AFSOC Commander Captures Mixed Emotions of Vets as Kabul Falls

AFSOC Commander Captures Mixed Emotions of Vets as Kabul Falls

As C-17s and C-130s lofted thousands of Americans and Afghan nationals fleeing from Kabul International Airport, Air Force Special Operations Command chief Lt. Gen. James C. “Jim” Slife articulated many of the mixed reactions of the tens of thousands of American service men and women who served in Afghanistan over the last 20 years.

In an Aug. 16 post shared on the AFSOC Facebook page, Slife noted that he had served a third of his career in the Afghanistan fight, with the responsibility of “sending countless Airmen into harm’s way there, not all of whom returned to their families.” He began sending home the remains of friends and teammates under his command starting in 2003 and said he’s felt all the “highs and lows” of success, frustration, and loss on the Afghan field of battle.

“Like many, I struggle to make sense of it all,” Slife wrote. He acknowledged that there will be histories written that will dissect the strategies and tactics applied in the “cold, unforgiving light” of hindsight, but the experience is still “too close” for him to reach hard conclusions about it all.

However, there are a few things, he wrote, “of which I’m certain.”

First, “the Airmen of AFSOC have done what they were asked to do magnificently.”

“Valor. Sacrifice. Duty. All of it. I wake up every morning with a profound sense of gratitude to be associated with this command” and the Airmen who comprise it.

“Even today,” Slife wrote, AFSOC forces “answer the call” and do everything asked of them. “From Medal of Honor recipient MSgt. John Chapman to the still-serving squadron commander currently on his 19th deployment, AFSOC Airmen have done their duty magnificently.”

There will be “many hard days, … months, … year[s] ahead” for those who served, “often with deep ambivalence” about how they feel about the experience. Veterans will process those feelings “all the while continuing to deal with the physical, … neurocognitive, … psychological, … and moral wounds we’ve suffered along the way.”

He urged his troops and other Airmen to “talk about it” with chaplains, psychologists, and physicians, in order to “put your own experiences into some context that will allow you to move forward positively and productively.” Resources are available for those who’ve served and those still serving, he said.

To troops who can’t find resources through the Preservation of the Force and Family program, the Veterans Affairs Department, the base mental health clinic, the local chapel, the Airman and Family Readiness Center or Military OneSource, he advised, “ask your chain of command or message me directly and let us help you find the right avenue.”

The AFSOC team has been “through too much together … to try to process these very complex things on our own.”

Slife offered an extended quote from the beginning of Charles Dickens’ “A Tale of Two Cities,” which, paraphrased, opens, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. … the epoch of incredulity, … the season of light, … the season of darkness, … the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.”

Slife said, “I don’t know what it all means. But for now, the knowledge that doing one’s duty is its own reward will have to be enough.”

More than six thousand people forwarded or shared the message.

Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force Joanne S. Bass thanked Slife for the comments, saying he had put into words “the feelings of many.”

Bass said she and her husband both served tours in Afghanistan “and have deep emotions about what transpired.” She has been thinking for days about the people she served with, the missions they performed, and “the friends I lost.”

Now, Bass said, “We must remain committed to ensuring the sacrifice that so many have made” continues to matter by “providing the best military advice to our nation’s leaders and through our unwavering commitment to the defense of our country. We owe it to our fallen brothers and sisters to come together now, more than ever, and see this through.”

Afghanistan Evacuations Resume After Chaos at Kabul’s Airport

Afghanistan Evacuations Resume After Chaos at Kabul’s Airport

Military flight operations at Kabul’s airport resumed Aug. 16 after a period of chaos halted flights. Images and videos circulating online showed desperate Afghans mobbing U.S. Air Force C-17s as they took off to evacuate Americans and others, as the Taliban reclaimed control of the country.

Hundreds of people crammed into C-17s. Videos and images showed one C-17 pushing through throngs of Afghans as it tried to get to the runway. People clung to the C-17’s landing gear, only to fall to their deaths as the aircraft left the Kabul airport.

Defense Department officials said during an Aug. 16 briefing that over a 48-hour period, the U.S. evacuated about 700 Afghan special immigrant visa, or SIV, recipients and hundreds of embassy personnel. The Defense Department could not provide specifics on the total number of personnel evacuated so far.

President Joe Biden, in an afternoon address from the White House, said the deterioration in Afghanistan unfolded “more quickly than we anticipated” as Afghan leaders fled the country and the military collapsed, but he insisted the drawdown was the right decision.

