WGS-5, the Air Force’s fifth Wideband Global Satellite Communications spacecraft, is now operating on-orbit as part of the WGS constellation, providing the US military and international partners with additional access to fast, secure communications, announced Boeing, the satellite’s manufacturer on Wednesday. “WGS-5 addresses a critical need of the Defense Department by increasing capacity and enhancing global coverage, supporting warfighters with communications bandwidth when they need it,” said Craig Cooning, vice president of Boeing Space and Intelligence Systems, in the company’s Oct. 2 release. WGS-5 reached space in late May; the Air Force and Boeing then conducted on-orbit testing of it before turning it over to the unit that will control it over its operational service life. WGS-5 is the second Block II spacecraft in the WGS series after WGS-4 and the three less-capable WGS Block I satellites. The next spacecraft in the series, WGS-6, has been on orbit since early August and is undergoing testing.
When Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth addressed the Army War College last week, he mentioned changes to the way the military buys software alongside Golden Dome and the F-47 as key to his goal of “rebuilding the military.” And Lt. Gen. Luke C.G. Cropsey, who heads the Air Force’s most consequential…