chief of Staff of the Air Force Gen. David W. Allvin are on a weeklong tour of the Pacific, including visits to key bases the U.S. hopes to expand to be better positioned for a possible conflict with China.

Contractor Crashed MQ-9 on Loan from Air Force in 2023, Causing $16 Million in Damage

The contractor behind a program to use drones to capture data from hypersonic tests crashed an MQ-9 on loan from the Air Force last year, causing $16 million in damages, according to a new accident investigation report. The crash took place Jan. 18, 2023, at Southern California Logistics Airport in Victorville, Calif. Crew members, while members of the California National Guard, were working as civilians for Integrated Innovation, Incorporated, or i3, at the time. 

Radar Sweep

Pentagon Defends Pace of Weapon Shipments as Ukraine Worries It’s Too Late

POLITICO

The Pentagon is defending its steady rollout of weapons to Ukraine even as officials in Kyiv say the assistance is coming too slowly—and it might already be too late to help turn the tide of the war in Ukraine’s favor. ... While the incoming F-16 fighter jets are welcome, they would’ve been more helpful a year ago, a senior officer said. The planes were originally expected to arrive in Ukraine by the end of 2023, and now they’re supposed to arrive by late spring once pilot training is complete.

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A Year After Chinese Spy Balloon Drama, US Military Seeks Its Own High-Flying Balloons

Inside Defense

A year after a Chinese stratospheric balloon flew across the United States—triggering a political furor, discussion about gaps in domain awareness and the eventual combat downing of the airship—the U.S. military is seeking funding to begin its own high-altitude balloon project to conduct intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance.

T-6 Training Jet Makes Emergency Landing at Joint Base San Antonio

Air Force Times

No injuries were reported after a T-6A Texan II training jet made an emergency landing at Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph, Texas, on April 3. The crash, involving an aircraft assigned to the base’s 559th Flying Training Squadron, occurred around 11:30 a.m. local time, said Air Education and Training Command, which oversees the squadron. The Air Force is investigating the cause of the accident.

Pentagon Delays F-35 Retrofits amid Upgrade Woes

Breaking Defense

Problems with an upgrade installed on some Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighters rolling off the production line have now disrupted plans to incorporate those upgrades on existing aircraft, and the F-35 Joint Program Office does not have a date for when those jets will get the much-anticipated retrofits.

Scout Space Eyes Military Customers for Space Domain Awareness Sensor

SpaceNews

Scout Space, a startup based in Reston, Va., is developing a space domain awareness sensor aimed at the military market as the U.S. seeks new ways to monitor and protect its assets in orbit. The company on April 4 announced it won a $1.8 million Small Business Innovation Research contract under the SpaceWERX Tactically Responsive Space program.

Russian Military ‘Almost Completely Reconstituted,’ US Official Says

Defense News

Russia has rebuilt its military after suffering enormous losses during its invasion of Ukraine, according to a U.S. State Department official. “We have assessed over the course of the last couple of months that Russia has almost completely reconstituted militarily,” said Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell at an event hosted by the Center for a New American Security.

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US Air Force Eyeing SATCOM Upgrades for KC-135s

Aviation Week

The U.S. Air Force wants to modify 326 of its Boeing C/KC-135 aircraft to have commercial access to both secure and nonsecure satellite communications. The service on April 11-12 will hold industry days near Tinker Air Force Base, Okla., for the new effort.

Air Force Materiel Command Details Air Force Reorganization Impact

Dayton Daily News

Air Force Materiel Command—the major Wright-Patterson Air Force Base-headquartered mission responsible for equipping the Air Force—revealed new details April 4 on how the Air Force’s planned reorganization will impact it. The changes will involve no significant job disruptions, a spokesman for the command said.

One More Thing

VIDEO: Wen Zhang Discusses Olympic Training

USAFA Athletics

A former two-time WAC Swimmer of the Year, Wen Zhang, a 2023 U.S. Air Force Academy graduate, discusses life in the World Class Athlete Program, his maturation in the pool, and the goals laid out before him as he aims to make the 2024 Olympic roster.