“We will end America’s longest war after 20 long years of bloodshed,” Biden said. “The events we are seeing now are sadly proof that no amount of military force would ever deliver a stable, united, secure Afghanistan—as known in history, the graveyard of empires. What’s happening now could just as easily happen five years ago or 15 years in the future, let’s be honest. Our mission in Afghanistan has … made many missteps over the past two decades.”

Biden ordered another 1,000 troops from the 82nd Airborne to Kabul, with more USAF C-17s mobilizing across the country to take in the additional forces.

U.S. troops struggled to regain security at the sprawling airport, which has a large military base on one side and a commercial hub on the other. Commercial flights halted at the airport as the military took over operations.

Maj. Gen. Hank Taylor, the director of current operations for the Joint Staff, said operations resumed late Aug. 16 as troops were able to clear the runway to allow C-17s to land. By the end of the day, up to 3,500 U.S. troops were expected to be on the ground. U.S. embassy personnel, evacuated to the airport the day before, “remain safe and are preparing to depart,” he said.

Satellite images showed throngs of people on the airport’s runway. American troops tried to control the crowds with concertina wire, warning shots, and vehicles. Pentagon spokesman John F. Kirby said that in multiple “security incidents” at the airport, troops returned fire at two individuals who shot into a crowd. U.S., Turkish, and other troops attempted to clear the airfield.

“We do not know how long this will take. … We obviously don’t want anyone else to get hurt, so we’re going to work methodically in the coming hours to restore a safe and secure environment,” Kirby said as military flights had just begun to resume.

The Pentagon plans to fly in the remaining forces and to use the empty aircraft to evacuate more people. If the airfield is clear and safe enough, more aircraft can flow in, ramping up to a pace of 20-30 sorties per day, with a capacity to evacuate up to 5,000 people per day.

About 22,000 more Afghans await the SIV process to depart.

U.S. Central Command boss Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr. met with Taliban leaders in Doha, Qatar, on Aug. 15 and was “clear and firm in his discussions with Taliban leaders that any attack on our people or on our operations at the airport would be met swiftly with a very forceful response,” Kirby said.

Before airport operations paused, a procession of C-17s took off full of evacuating personnel while USAF tankers orbited above. One C-17, callsign RCH871, reportedly carried approximately 800 people late Aug. 15. Former NATO Supreme Allied Commander retired Adm. James Stavridis tweeted that an Air Force general told him of the mission, flown by the 816th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron.

Audio of a radio or other voice call apparently between the C-17 and a control center, posted online, includes the controller asking, “How many people do you think are on your jet? Eight hundred people on your jet? Holy cow. OK. Hey, well, good job getting off the ground.” The controller then confirms the aircraft is inbound to Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar. A defense official told Defense One the number was closer to 640, close to a new record.

A photograph posted on the unofficial “Air Force amn/nco/scno” Facebook page shows the interior of a C-17 packed with people sitting on the floor of the plane.

Air Forces Central Command and Air Mobility Command, when asked by Air Force Magazine, for any information about the ongoing airlift mission referred all questions to the Office of the Secretary of Defense.

Get Ready for the Next Generation of High-Performance Propulsion

Get Ready for the Next Generation of High-Performance Propulsion

A brief history of aircraft propulsion, from piston engines to early jets, to turbofans, and now GE’s advanced entry.

The first airplanes were powered by piston engines turning propellers, and when gas turbine engines emerged decades later, they quickly proved able to propel aircraft higher, further, and faster. The cycle repeated itself with the turbofan in the 1960s and ’70s. 

Yet as dazzling as any new technology is when first developed, something better eventually surpasses it. Such is the case with GE’s Adaptive Cycle Engine, a new propulsion technology that can deliver either power or efficiency on demand. 

The adaptive engine design entails a three-stream architecture that comes together to improve thrust by 10 percent and fuel efficiency by 25 percent. Efficient thermal management capability—the ability to dissipate heat more effectively—also enhances combat effectiveness. 

Use of advanced component technologies—such as ceramic matrix components (CMC), polymer matrix composites (PMC) and additive manufacturing allows for the use of fewer parts. The results include lower sustainment costs for the F-35. The plane would have longer range and loiter times without the need for midair refueling, as well as increased speed and the ability to carry heavier ordnance payloads. 

