To celebrate the B-1’s 25th birthday, Boeing on Monday issued a release highlighting the bomber’s accomplishments over the years. Top on the list was the aircraft’s successful post-Cold War conversion from a nuclear-capable platform to the conventional-only aircraft used extensively today to support troops in Southwest Asia. Boeing notes that the B-1 went from an aircraft without a primary mission after it shed its nuclear role in the early 1990s to one that now plays a key role in Afghanistan. Indeed, B-1s have dropped more than 70 percent of the joint direct attack munitions used in that country, according to the company. The bomber, affectionately known as “BONE” for its phonetic pronunciation, officially turned 25 in June. Earlier this year, airmen of the 7th Bomb Wing at Dyess AFB, Tex., celebrated the bomber’s silver anniversary by setting several unofficial world records during B-1 flights from the base.
The Pentagon plans to use U.S. Air Force C-17s and C-130s to deport 5,400 people currently detained by Customs and Border Protection, officials announced Jan. 22, the first act in President Donald Trump’s sweeping promise to crack down on undocumented immigrants and increase border security.