US Conducts Open Skies Flight Over Russia, First Since 2017
COPE North Paused Because of Typhoon
Counter-Drone Systems, AI Software Among AFWERX Tech Accelerator Projects
USAF Details Game Plan for 10-Day Base Housing Review Directed by SECAF, CSAF
The Air Force is in the middle of a housing “standdown,” reviewing all 74,500 of the service’s housing units worldwide by March 1 following a directive from USAF leadership to find health and safety risks in base housing. The 10-day review aims to examine all family housing units firsthand for health and safety risks, according to a release. It will consist of tours of each unit that are conducted with tenants present, plus the solicitation of input from airmen about relevant problems they’ve experienced in their units, the release said. “The results will give senior civilian and military leaders a more thorough understanding of the extent and severity of the problems and help inform responsive solutions,” the release said. The same directive that ordered the review stated it will be the duty of senior USAF leaders to identify and help fix many housing issues experienced by airmen and their families, the release said, including “the presence of black mold, rodent infestation, flooding, radon, and faulty wiring.” The directive also charged the Air Force Inspector General with evaluating the way the service “responds to complaints about conditions at base housing,” the release said. USAF policy is also being reviewed to determine whether any directives are keeping commanders from being able to properly respond to such complaints, the release said. —Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
Special Operations Airmen to Ruck 830 Miles from Lackland to Hurlburt
Twenty special operations airmen will undertake an 11-day, 830-mile ruck from JB San Antonio-Lackland, Texas, to Hurlburt Field, Fla., in memory of late combat controller SSgt. Dylan Elchin and the 19 other special tactics airmen killed in combat since Sept. 11, 2001. The ruck will begin before dawn on Friday and is slated to end on the afternoon of March 4, according to a 24th Special Operations Wing release. Ten two-person teams—all composed of special tactics airmen—will take part, with all participants completing the initial 4.7 miles together. The teams will alternate rucking an average 12 of miles per leg for a combined 70 miles per day. Planning marches for special tactics airmen who are KIA is a tradition within this segment of the Air Force Special Operations Command community, according to the wing. This year’s iteration of the event is the fifth since 2009. People can track the march and get live updates by visiting http://raceday.me/v/75ea11.—Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory
Contingency Response Wing Commander Relieved Due to Conduct Unbecoming an Officer
Oregon Guard F-15 Experiences In-Flight Emergency
Defense Department Watchdog Reviewing US Base in Niger
The Defense Department’s Inspector General is evaluating the airfield and base support for Niger Air Base 201, the largest Air Force-led construction project in the service’s history. The base near Agadez is a hub for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance, with the 323rd Expeditionary Reconnaissance Squadron conducting MQ-9 operations in the region. The IG will evaluate whether the Air Force “effectively planned, designed, and implemented” requirements for the base, according to a Feb. 11 announcement of the evaluation. The base has been the focus of increased ISR operations since the October 2017 ambush that killed four US Army Special Forces soldiers. —Brian Everstine
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RADAR SWEEP
AFRICOM Adds Logistics Hub in West Africa, Hinting at an Enduring US Presence
U.S. Africa Command plans to begin routing flights to Accra, Ghana, as the hub of a new logistics network to ferry supplies and weapons to the patches of U.S. troops operating across the continent’s increasingly turbulent western region. Defense One
Air Guardsman Arrested After Reportedly Posing as CIA Agent to Impress Woman at Church
A man pretends to be a CIA agent to impress a woman he’s developed an eye for, informing her she is “the target of a terrorist organization and that her life was in danger,” and that “if she did not follow his directions, she would be seriously injured or killed.” Air Force Times
CRW Delivers Agile Mobility Expertise During Exercise Green Flag Little Rock
The sound of gunfire echoed across the open field at the Geronimo Landing Zone as Airmen from the 621st Contingency Response Wing based out of Travis Air Force Base, California, responded to a simulated base attack during a training mission in support of Green Flag Little Rock exercise, Feb. 6-17. Air Force News
Misawa Propulsion Airmen Speed Up F-16 Engine Delivery to PACAF Bases
The 35th Maintenance Squadron propulsion centralized repair flight received keys to a new storage facility that stores all F-16 Fighting Falcons engines for U.S. Pacific Air Forces installations in January 2019, enabling the team to provide engines to its sister aircraft bases more quickly. PACAF News
Pentagon Seeking Proposals For How to Use Sensors in Space to Quickly Target Enemy Missiles
A solicitation was issued by the office of Mike Griffin, undersecretary of defense for research and engineering, inviting contractors to submit ideas for a “Time-Sensitive Target Mission Payloads Demonstration.” Space News
One More Thing …
Woodrow Wilson Foundation Finds Only One State Can Pass US Citizenship Exam
A new survey of 41,000 Americans conducted by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation demonstrates why a greater emphasis on American history learning is essential to the nation. The Foundation found that in the highest-performing state, only 53 percent of the people were able to earn a passing grade for U.S. history. People in every other state failed; in the lowest-performing state, only 27 percent were able to pass. Woodrow Wilson Foundation