“Cold War-era engines were designed to confront the Soviets on the Eastern Front in Europe,” notes David Tweedie, General Manager for Advanced Products at GE Edison Works. “The design focus was on squeezing out the most thrust for every pound of airflow.” 

Performance was valued over efficiency, because range was not a primary issue of concern. 

Following Operation Desert Storm to expel Iraq from Kuwait in1991, however, planners began to see range as increasingly important. Navy aircraft flying from aircraft carriers in the Arabian Gulf lacked the range to strike deep into Iraqi territory. Air Force fighters flying from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Jordan needed to refuel as soon as they were at altitude. Yet the combination of stealth and precision munitions enabled the United States and its coalition partners to reduce Iraq’s army—then the world’s fourth largest—to shambles within weeks, setting the stage for a brief and overwhelming ground assault that followed. 

The world was watching. 

“U.S. adversaries were paying attention,” Tweedie said. They saw the value of stealth and performance, but also sought ways to counter those strategic U.S. advantages. “But one way to defeat stealth and precision is to force your adversary to keep its carriers and tankers so far away that tactical fighters can’t get to the theater of operations, can’t get close enough to conduct their mission,” Tweedie said. “That’s how our adversaries sought to negate our advantage.”

In partnership with the US Air Force, GE’s XA100, however, rewrites the book on aviation power. Turbofan technology can be optimized to do one of two things. Elongating the turbofan increases thrust, while broadening the engine’s aperture improves efficiency. The XA100 is able to reconfigure itself on demand, shifting from fuel efficiency for extended range and loiter times to high-thrust for air combat. 

For GE, it’s one more step in a natural progression. “GE’s launch into the aviation business matured and developed in the 1920s and ’30s so that by the time World War II came around, many piston engines were using GE turbochargers to help with performance,” Tweedie said. 

By then, both Germany and England began developing gas-turbine propulsion technology, but the British, focused with preparation for war, handed off their prototype to the U.S. GE tested its first turbojet in 1942 and its jet engines powered the F-86 Sabre during the Korean War and F-4 Phantoms and F-5 Tigers in the Vietnam War era. 

Engine development is cyclical, Tweedie says. “You apply research and development money into a technology for many years before you can harness it. Then you hit an inflection point, when you really start to understand the technology, and you can deliver massive improvements in the capability of your products,” he explains. “Eventually, though, you come to a point where the technology becomes mature and you need to do something fundamentally different.”

When that happened in the 1960s, U.S. researchers developed the turbofan technology that powers most of today’s leading aircraft. Now, half a century later, the United States propulsion industry is on the verge of another breakthrough. 

“We think that the same kind of generational leap is what we’re offering here with the XA100,” Tweedie says.

C-130 Carrying Disaster Assistance Team Deploys to Haiti for Earthquake Aid

C-130 Carrying Disaster Assistance Team Deploys to Haiti for Earthquake Aid

A C-130 from Little Rock Air Force Base, Ark., went to Haiti over the weekend, carrying a team from U.S. Southern Command to assess the impact of a massive earthquake that hit the Caribbean nation Aug. 14.

The C-130 Hercules from the 19th Airlift Wing took off from Homestead Air Reserve Base, Fla., and arrived in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Aug. 15. 

The 14-member SOUTHCOM Situational Awareness Team will work with American diplomats and disaster assistance personnel to survey and assess the impact of the 7.2-magnitude quake. The official death toll reached at least 1,297 on Aug. 16 and is expected to grow in the coming days.

The results of that survey will help SOUTHCOM to “identify U.S. military capabilities needed and available to support U.S. foreign disaster assistance,” the command said in a press release announcing the formation of a joint task force.

Other military aircraft have also deployed in support of the task force. The Navy is using its ScanEagle drones and P-8 Poseidon planes to provide aerial images of the areas affected by the earthquake. Four helicopters—two UH-60s and two CH-47s—will also provide airlift support for relief efforts.

The Air Force has assisted in humanitarian relief for Haiti before. In 2016, when Hurricane Matthew caused billions of dollars in damages and left many homeless, Airmen helped establish aerial ports and to transport food, medicine and other essential supplies. 

In 2010, when a 7.0-magnitude earthquake hit Haiti, the Air Force formed part of a massive military response, airlifting in supplies, helping to evacuate affected individuals, and providing air traffic control as thousands of aircraft arrived with aid in austere conditions.

