U.S. Forces Operating ‘Without Complete Air Superiority’ Due to Small, Armed Drones

U.S. Forces Operating ‘Without Complete Air Superiority’ Due to Small, Armed Drones

The proliferation of small unmanned aerial systems, usually commercially available drones that can be outfitted to drop weapons, is the most “persistent and dangerous” threat to troops in the Middle East in decades.

“These small- and medium-sized UAS proliferating across the [area of operations] present a new and complex threat to our forces and those of our partners and allies,” U.S. Central Command boss USMC Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr. told the House Armed Services Committee on April 20. “For the first time since the Korean War, we are operating without complete air superiority.”

The counter-UAS effort is a “top priority” for CENTCOM. There are existing air defense and missile defense systems that can track inbound threats, and the command is looking at several systems to counter UAS, but their small size makes that a difficult task.

The U.S. military needs to develop an “integrated system” that takes components of what’s already available—one that can provide an early warning of the launch of a UAS, an idea of where it is coming from and its altitude, and be able to engage it both kinetically and non-kinetically.

“There’s a lot of great work being done in the department, we are not there yet,” McKenzie said.

Army Gen. Stephen J. Townsend, commander of U.S. Africa Command, said he first encountered drone-delivered munitions during the battle of Mosul against the Islamic State group when he was commander of Combined Joint Task Force-Operation Inherent Resolve. The effectiveness and proliferation of the system is an “area of great concern.”

While AFRICOM has not seen “significant employment of weaponized drones in Africa,” the command is working with the broader Defense Department to get ahead of it, he said.

US Could Put Bombers Back on Alert if it Moves Away from Triad, STRATCOM Boss Warns

US Could Put Bombers Back on Alert if it Moves Away from Triad, STRATCOM Boss Warns

As the new administration and Congress prepare to take a critical look at the nuclear triad and overall need for nuclear modernization, the head of U.S. Strategic Command warned lawmakers that a reduction in the overall force could mean a return to Cold War norms.

During testimony to the Senate Armed Services Committee, Adm. Charles A. Richard said that while he welcomes a review of the nuclear posture, cutting the intercontinental ballistic missile force and shifting to a “dyad” approach would require the military to completely reshape operations.

“What is not often recognized is that we don’t have a triad day-to-day, right. The bombers are not available to us,” Richard said. “We chose to take them off alert as a type of peace dividend after the Cold War, so day-to-day all you have is basically a dyad. Basic design criteria in the triad is that you cannot allow a failure of any one leg of the triad to prevent you from being able to do everything the President has ordered you to do.

“If you don’t have intercontinental ballistic missiles, we can’t meet that criteria. You are completely dependent on the submarine leg, and I’ve already told the Secretary of Defense that under those conditions I would request to re-alert the bombers.”

Some on Capitol Hill have questioned the need for the Air Force’s Ground-Based Strategic Deterrent—the replacement of the aging Minuteman III ICBM and its infrastructure. During the hearing, several lawmakers asked Richard directly to defend the need for this modernization in advance of budget deliberations.

There is “no operational margin” left in the ICBM leg of the triad, Richard said, since all of it was depleted as the nation delayed modernization. The current ICBM force is “at risk of losing credibility” in the eyes of potential adversaries, and even at risk of “not working at all” against a pacing threat.

“We could reach a point where no amount of money” would mitigate that risk, Richard said.

“Nothing lasts forever,” Richard said. “You cannot indefinitely life-extend anything. I cannot deter with the leftovers of the Cold War forever. … I need a weapons system that will actually work and actually make it to the target.”

Richard offered the example of the current Minuteman III alert station. Across the Air Force’s alert sites, the service is down to two remaining switches that are required in the station. No companies are manufacturing the switch, and it isn’t feasible for a company to start making them, so maintainers have been “pulling rabbits out of hats” to work through these types of issues.

At the same time, China has been working to build its nuclear stockpile and modernize. “In the very near term, China will possess a capable triad,” he said.

