An unarmed Minuteman III ICBM experienced an anomaly during an operational flight test Wednesday from Vandenberg AFB, Calif., forcing testers to destroy it for safety reasons over the Pacific Ocean, announced officials with Vandy’s 30th Space Wing. “Established parameters were exceeded, and controllers sent destruct commands,” said Col. Matthew Carroll, 30th SW chief of safety. “We plan for situations like this and everything was executed according to the plan.” Test controllers launched the missile at 3:06 a.m. West Coast time; after detecting the anomaly, they terminated the flight as the missile was over a broad ocean area, northeast of Roi-Namur, a part of the Kwajalein atoll in the Marshall Islands. An Air Force team will investigate the anomaly’s cause. The Air Force routinely conducts these operational test flights from Vandenberg to Kwajalein to ensure the Minuteman’s reliability and accuracy. (Vandenberg release)
After months of debate and sometimes public tension, the Space Force and Intelligence Community are making progress on establishing ways to work together, officials said this week—to the point where one predicted there will soon be “a sharing of data like we've never seen before.”