Space Force’s Hack-A-Sat Dips a Toe in Digital Waters

Space Force’s Hack-A-Sat Dips a Toe in Digital Waters

The Space Force’s second annual Hack-A-Sat contest in December will reflect its commander’s determination to be the first truly digital military service, organizers told Air Force Magazine in an interview at the recent DEF CON hacker convention.

Hack-A-Sat was one of the principal attractions at DEF CON’s Aerospace Village—one of the many specialist areas of the convention, each focused on a different variety of hacking expertise.

The competing teams will try to hack each other’s “flat sat” hardware—an earthbound duplicate of the technology inside a real satellite—while defending their own. But before the event gets underway Dec. 11, the teams get to familiarize themselves with the systems they’ll defend and, using a digital twin—a software model that behaves exactly as the flat sat hardware would—to practice attacking those systems.

“The digital twin is for training purposes,” said Stephen Colenzo, technology transfer lead at the Air Force Research Laboratory. “But when it’s game time, it’s all going to be on the real hardware, and they’re going to be remoting in via VPN.”

But smart teams will continue using the digital twin even once the contest is underway, explained Capt. Charles “Aaron” Bolen, Space Force Hack-A-Sat team lead, because it can be used to practice hacking attacks and play out the consequences of defensive measures, such as patching, in more or less real time. ”They can use it offline to practice [attacks] and send commands to it to test things out before they go ahead and execute in the [contest] environment,” he said.

Bolen added that this was reminiscent of the way the Space Force worked to secure its systems. “This is very much the way we really develop space vehicles—testing it [on the software twin] and then running it on actual hardware.”

As he spoke, hackers in the neighboring Car Hacking Village repeatedly set off the alarm on an online vehicle organizers had brought to the floor.  

Hackers like to get hands-on access to the systems they’re trying to break into, and Hack-A-Sat organizers brought both a prototype of the flat sat they‘ll be using for the contest in December, and a digital twin of it, that visitors could interact with. 

Last year, the first Hack-A-Sat had to pivot after DEF CON 2020 went into “safe mode” and became a purely remote event as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The organizers, who had planned for each team to have hands-on access to their flat sat hardware onsite, sent each competitor their own flat sat instead. COVID-related shipping and customs delays meant two teams got their hardware late and one didn’t get theirs until the morning of the competition itself, explained AFRL Program Manager DeliaRae Jesaitis. “It was a real nail-biter,” she said.

This year, rather than risk such delays, all eight of the flat sats—one for each team that qualified for the 2021 contest—will be co-located at a Space Force facility, with the teams porting in to their hardware flat sats via VPN. They will be able to monitor it via CCTV, said Bolen.

“The hope is that, to the competitors, it doesn’t feel any different to being on the spot,” he said. “The advantage is that everyone gets to sleep in their own beds at night … and it allows for maximum participation” when international travel was still extremely disrupted and in-person involvement would be limited by social-distancing requirements. “So, this is definitely allowing for a lot more people to be involved than probably could be if it was in-person,” he concluded.

Eight teams from the United States, Poland, Germany, and Romania qualified for the contest out a field of more than 1,000 who registered to take part in the initial challenges. The eight teams are competing for $100,000 in prize money ($50,000 for first place, $30,000 for second place, $20,000 for third place), and all of them get to keep their flat sats.

The contest lasts for 24 hours, a relatively humane duration, since contestants typically don’t sleep during a capture-the-flag contest. It’s also the shortest duration that eliminates any possibility of advantaging a team because of which time zone they’re in, explained Bolen.

The global aspect of the hacker audience is one of the things that makes Hack-A-Sat valuable to Space Force, said Col. Wallace “Rhet” Turnbull, who runs defensive cyber operations for the USSF Space Systems Command in Los Angeles.

“It’s a good way to engage with the [hacker] community and get people interested in working to secure space” from cyberattacks, he said.

U.S. Rushes to Evacuate Personnel as Taliban Takes Over Kabul

U.S. Rushes to Evacuate Personnel as Taliban Takes Over Kabul

U.S. and coalition air crews rushed to evacuate personnel from Kabul as the Taliban entered the Afghan capital Aug. 15, completing the group’s rapid takeover of the country and forcing the now former president into exile.

