Daily Report

Dec. 9, 2024

B-52s, F-15s, and A-10s Conduct Massive Anti-ISIS Airstrikes in Syria After Fall of Assad

The U.S. military conducted a punishing series of airstrikes against Islamic State militants on Dec. 8 following the sudden demise of the ruling Assad regime. U.S. Air Force B-52 Stratofortress bombers, F-15E Strike Eagles, and A-10 Thunderbolt II attack aircraft conducted dozens of airstrikes against Islamic State leaders, fighters, and camps in central Syria, dropping about 140 munitions on over 75 targets.

As Space Gets More Crowded, Space Force Needs New AI Tools to Keep Up: Experts

Machine learning AI (AI/ML) is quite different from the generative AI large language models that have captured headlines and public imagination in the last two years, but it is vital to help human analysts sift through and make sense of the huge amount of data coming off of and about the rapidly proliferating number of satellites, especially in low-earth orbit, or LEO.

Radar Sweep

‘A New History for Syria’: Assad Flees to Russia in Stunning Downfall

USA Today

Syrian rebels seized Damascus on Dec. 8, and long-time President Bashar al-Assad fled the battle-scarred country amid the stunning collapse of his regime after 13 years of war. Assad and his family have arrived in Russia, granted asylum “on humanitarian grounds,” Russian news agencies reported on Dec. 8, citing a Kremlin source.

The 11-Day Blitz by Syrian Rebels That Ended 50 Years of Assad Rule

The Wall Street Journal

Entering the weekend, Syria President Bashar al-Assad showed no signs of yielding. As armed rebels closed in Dec. 7 on Damascus, Assad ordered his forces to defend the Syrian capital, seemingly confident the military would come to his rescue, according to Syrian officials familiar with the matter. By late Dec. 7, Assad had vanished. He didn’t show up for a prepared address to the nation, and his cabinet had no idea where he was. They learned with the rest of the world that Assad had escaped the country hours ahead of the rebels who captured Syria.

Air Force Not Ready to Stop Buying Human-Piloted Jets

The New York Times

The Air Force is at least decades away from being ready to stop buying and flying human-piloted fighter jets like the F-35, but it also does not want to rush into building a next generation of these high-priced fighting machines until it has a better idea of just what it needs. That is the conundrum the Air Force detailed this week, as it is facing increasing scrutiny over its spending on piloted fighter jets, most notably from Elon Musk, whom President-elect Donald J. Trump has appointed to help oversee a governmentwide cost-cutting effort.

On His Last Indo-Pacific Trip as SECDEF, Austin Will See ‘a Lot of Firsts’ in Japan

DefenseScoop

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin touched down in Japan on Dec. 8, kicking off his 13th and final trip to the Indo-Pacific region as the Pentagon’s chief. Here, he’ll spend the next three days engaging with U.S. troops and Japanese leaders about ongoing joint command-and-control upgrades the two militaries are pursuing, as well as a range of other nascent cooperative efforts designed to expand and modernize their shared arsenals of warfighting assets.

NATO to Launch New Cyber Center by 2028: Official

Breaking Defense

In order for the alliance to be better equipped at dealing with cyber threats, NATO is in the process of standing up a new cyber center—to go online by 2028—that will meld parts of its various cyber entities into one, a NATO official told Breaking Defense this week.

Defense Tech Firms Establish AI-Focused Consortium

Defense News

Palantir and Anduril, two leading defense technology firms, announced today they’re creating an industry consortium to address what they see as hurdles impeding the Defense Department’s adoption of AI.

US Space Force Official Warns of Rising Chinese Threats

SpaceNews

The vice chief of space operations for the U.S. Space Force, Gen. Michael Guetlein, issued a stark warning this weekend about China’s accelerating advances in space technology and its growing capacity to challenge the United States’ dominance in orbit. Speaking Dec. 7 at the Reagan National Defense Forum in Simi Valley, Calif., Guetlein described the evolving space environment as increasingly hostile, marked by the erosion of longstanding norms and the emergence of new threats to U.S. space assets.

One More Thing

GALLERY: US Military Bases Celebrate the Season with Christmas Tree Lightings, Holiday Festivals

Stars and Stripes

U.S. military bases across the country and around the world are hosting Christmas tree lighting ceremonies and festive activities for service members and their families to celebrate the beginning of the holiday season. Military communities are gathering to witness the illumination of largely decorated Christmas trees and to enjoy holiday parades, markets, games and special appearances by Santa Claus and Mrs. Claus.