Asked where he’d like to see his next investment dollar go, Lt. Gen. David Deptula, the Air Staff’s intelligence-surveillance-reconnaissance lead, said Wednesday he’d put it towards a long-range, multi-role strike platform. “We cannot move into a future without a platform that allows the United States of America to project power over long distances and to meet advanced threat systems in a fashion that gives us an advantage that no other nation has,” Deptula said following an Air Force Association-sponsored breakfast speech in Arlington, Va. He added, “We can’t walk away from that.” He emphasized that this future “bomber,” like modern F-22s and F-35s, will not be a single-role platform, even if it has a “B” designation, but rather a “flying sensor platform” that also has the capability to deliver ordnance. “No longer are we going to build or should we build single-capability platforms,” he said.
Lt. Gen. Dan Caine, nominee to be chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that the Defense Department needs to upgrade its electronic warfare capability and its EW training ranges; just as his predecessor said at his own confirmation hearing.