The Air Force is considering hand-to-hand combat training for air advisors in response to the slaying of eight USAF air advisors and a civilian contractor in late April at Kabul Airport in Afghanistan. “I look at the recent deaths of the air advisors . . . and I wonder if we had had them in here for combatives, if that had been part of the curriculum, if we wouldn’t have had them be able to disarm [the assailant],” said Brig. Gen. William Bender, commander of the USAF Expeditionary Center at JB McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, N.J. “Infiltration and complacency” are the biggest threats airmen’s face in Afghanistan today, Bender told the Daily Report last month during a visit to the center, which supports air advisor training. “If we had the opportunity with those individuals to teach them just a limited combatives course on how to disarm, we probably could have saved many of the lives that were lost there. We didn’t, and now we’re looking at changing the curriculum,” he added soberly. (See also Friendly Fire.)
As with previous stealth aircraft unveilings, the Air Force’s imagery of the F-47 Next-Generation Air Dominance fighter has been doctored to keep adversaries guessing about its true shaping and design philosophy.