“My best military advice is to offer caution, observe their actions, which speak louder than words, take steps to credibly deter armed conflict, and reject Chinese policies or actions that threaten the international rules-based order or undermine regional and global stability,” Richard wrote in prepared testimony. “We must remain postured to counter Chinese coercion and subversion, assure our regional allies and partners, and protect our national security interests as international law allows.”

F-15s, F-16s, C-130s Deploy for Exercise in Poland

F-15s, F-16s, C-130s Deploy for Exercise in Poland

USAF F-15s, F-16s, and C-130s are training in Poland in an agile combat employment exercise that comes as Russia executes a massive buildup on the border with neighboring Ukraine, though U.S. officials say the exercise was long-planned.

F-15Es from the 492nd Fighter Squadron at RAF Lakenheath, England; F-16s from the 480th Fighter Squadron at Spangdahlem Air Base, Germany; and C-130s from the 37th Airlift Squadron at Ramstein Air Base, Germany, arrived in Poland for the ACE event on April 19. 

The F-15Es and F-16s will operate out of 32nd Tactical Air Base in Lask, Poland, and the 31st Tactical Air Base in Krzesiny, while the C-130s will operate out of Chievres Air Base in Belgium, according to a release. After the event, the F-15Es will remain to train with the Polish air force. 

“Opportunities to train alongside our Polish allies are incredibly valuable and critically important. It allows us to hone our combat skills, build lasting relationships and learn to operate seamlessly as a combined force,” said Gen Jeffrey L. Harrigian, U.S. Air Forces Europe-Air Forces Africa commander, in the release. “The reoccurring aviation detachment rotations make both nations stronger by developing highly capable Airmen ready to deliver combat airpower, anytime and anywhere.

Within the last couple weeks, Russia has increased its forces along the border with Ukraine in occupied Crimea. Pentagon spokesman John F. Kirby said April 19 that this buildup is “certainly larger” than in 2014 when Russia invaded Crimea, and he called for Russia to be more clear about their intentions. Moscow has said the build-up is for training, but it is “not completely clear” to the Pentagon that this is true, Kirby said.

The exercise in Poland is “fairly routine,” and “not a specific reaction to what’s going on” in Crimea, Kirby said. Russia has deployed more than 100,000 troops to annexed Crimea, in a move that shows “the risk of further escalation is evident,” said Josep Borrell, the European Union’s top diplomat, according to Reuters. U.S. European Command boss Gen. Tod. D. Wolters told lawmakers last week that he sees a “low-to-medium” risk that Russia will invade Ukraine.

NASA Aircraft Makes First Controlled, Powered Flight On Mars

NASA Aircraft Makes First Controlled, Powered Flight On Mars

NASA’s “Ingenuity” robotic helicopter made a powered, controlled flight above Mars on April 19, paving the way for further exploration of the red planet—and others—from the air, the space agency announced.  

“Altimeter data confirms that Ingenuity has performed its first flight; the first flight of a powered aircraft on another planet,” chief pilot Havard Grip said over NASA’s live feed of the event.

The four-pound, solar-powered helicopter spun up its two, four-foot-long counter-rotating rotors, ascended to 10 feet, hovered for 30 seconds, rotated 96 degrees clockwise, and landed in the course of its 39.1 second flight. Ingenuity imaged its own shadow on the ground below from its maximum altitude.

The flight was made at 3:34 Eastern Daylight Time, 12:33 local Mars time.

The event was also recorded by the “Perseverance” rover, which landed on Mars on Feb. 18, carrying the helicopter on its underside. After NASA identified a 33X33-foot flat area for test flight—now dubbed “Wright Brothers Field”—Perseverance released the coaxial aircraft and rolled about 200 feet away, where it will remain during a series of four more increasingly challenging test flights over the next few weeks. After that, the test flights will end and the rover will proceed to its main mission of exploring the area around Jezero Crater, an ancient river delta, which NASA thinks could harbor fossils or other evidence of past life on the planet.

The International Civil Aviation Organization has recognized the operating area with the code JZRO, NASA said. The aircraft’s callsign is IGY-1.

Ingenuity carries a tiny swatch of fabric from the Wright brothers’ original “Flyer,” which flew at Kitty Hawk, N.C., in 1903, to commemorate the connection to the first powered, controlled flight on Earth.

