While the Pentagon’s AirSea Battle Office has no official role in the testing and development of the Long Range Anti-Ship Missile design and its integration on the B-1 bomber, the office is working closely with the services and the combatant commands to align concepts like the missile with the principles of ASB, said office spokesman Christopher Krisinger. The office’s connection is in more “broad, conceptual ways,” Krisinger told the Daily Report on July 18. Long-range strike is a core mission of the Air Force, and because the ASB concept has the support of Air Force and Navy leadership, the ASB office has worked to educate major commands and units on the fundamentals of ASB, he said. “Units, commands then can develop their own [concepts of operation], concepts, and practices to operationalize those principles,” said Krisinger. The ASB office “advocates for, facilitates, and monitors such developments like the B-1 test” as well as provides “top cover” for the Air Force and Navy to conduct similar experiments and exercises, he said. Lockheed Martin is maturing the LRASM design under DARPA and Navy sponsorship.
The 301st Fighter Wing in Fort Worth, Texas, became the first standalone Reserve unit in the Air Force to get its own F-35s, welcoming the first fighter Nov. 5.