The Massachusetts Air National Guard’s 102nd Intelligence Wing declared full operational capability as an intel unit, with the opening of a new $17.6 million facility and associated equipment at Otis ANGB, Mass., Nov. 7. The Distributed Common Ground System hub will enable the unit to expand from gathering, processing, and disseminating intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance data from medium-altitude platforms, to medium- and high-altitude aircraft, according to a unit release. “From a historical perspective, our wing has now come full circle in our lineage,” from an observation unit in the 1920s, to an air-defense unit, and finally back to an ISR wing, 102nd IW Vice Commander Col. Virginia Doonan said. The 102nd IW has been working with MQ-1, MQ-9, and MC-12W platforms from a temporary ground facility since 2009. The new DCGS facility will expand its capabilities to now interface with both the U-2 Dragonlady and RQ-4 Global Hawk, according to the release. Massachusetts crews have been working from other DCGS sites to gain expertise for several years. The unit flew its final F-15 sortie in 2008.
The Air Force’s Hypersonic Attack Cruise Missile is behind schedule and may significantly overrun its expected cost, which could partially explain why the service is reviving the hypersonic AGM-183 Air-Launched Rapid-Response Weapon.