Acting NASA Administrator Steve Jurczyk, at an online press conference, said the event represents one of the rare times that NASA has integrated its aeronautics research arm with its space science arm. The success of Ingenuity will allow the space agency to “see how we can deploy this capability on future missions.”

NASA Mars 2020 team managers speculated that future such aircraft could be used on Mars to investigate interesting areas too treacherous for a lander or rover to go. These include steep crater walls where briny liquid water occasionally flows on the surface, or in one of Mars’ deep canyons, where water vapor forms lingering clouds. They could not say if a flight element will be included on NASA’s next Mars mission, which will focus on soil and rock sample return.

Other applications could be terrestrial planets and moons with an atmosphere, such as Venus, and Saturn’s moon, Titan. Flying on Titan would actually be easier, officials said, because its atmosphere is 50 percent thicker at the surface than Earth’s.

There are also earthbound applications for operating at extreme altitudes, such as at the top of the Himalayas.

“This is not a drone like the ones you can buy, … unbox, and fly,” said Ingenuity chief engineer Bob Balerum. The aircraft has to fly in an atmosphere only one percent as thick as Earth’s—comparable to flying at 90,000 feet on Earth—and tolerate nighttime temperatures plunging to 130 degrees below zero, Fahrenheit.

“This is a very, very special aircraft,” he said, requiring considerable research and development. There was a gentle breeze of 2-3 meters per second during the flight, which the aircraft automatically compensated for, he said. “Early concept design work has started” on future Mars and other-planet aircraft, he said.

“We are thinking of things in the 25-30 kilogram class, … or about 50 pounds,” with a science payload of 10 pounds, Balerum said. Anything larger, he said, and “the packaging of the blades becomes awkward; it might not be feasible in the near term.”

The first flight near local noon was chosen to maximize solar power energy and take advantage of environmental conditions. NASA officials said the drone carries a microphone as well as a camera, and audio may be obtained on the last mission. It won’t be attempted before then because of potential electromagnetic interference with the aircraft’s other systems.

Mimi Aung, Ingenuity project manager, said the next four flights must be accomplished within the next two weeks, as the Ingenuity technology demonstration was allocated 30 days at the front of the Perseverance mission. In two weeks, the rover will press on with its surface journey, taking it farther away from wherever Ingenuity sets down for the last time. However, she said it is possible the drone will fly ahead of the rover.

On the second flight, Ingenuity will fly to five meters height, fly laterally two meters and return to its takeoff point, Aung said. The third flight will again fly to a height of five meters, then laterally 50 meters away, and return to its takeoff point. On the fourth and fifth flights, higher speeds and distances will be attempted. The vehicle navigates with an inertial measurement unit as well as by imagery of the ground, but the latter becomes more difficult at higher speeds. The maximum altitude is also about 50 meters, due to the limitations of the laser rangefinder altimeter Ingenuity uses. She declined to say whether the vehicle was designed to crash-land on its final flight, when the highest speeds will be attempted. Its descent speed was about one meter per second.

The second through fifth flights will be “increasingly difficult … We intend to push it to the limit,” Aung said. This could mean a traveling distance of 600 meters and “as fast as we can go.”

Ingenuity was actually programmed to “fly through” the ground, turning off its motor when it detected an obstacle beneath its spindly legs.  

The aircraft’s performance matched perfectly with computer simulations and its handling in an altitude chamber simulating Mars-like conditions. One pleasant surprise was that little dust was kicked up by the drone when it was near the ground.

Asked what the most challenging aspect of the Ingenuity project was, the team answered that it was weight, with one extended argument taking place over a two-gram sensor. Jurczyk said Ingenuity marks another step on NASA’s continuum of expanding its exploratory reach. Early in the space program, NASA was limited to space flybys of the planets, advancing to landers, and then rovers such as the 1996 Sojourner on Mars, followed by increasingly larger and more sophisticated rovers. Ingenuity represents a new step “into the third dimension” of surface exploration

Outstanding: Meet Senior Airman Cassidy B. Basney

Outstanding: Meet Senior Airman Cassidy B. Basney

Senior Airman Cassidy B. Basney, with the 50th Operations Support Squadron, 50th Space Wing, is among the Space Force’s first-ever 12 Outstanding Airmen, Guardians, and Civilians of the year announced April 13.

