Osprey Won’t Return to Unrestricted Flight, Get New Clutch Until Mid-2025

The V-22 Osprey fleet will not return to full, unrestricted flight operations until mid-2025, a Pentagon official said, as part of a slow buildup following a deadly crash that killed eight Airmen and a three-month grounding. It will also be around that time that the V-22 Joint Program Office will start fielding a newly designed clutch for the Osprey, which is flown by the Air Force, Marine Corps, and Navy.

Air Force Launches Its Own Generative AI Chatbot. Experts See Promise and Challenges

Airmen and Guardians now have their own free generative artificial intelligence chatbot that can interact in a "human-like" manner, helping them with communications, task completion, and online coding like ChatGPT—but on a secure system. The Air Force and Space Force launched the Non-classified Internet Protocol Generative Pre-training Transformer or NIPRGPT, earlier this week, encouraging personnel with a Common Access Card to try it out.

Radar Sweep

Biden, Zelenskyy to Sign US-Ukraine Security Agreement at G7 Summit

ABC News

President Joe Biden and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will sign a bilateral security agreement at the G7 summit June 13 that will pledge long-term defense and security cooperation. “We want to demonstrate that the U.S. supports the people of Ukraine, that we stand with them, and that we’ll continue to help address their security needs, not just tomorrow but out into the future,” national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters aboard Air Force on his way to the G7 summit site of Bari, Italy. “We’ll be sending Russia a signal of our resolve.”

Lasting Grief but Few Answers: Families of Troops Killed in Osprey Crashes React to Hearing on Troubled Aircraft

Military.com

Gabriela Lavoy sat in her Texas home the morning of June 12 and thought back to when she spoke to her son days before he died, a phone call in which he revealed he was planning on getting married to his girlfriend and would spend Christmas with his mom for the first time in two years since he was deployed overseas. But her boy, 33-year-old Tech. Sgt. Zach Emmett Lavoy—an Airman with the 1st Special Operations Squadron—never made it home.

Does the US Need to Be Building Hardened Aircraft Shelters for Its Combat Aircraft?

The War Zone

Aircraft shelters with varying degrees of hardening are seeing a renaissance of sorts in response to growing drone and missile threats. China alone has built over 400 new hardened aircraft shelters across various bases in recent years, not to mention many other shelters offering lower tiers of protection. This trend is being seen in other countries like Russia, North Korea, and Iran. At the same time, a debate is now heating up between the U.S. military and Congress about the value of building new defensive infrastructure for its aircraft.

Anduril Gets $19 Million Contract to Develop Solid Rocket Motors for US Navy

SpaceNews

Anduril Industries won a $19 million contract from the U.S. Navy to develop a 21-inch diameter solid rocket motor for the second stage of the Standard Missile 6—a surface-to-air naval weapon used to intercept aircraft and ballistic missiles. ... Solid propellant—a stick of fuel and oxidizer pre-mixed and molded into a specific shape—powers weapons systems ranging from tactical munitions to nuclear-armed intercontinental ballistic missiles.

Japan Looks to Revamp Defense Industry After Years of Downsizing

Breaking Defense

Faced with an aging workforce, an ailing supply chain and a shrinking defense industrial base, Japan is taking steps to revitalize its defense industry and entice new entrants into the sector, a representative of Japan’s acquisition agency told Breaking Defense.

China’s Overseas Bases Aren’t a Big Threat, Yet: RAND

Defense One

China’s growing interest in opening more military bases abroad does not pose a big threat to U.S. forces in the next six years, RAND concludes in a new report out June 10. China is not well positioned to build foreign bases or run them in a way that will improve their ability to contest U.S. naval power, according to the report.

Space Force Turning to Commercial Sats to Enhance In-Space Monitoring

Breaking Defense

Following its success at tapping hundreds of ground-based commercial sensors to keep eyes on the heavens, the Space Force now wants to replicate that model for space-to-space imagery, according to the service’s head of intelligence. “The next pivot for looking up is to look in outer space from outer space. There’s no reason you only need to observe satellite maneuvers from the ground. You can do it from space,” Maj. Gen. Gregory Gagnon, Space Force deputy chief of space operations for intelligence, said.

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USAF’s ‘Franklin’ Low-Cost Cruise Missile Concept Seeks ‘Respect’

Aviation Week

When a potential adversary’s radar picks up numerous inbound cruise missiles, each target needs to be tracked and treated as a major threat. In a word, the targets need “Respect.” That is the thinking behind a new U.S. Air Force collaboration with the Defense Innovation Unit (DIU).

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House Appropriators Want Replicator Tranche 2 Investment Plans, Push DIU Funding

Inside Defense

House appropriators are seeking a detailed plan of Replicator's tranche 2 requirements and want to funnel millions into the Defense Innovation Unit to better transition developmental technology into the field, according to a document obtained by Inside Defense. In a report accompanying a draft of the House defense appropriations bill that will be debated by the full committee tomorrow, lawmakers note that no money allocated toward DIU is to be used for Replicator tranche 1.

One More Thing

98-Year-Old WWII Vet Believed to Be Oldest American Organ Donor Ever

The Associated Press

Orville Allen lived a lifetime of service, and when he died at age 98 he had one last thing to give: his liver. Allen, a veteran of both World War II and the Korean War and a longtime educator in rural southeastern Missouri, is the oldest American to ever donate an organ, transplant organizations said. ... He was a pilot in the Army Air Corps in World War II, then served in artillery communications in the Army 1st Cavalry Division in the Korean War.