When asked what keeps him awake at night, Gen. Bob Kehler, Air Force Space Command boss, told the House Armed Services strategic forces panel Wednesday there are two things: recruiting and retaining “world-class” space and cyberspace professionals and long-term industrial base viability. AFSPC has dealt with the space side of the people equation for years as “we compete with civilian industry,” but now the command has taken on the new cyberspace mission, and Kehler says that side of the problem “will be an acute issue for us as we go forward.” He told lawmakers that various reports have described the industrial base as having “more fragility” than in the past, and he wants to ensure current leaders leave “the appropriate industrial base” to meet their successors’ needs in the future. Kehler also expressed concern that the need to “pay attention to [future] innovation” is languishing.
CCA’s AI Pilots Step into the Spotlight
March 9, 2026
Just one year ago, Collaborative Combat Aircraft took center stage as then-Chief of Staff Gen. David W. Allvin designated the two competing jets prototypes as the first unmanned fighters in Air Force history: General Atomics’ YFQ-42A and Anduril Industries’ YFQ-44A. Twelve months later, it’s the autonomy software that’s flying those aircraft garnering the attention. Autonomy software, more than hardware, may prove the most valuable and enduring element of the CCA program.