USAF airlifters, along with those of other NATO nations, carried personnel out of Afghanistan as the State Department warned Americans to shelter in place, with the city’s airport reportedly taking fire. The U.S. Embassy in Kabul said in an alert, “The security situation in Kabul is changing quickly including at the airport.”

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani reportedly left the country earlier in the day. The Taliban took over the presidential palace in Kabul.

U.S. helicopters repeatedly ferried personnel from the sprawling embassy complex in the middle of the city to the airport, where State Department staff and the military coordinated evacuations. The American flag was reportedly taken down at the embassy the afternoon of Aug. 15.

Open-source flight tracking websites showed many successive USAF airlifters, mostly C-17s, along with tankers flowing into Afghanistan from bases in the Persian Gulf.

The United Kingdom Ministry of Defence said it had deployed an air assault brigade and aircraft to Kabul to evacuate British nationals amid the worsening situation.

The rapid Taliban advance into the city accelerated U.S. plans announced just days before. The Pentagon on Aug. 12 had announced it was deploying thousands of troops to Kabul to protect U.S. diplomats as part of the drawdown. Then on Aug. 14, President Joe Biden announced he was increasing the number of troops heading to Kabul “to make sure we can have an orderly and safe drawdown of U.S. personnel and other allied personnel, and an orderly and safe evacuation of Afghans who helped our troops during our mission and those at special risk from the Taliban advance.”

Biden said he warned the Taliban that any attack on U.S. personnel would be met with a “swift and strong U.S. military response.”

“Over our country’s 20 years at war in Afghanistan, America has sent its finest young men and women, invested nearly $1 trillion dollars, trained over 300,000 Afghan soldiers and police, equipped them with state-of-the-art military equipment, and maintained their air force as part of the longest war in U.S. history,” Biden said. “One more year, or five more years, of U.S. military presence would not have made a difference if the Afghan military cannot or will not hold its own country. And an endless American presence in the middle of another country’s civil conflict was not acceptable to me.”

Pentagon spokesman John F. Kirby on Aug. 12 said the U.S. airlift capacity would be able to fly out “thousands” per day, but the advance of the Taliban meant the pace of operations would accelerate.

“This is a temporary mission with a narrow focus,” Kirby said. “We certainly anticipate being postured to support airlift as well, for not only the reduction of civilian personnel from the embassy, but also in the forward movement of special immigrant visa applicants.”

Stealth Adversary Drone Contract Expected in September

Stealth Adversary Drone Contract Expected in September

Blue Force Technologies expects a contract in the next month authorizing it to proceed with development of a stealthy, unmanned aerial system for Air Force fifth-generation fighters to train against. The company expects to build four aircraft for a demonstration program, with first flight in July 2023.

The aircraft are being developed using small business development money under the Air Force Research Laboratory and Air Combat Command.

ACC boss Gen. Mark D. Kelly touted the program during the recent Air Force Lifecycle Management Center’s Life Cycle Industry Days conference as the Air Force’s first “toe in the water” trying out low-cost, attritable aircraft technologies. He sees the technologies as an affordable way to put up enough stealthy, maneuvering, fighter-like aircraft to really stress USAF’s fifth-generation F-22 and F-35 fighters in training. He said the program could yield aircraft that provide high-level adversary training at only 25 percent of the cost of manned systems.

“That, to me, is low cost,” Kelly said.

The company, which has experience fabricating vehicles and structures for other firms, anticipates a cost per flying hour of about $4,000, versus $50,000 per hour for an F-22.

With a 5,000-pound max takeoff weight, the aircraft—known for now as “Red Medium”—will have modular payloads and open-systems architecture, allowing a wide array of threats to be simulated, the company’s founder and president Scott Bledsoe said. It will use a Williams FJ44-4 engine, a 4,000-pound thrust class “military trainer derivative of their biggest business jet engine,” he said. The 20-foot-long, 17-foot-span, carbon-fiber jet will be capable of attaining Mach .95 and turning at up to 9Gs, with a 4G sustained turn. It will also have persistence to fly two adversary engagements without landing to refuel.

“We can produce a high subsonic-class threat,” Bledoe said.  

The company has already passed through preliminary design review and would enter critical design review in June 2022, assuming a next-phase contract in the next month. Bledsoe said the project has been nurtured by AFRL and AFWERX and that AFRL has even allowed the company to use some of its high-speed computer capability for design work.

