Space Operations Command Getting New Name, New Boss

The Space Force plans to rename Space Operations Command, one of its three field commands, to Combat Forces Command to emphasize its role in providing combat forces to different combatant commands. The change is not final but is expected to occur after the confirmation of a new commander, Maj. Gen. Gregory J. Gagnon.

Radar Sweep

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How China’s New Naval and Air Sites Would Aid an Attack on Taiwan

The Wall Street Journal

China is undertaking a large-scale build-out of infrastructure along its eastern coast, including air and naval sites that show its growing readiness for a potential conflict over Taiwan. Satellite images and other open-source material examined by The Wall Street Journal illustrate how these facilities would strengthen China’s hand if it launched an invasion of the island democracy. Beijing claims Taiwan as its territory and has pledged to take it, by force if necessary.

Trump Selects Top Military Intel Advisor to Run the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency

DefenseScoop

President Donald Trump has nominated Army Lt. Gen. Michele Bredenkamp to lead the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, the Pentagon announced Sept. 5. NGA is both a principal member of the U.S. intelligence community and a Pentagon combat support agency. Its personnel supply the military, IC and first responders with data and intel to address their analytical and operational needs.

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OPINION: Can Trump’s ‘War Department’ Win a War?

The Wall Street Journal

“President Trump signed an order on Sept. 5 to restyle the Pentagon as the Department of War, and the press has been preoccupied with the nomenclature. What should really worry Americans is whether Mr. Trump’s military can win the next major war, no matter what the sign outside the door says,” writes the editorial board.

China’s Military Technology Parade Underscores Need for More US Deterrents, Experts Say

DefenseScoop

The Trump administration should expand the United States’ weapons arsenal, international partnerships and signaling to counter China’s rising influence globally and deter the People’s Liberation Army as its 2027 deadline for being ready to invade Taiwan approaches, U.S. analysts and a lawmaker said this week. Chinese President Xi Jinping hosted one of his nation’s largest-ever military parades on Sept. 3 in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, to commemorate 80 years since Imperial Japan’s surrender in World War II.

PODCAST: A New CSAF, CCA Airborne, and Starship Success

The Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies

Heather “Lucky” Penney talks to our team about what a new Chief of Staff of the Air Force will mean for the service and the broader defense environment. We also discuss the CCA’s first plight, plus ACC’s focus on readiness. The conversation evaluates spacepower developments—everything from the most recent Starship launch to the X-37B mission and NTS-3.  Added to that, there are also a lot of issues going on with our partners and allies—quite a few are boosting their defense budgets, but some are calling into question buying U.S. systems. What does this mean for the defense ecosystem? We wrap looking at where the Sentinel program is headed these days and consider the latest with B-21 and B-52 modernization efforts.

Navy Taps Four Aerospace Primes to Design Autonomous Drone Wingmen

Breaking Defense

The U.S. Navy has awarded contracts to four major aerospace prime contractors—Anduril, Northrop Grumman, Boeing, and General Atomics—for “conceptual designs” for a carrier-based autonomous combat drone, according to a Navy document obtained by Breaking Defense. Additionally, Lockheed Martin is under contract for the drone’s “common control,” according to a slide on Collaborative Combat Aircraft from the Navy’s program executive office for unmanned aviation and strike weapons, dated Aug. 20.