Air Force Space Command’s 1st Space Operations Squadron at Schriever AFB, Colo., today (June 2) will cease operations of the midcourse space experiment satellite, which provided valuable data on activities in space six years beyond its intended service life. MSX, launched in April 1996 by the then-Ballistic Missile Defense Organization (now Missile Defense Agency), housed the Space-Based Visible sensor that was the US’s first on-orbit space-surveillance asset. The Air Force used it to track objects in geosynchronous orbit once it assumed control of the satellite from the BMDO in December 1998. With the retirement of MSX, the US will face a gap in space-based space surveillance until the follow-on, more sophisticated space-based space surveillance system satellite is placed in orbit in early 2009. Meanwhile, the Air Force will rely on its network of terrestrial-based sensors to monitor space. Gen. Robert Kehler, AFSPC commander, hinted in February that SBV, together with MSX, was on its last legs and would be phased out soon. (Schriever report by SSgt. Don Branum)
Air Force Changes Rules for Pregnant Aircrew—Again
April 3, 2025
The Air Force is changing its policy for pregnant aircrew, generally reverting to rules set in 2019 that barred female aviators from flying during the first trimester—or from flying in aircraft with ejection seats at all—due to potential risks to the pilot and her unborn fetus.