Basney “epitomized the Space Force’s core beliefs of innovation” by designing a “software application that led to 21 alerts of counterspace threats.” She also worked with intelligence partners to streamline a request from the then-50th Space Wing for information process, and “improved communications with the Combined Space Operations Center to maximize agility,” according to a video announcing the winners. Basney “is always looking for ways to optimize response time with proven results in the protection of assets and personnel.”

The recognition, which Chief of Space Operations Gen. John W. “Jay” Raymond said demonstrated “incredible agility, innovation, and boldness,” is for performance in 2019. Basney’s performance also earned her inclusion in the Air Force’s 2020 Outstanding Airmen of the Year, where she was chosen to be the sole representative of the U.S. Space Force. The Outstanding Airmen of the Year program traditionally includes 12 members, with one each representing each major command, plus the Air National Guard, the Air Force Reserve, and Air Force District Washington. Basney’s selection reflected her service within Air Force Space Command, which evolved to become the U.S. Space Force.

Space Force leaders posted the video in April, having been delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Space Force leaders wanted to “give the winners the recognition they deserve,” according to a statement.

The Air Force Association will spotlight the other 11 winners over the next few weeks.

New Enlisted Force Development Strategy Coming Soon

New Enlisted Force Development Strategy Coming Soon

The Air Force will unveil a new enlisted force development strategy this summer to try to help Airmen get the most out of their Air Force careers, Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force JoAnne S. Bass said April 19, in a virtual chat with Chief of Staff of the Air Force Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr.

“It’s really about talent management,” Brown said. “It’s not just a promotion system and our special duty assignments, but it’s really the approaches we take to ensure each of our career fields allow you each to get to your full potential,” Brown said. “It’s about us thinking differently about how we manage that talent.”

Air Force retention is higher today than at any point in the past 20 years, Brown said. Largely because of the COVID-19 pandemic, USAF is about 3,000 Airmen over end strength.

The overage might have been higher, Bass said. A series of voluntary separation opportunities that rolled out in January, including an expanded Palace Chase program for transferring into the Reserve, aim to help the force manage the number of enlisted members and officers in order to get down to its target size.

At the same time, even though the overall force is too large, some specialties are still short-handed, Bass acknowledged. That means cross training will offer some Airmen the chance to stay, but in a different job.

“What I love is we have a ton of synergy, probably more now than ever, with how we develop officers, enlisted, and our civilians,” Bass said. “We’re challenging the status quo on all things. Talent management, you know: How do we bring in some of the best talent in the United States Air Force? [And] once we have that talent in, how do we train, educate, develop, and retain that talent? And, then also, when it’s time to take this uniform off, how do we make sure that our Airmen are ready and able to transition and be their very best [as civilians]? Those are some of the things I’ve been focused on for the past eight months.”

Task Force of B-52s Deploy To Andersen

Task Force of B-52s Deploy To Andersen

Four B-52s deployed to Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, on April 17 in the latest Pacific bomber task force mission.

The B-52s, from the 2nd Bomb Wing at Barksdale Air Force Base, La., will train with joint services and allied nations during the deployment, according to a Pacific Air Forces release.

“The Air Force is currently working in a complex, dynamic, and sometimes volatile global security environment,” 2nd Bomb Wing Commander Col. Mark Dmytryszyn said in the release. “It is our charge to regularly conduct these joint and combined security cooperation engagements across different geographic combatant commands and their areas of operation.”

The deployment comes on the one-year anniversary of the Air Force ending the Continuous Bomber Presence at Guam. For 16 straight years, the Air Force kept bombers based at Andersen as a deterrent. Since then, the Air Force has sent smaller “bomber task force” rotations, which include a few bombers at a time, on a more unpredictable basis.

B-52s and B-1s have rotated through the base as part of BTFs.

