Radar Sweep
Defense Secretary Hospitalized for Surgery Complications
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin went into the hospital on Monday for complications following an elective surgery, the Pentagon announced Jan. 5 He was expected to resume his full duties the evening of Jan. 5, Air Force Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder said in a statement. ... Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks has been filling in where necessary, Ryder said.
Pentagon Didn’t Inform Biden, White House for Days about Austin’s Hospitalization
The Pentagon did not tell President Joe Biden and other top officials about Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s hospitalization for three days, three U.S. officials said. National security adviser Jake Sullivan and other senior White House aides didn’t know of Austin’s Jan. 1 hospitalization until the Defense Department sent over word Jan. 4, two other U.S. officials said. Sullivan informed Biden shortly after DOD’s notification.
Congress Reaches a Deal on How Much to Spend for 2024 as Shutdown Deadline Nears
House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced a deal Jan. 7 on how much the U.S. government will spend in the new year, a significant step toward avoiding a shutdown. But while the agreement on a “topline” spending level breaks a logjam that had stalled the process, it doesn’t necessarily extinguish the shutdown threat as the first of two deadlines nears on Jan. 19, when some parts of the government will run out of money.
Boeing Aims for Annual Output of 6 E-7 Wedgetails to Fill Global Early Warning ‘Gap’
Aerospace giant Boeing plans to ramp up production of the E-7 Wedgetail to an ambitious six planes per year to keep up with burgeoning global demand, according to the company official charged with getting the early warning birds in the air. Previously, executives discussed plans for producing four of the radar planes a year with the possibility of reaching up to six. But in a December interview with Breaking Defense inside a trailer that houses a partial mockup of the Wedgetail’s interior at Boeing’s Tukwila Development Center, E-7 program manager Stu Voboril said it’s become obvious the company will shoot for the higher end as legacy airframes are phased out.
PODCAST: Airpower and Spacepower Predictions for 2024: The Rendezvous
In Episode 162 of the Aerospace Advantage podcast, the Mitchell Institute’s John “Slick” Baum chats with members of the Mitchell Institute team about the latest defense developments in the beltway and the broader national security community. We’re off to a new year, so we’ve gathered members of the team to discuss topics we should be tracking in 2024.
ULA Is Ready to Launch Its New Rocket. But Will It Be Able to Challenge SpaceX?
United Launch Alliance is set to send its much-anticipated heavy-lift rocket into space, as it endeavors to compete against launch titan SpaceX. The first flight test and certification mission for ULA’s Vulcan Centaur rocket is on track to launch from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida on Jan. 8, company officials said.
Cyber Command’s Premier Force Gets New Commander
Maj. Gen. Lorna Mahlock assumed command of U.S. Cyber Command’s elite Cyber National Mission Force in a ceremony Jan. 5. Mahlock, the first Marine Corps officer to lead the CNMF, takes over for Maj. Gen. William Hartman, who will assume the deputy commander role at CYBERCOM and pin on a third star.
Space Force on the Verge of Finalizing Long-Awaited Commercial Space Strategy
The U.S. Space Force is on the verge of finalizing a key strategy document outlining how it will partner with the burgeoning commercial space industry. After months of refinement, Deputy Chief of Space Operations Lt. Gen. DeAnna Burt announced Jan. 5 at the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies that the document is nearing completion. “We are just days away from signing off on the strategy,” Burt said.
Pakistan to Buy Chinese FC-31 Fighter Jets, Says Air Chief
Pakistan is set to acquire the Chinese FC-31 Gyrfalcon fifth-generation fighter, according to head of the Pakistan Air Force. Air Chief Marshal Zaheer Ahmed Baber Sidhu was speaking Jan. 2 at an induction ceremony for new equipment—which included J-10C Firebird fighters—when he said the FC-31 would enter service in the near future.
Air Force Announces Requirements for Pet Owners to Receive PCS Travel Reimbursement
Airmen and guardians seeking reimbursement for bringing pets with them to a new military duty assignment now have a list of the documentation needed to make that happen. An Air Force statement Jan. 4 lays out how personnel can receive compensation for those expenses, which are covered up to $550 for permanent changes of station within the continental U.S. and up to $2,000 for moves outside the continental U.S.
The U-2 Chase Car Is a Spy Jet’s Best Friend
Since 1955, the United States military has operated a jet that can leapfrog entire continents, sustain speeds of more than 400 mph and employ sophisticated cameras to photograph targets more than 13 miles away. That plane is the Lockheed Martin U-2 Dragon Lady, and it's a design so radical that pilots can't actually land the aircraft without help from outside. For that, they need U-2 chase cars.