Lawmakers queried senior service medical personnel about the efficacy of creating a single medical command rather than having separate functions within each service. Lt. Gen. George Peach Taylor Jr., Air Force Surgeon General, calls the idea a “work in progress”—in that DOD is reviewing “various options—but he cautioned that the Air Force, in particular, would have to take a “much larger leap” than the other services because its medical operation is “decentralized.” The Army supports a unified medical command, while the Navy, like USAF, has concerns about the ability to carry out service-unique missions, like the air care provide by Air Force medical teams. The greatest benefit, they all agreed, would be in providing common training organizations and in purchasing supplies and equipment. However, Vice Adm. Donald Arthur said that it is important “not to meet the medical system’s needs, but to meet the services’ needs for combat service support.”
Watch, Read: CSO on the Need for Space Superiority, Control
March 12, 2025
Gen. B. Chance Saltzman, Chief of Space Operations for the U.S. Space Force, delivered the opening keynote of the 2025 AFA Warfare Symposium. Emphasizing the need for the U.S. to maintain space superiority, Saltzman made the case that the Space Force needs to develop capabilities to control the domain. Watch…