Under an earlier contract phase that concluded last month, Blue Force demonstrated that “we have an aircraft design that’s stable, controllable, meets performance requirements, and meets cost requirements,” Bledsoe said. The company is ready to “go start cutting tooling and building it.”

The concept arose in 2016. While many small UAS companies were looking to meet Air Force intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance needs, the service was not yet ready to create a program of record. However, “Adversary air is a kind of wide-open field, nobody has a good answer, and the Air Force has this looming problem,” Bledsoe said. The company talked to fighter pilots about what they needed in an adversary system, collaborated with ACC, and launched the project. Creative use of USAF small business money, such as AFVentures’ Strategic Finance program, government matches, and other initiatives to draw in small business players made the project affordable and manageable, Bledsoe said.

Hermeus, another company getting Strategic Financing program funding, received a contract this week to develop hypersonic vehicles.

Blue Force Technologies has built a ground test model, completed last month, to verify and integrate systems with a ground control station, which will allow “burning down as much systems integration risk as possible,” Bledsoe noted. This has led to more ACC endorsements.

The jet will have an “open architecture” nose to allow reconfigurable threats that will appear to Air Force jet sensors like adversary aircraft. In fact, standards have been published, and the system is so open that “a third party can integrate the nose of the aircraft without even calling us,” Bledsoe said. “We were really first in the industry to take that approach.”

This was done because the Air Force may want to use the aircraft for something other than adversary work—it will be low observable—and in case “it needs to go places and do things that we don’t necessarily need to know about,” Bledsoe said.

Andrew Van Timmeren, a former F-22 pilot who is an adviser to Blue Force Technologies on adversary air, said the new aircraft will offer an opportunity for fighter pilots to get comfortable operating with an unmanned aircraft.

“We are 100 percent focused on designing and building an adversary replication platform,” Von Timmeren said. But “that doesn’t mean it’s not going to collaborate with the other Red Air players … trying to punish Blue Air mistakes. … If we can pretend to be adversaries pretty good, I think we can pretend to be the blue guys pretty good.”

“As a Raptor guy,” he explained, “I need to practice” manned/unmanned teaming in a non-lethal environment before going to war with such a system. Fighter pilots need to be able to trust an unmanned system not to “crash into me or crash into the ground.” Without that trust, “I’m actually going to ask you to just leave it at home—I don’t want it to go to war with me.” Right now, ISR systems don’t typically collaborate with fighters.

But “this thing is going to roll around in the mud with me and my bros, my friends who are still flying, and if we can continue to develop that and develop data for future autonomous vehicle development,” that trust will be developed.

As an adversary, the jet will do the mission at low cost more effectively than any other way, he said.

“You can’t go to the boneyard to find something that’s relevant” to modern combat “versus being clean-sheet designed; that’s purpose-built,” Von Timmeran said. “This is going to cost less because it’s essentially all ‘commercial, off-the-shelf.’ ”

The company’s concept anticipates two of the aircraft being transportable in a single box, similar to the way MQ-1 Predator drones were transported.

Blue Force is also looking at putting hardpoints on or in the aircraft if the Air Force should want an offensive version, the company said.

With Troops ‘Orphaned’ by the Air Force, Florida Guard Boss Calls for Space National Guard

With Troops ‘Orphaned’ by the Air Force, Florida Guard Boss Calls for Space National Guard

Florida Air National Guard members specializing in offensive space capabilities have “kind of been orphaned” by the transfer of Air Force assets to the Space Force without the corresponding creation of a Space National Guard, Adjutant General of the Florida National Guard USAF Maj. Gen. James O. Eifert said.

Name change legislation recently passed out of the Senate Armed Services Committee would not help those Guard members, who need a direct link to the Space Force, he said. A study on creation of a Space Force Reserve and Guard component ordered in the 2021 National Defense Authorization Act lingers with the Office of Management and Budget.

In the meantime, highly qualified Air National Guard members working in Florida’s robust commercial space industry and deploying to the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility have lost touch with military space leadership, Eifert said in an interview.

“Our Space Force units in the National Guard have kind of been orphaned by their parent service,” he said of the Florida Air National Guard’s 114th Space Control Squadron, which came into being in 1989 and has deployed to wars in the Persian Gulf, Bosnia, and Afghanistan.

“We really have to create a Space National Guard because the current relationship is not tenable for a healthy future,” he said. “Those systems, that culture, those Air Force Specialty Codes—they don’t exist in the Air Force. They only exist in the Space Force.”

