pt test

CMSAF Says 2-Mile PT Test ‘Likely’, but Final Changes Still Uncertain

Changes are coming to the Air Force physical fitness assessment, but the service is not yet revealing what those are or when Airmen might expect to see them. A message from Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force David A. Flosi to other enlisted leaders hinted that the new test will include a two-mile run, and that Airmen will take the assessment twice a year rather than once a year.

Radar Sweep

COMMENTARY: Why Airpower Plays a Key Role in Israel’s Military Campaign

Forbes

“In his recent article ‘Israel’s Futile Air War,’ Robert Pape argues that Israel’s effort to destroy Iran’s nuclear capability and pressure the regime through airpower is doomed from the start. He claims that only ground forces can achieve such goals, pointing to historical U.S. operations as cautionary tales. But Pape’s central premise—that ‘airpower alone’ cannot accomplish strategic objectives—does not only misinterpret modern military history but also distorts understanding of the nature of joint operations and of how to best employ military forces to attain political goals,” writes retired Lt. Gen. David A. Deptula, dean of AFA’s Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies.

Tech Firm Uses AI to Make Pentagon Budget, Spending Easier to Track

Defense News

As lawmakers and Pentagon officials push for reforms to the defense acquisition system, a small tech firm is expanding a data-analysis platform it says could arm Pentagon weapons-buyers with the information they need to more effectively manage the Defense Department’s nearly trillion-dollar budget.

Top Lawmaker Wants More Progress on EW Capabilities Across Services

DefenseScoop

There aren’t enough electronic warfare tools resident within the U.S. military services currently, according to a top lawmaker. At the end of the Cold War, many of the services divested of their capability within the electromagnetic spectrum. Now, these technologies are at a premium and in high demand for jamming enemy communications, navigation, and missiles while protecting against the same. Adversaries have invested heavily in this area following U.S. divestment, forcing a sprint to reinvigorate American EW prowess.

GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator Successor in the Works

The War Zone

The U.S. Air Force’s first combat employment of 30,000-pound GBU-57/B Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP) bunker buster bombs in recent strikes on Iranian nuclear sites draws new attention to work toward a successor. There was already very active U.S. military interest in a new Next Generation Penetrator (NGP) when the MOP first began entering service in the early 2010s.