Eifert said keeping the Guard members under the Air Force when the service has gone in a different direction doesn’t make any sense. Simply renaming the Air National Guard to be “Air and Space National Guard,” as proposed in the fiscal 2022 markup passed out of the Senate committee in July, would not fix the problem, he said.

“What we do need is we need to have that direct relationship between the Space Force and the Guardians that are currently in the Air National Guard,” he said.

Pentagon leaders from Deputy Secretary Kathleen Hicks to National Guard Bureau Chief Gen. Daniel R. Hokanson have called for creation of a Space Force Guard and Reserve.

“We have over a thousand space professionals in the National Guard, and we really look forward to them transitioning from the Air National Guard to hopefully a Space National Guard in the near future,” Hokanson told Air Force Magazine on June 23.

“Many of them already work in the civilian industry,” he said. “That’s one of the great benefits of the National Guard is we leverage not only their military training, but many of them bring their civilian skillsets to work, which makes organizations even better and vice versa.”

Eifert said his squadron of about 88 space professionals are a case in point. Many work at Harris Corp. in Melbourne, on Florida’s Space Coast, designing in their civilian job the same hardware they use in their military job.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in August 2020 cut the ribbon on a $9 million military construction investment to house the squadron’s counter communication system.

“It’s essentially a big satellite dish with the software associated with it,” said Eifert of the CCS, which is capable of interdicting and interfering with adversary satellite signals.

In August, the squadron was deployed to the Middle East on a six-month tour to put into practice their expertise in the radio frequency spectrum and signal management.

Eifert says the Florida Congressional delegation backs legislation to create a Space National Guard, but some members of Congress are worried about cost.

Hokanson said Air National Guard personnel who are space operators already exist, likely limiting cost.

“Folks may not realize, but the National Guard has actually been conducting space missions for over 25 years,” he said.

The National Guard Association agrees on the need and potential cost savings to the federal government.

“Why not move these people to the Space National Guard? It’s not going to cost anything,” NGA spokesman John Goheen told Air Force Magazine.

“If you don’t have a Space Reserve component, you don’t have a way of retaining space professionals that leave the active component,” he said. “In this day and age when personnel costs are so high, you want a surge capacity. You don’t want to have everything in an active component.”

USAF Will be Able to Airlift ‘Thousands’ from Afghanistan as More Troops Arrive in Kabul

USAF Will be Able to Airlift ‘Thousands’ from Afghanistan as More Troops Arrive in Kabul

The Air Force will deploy enough aircraft to ferry out “thousands per day” from Kabul as the American diplomatic presence draws down and more Afghan interpreters are brought out of the country, the Pentagon said Aug. 13.

The first of approximately 3,000 troops deploying to Afghanistan to provide security for this part of the withdrawal arrived Aug. 13, and the rest are expected to arrive over the following two days, Defense Department spokesman John F. Kirby said in a briefing. Kirby said he didn’t know of any combat aircraft deploying as overwatch.

“There will be airlift provided,” Kirby said. “Clearly there’s an Air Force role here with respect to airlift.”

The Pentagon, U.S. Transportation Command, and Air Mobility Command were planning the details, Kirby said.

“Airlift will not be a limiting factor in this mission,” Kirby said, adding that military aircraft won’t be all that are used.

“Capacity is not going to be a problem,” he said. “We will be able to move thousands per day.”

The Pentagon announced Aug. 12 that it was deploying up to 8,000 new troops to the Middle East as part of the withdrawal, as the Taliban has rapidly moved across Afghanistan and claimed several cities in steps to encircle the capital of Kabul.

In addition to the 3,000 personnel in Kabul—two Marine Corps infantry battalions and one Army battalion, all already in U.S. Central Command—the Pentagon is sending a combined USAF and Army 1,000-person team to Qatar to help process Afghan Special Immigrant Visa applications. Another brigade combat team of the 82nd Airborne will deploy to Kuwait to stand by if needed.

The new forces in Kabul are deploying to Hamid Karzai International Airport, where U.S. attack and lift aircraft, infantry and security personnel, and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance aircraft are already present, Kirby said.

The Pentagon moved swiftly to get these troops “on station as quickly as possible” to support the State Department’s moves when they begin. Kirby did not provide a specific timeline, other than saying the Afghanistan withdrawal will be completed “by the end of the month.”