“These BTF missions demonstrate the strategic credibility and tactical flexibility of our forces to address today’s matters,” Dmytryszyn said in the release. “As an aircraft capable of employing with a wide variety of nuclear and conventional weapons, delivered across a continent-spanning range, employing global joint all-domain command and control systems, the B-52 remains a universally-recognized symbol of America’s assurances to our allies, our partners, and the world.”

DNI: Cyber Is The Common Weapon Among Top Adversaries

DNI: Cyber Is The Common Weapon Among Top Adversaries

China aims to displace the U.S. as the world’s pre-eminent superpower; Russia is “pushing back” against the U.S., sometimes with force; Iran is a “regional menace” and North Korea is a “disruptive player,” and will be for years to come, Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines said in the U.S. intelligence community’s annual assessment of top threats facing the U.S.

Released April 9 amid Chinese saber-rattling against Taiwan and as Russian troops massed on the border with Ukraine, the 31-page unclassified threat assessment calls China the “pacing threat” for the U.S.—militarily, politically, and economically—noting that the other three nations remain active, potent adversaries, particularly in cyber warfare.

President Joe Biden on April 15 announced new sanctions on Russia stemming from the Solar Winds hack and Russia’s interference in the 2020 U.S. election. The sanctions target 32 individuals and organizations, and Biden also expelled 10 Russian diplomats. Biden called the move “proportionate,” saying his intent is not to “kick off a cycle of escalation and conflict with Russia.” The Solar Winds attack gave cyber criminals access to more than 18,000 computer networks, both government and private. Biden said Russia needs to be held to account for attempting to “undermine the conduct of free and fair democratic elections” in the U.S. and other Western nations.

Moscow said it would come up with “a decisive response.”

China is a different story. The DNI said the Chinese use coercive foreign loans and “vaccine diplomacy,” along with expansive territorial claims, to compete vigorously with the U.S. for world influence. Beijing sees an “epochal shift” as China rises in economic and military power, ultimately surpassing the U.S. China views anti-Chinese economic measures by Washington as a desperate effort to “contain China’s rise,” the DNI said. China touts its own containment of COVID-19 as “evidence of the superiority of its system,” and is laboring to sew up regional hegemony, securing “what it views as its territory and regional pre-eminence.”

Chinese combat air packages—fighters, bombers and airborne warning and control aircraft—have made nearly two dozen unannounced incursions into Taiwan’s air defense identification zone in recent weeks, and the DNI report called this a stepped-up pattern of Chinese efforts to intimidate and re-unify with Taiwan.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said April 11 on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that the U.S. will continue to help Taiwan “defend itself,” and that “it would be a serious mistake for anyone to try to change the existing status quo by force.” China views Taiwan as sovereign territory, and continues to remind the U.S. of its agreement to the “one China” principle. China says further warming of military ties between Washington and Taipei are provocative and “belligerent.”

“Friction will grow as Beijing steps up attempts to portray Taipei as internationally isolated and dependent on the mainland for economic prosperity, and as China continues to increase military activity around the island,” according to the report. Beijing, the intelligence community asserts, is “intensifying efforts to shape the political environment in the United States to promote its policy preferences, mold public discourse, pressure political figures whom Beijing believes oppose its interests, and muffle criticism of China.” It adds that China wants to sow doubt about U.S. commitments to the Indo-Pacific region.

China continues to intimidate its “rival claimants” for control of the South China Sea, using air, naval, and maritime law enforcement to demonstrate its “effective control over contested areas,” the DNI said. Likewise, China seeks to intimidate Japan over contested areas in the East China Sea, and India on the China-India border. Tensions there remain high following the first “lethal border clash between the two countries since 1975,” the report said, but both countries have begun pulling back troops and equipment from the border in a sign of easing tension.

To assert itself globally, China is busily acquiring military basing rights in South America and the Caribbean, offering loans and other incentives that intel officials consider “coercive.” Securing access to energy sources is also part of China’s strategy. Politically, China advocates “new international norms for technology and human rights, emphasizing state sovereignty and political stability over individual rights.”

Intellectual property continues to be a sensitive and frustrating area of concern, the DNI said. China continues to steal technology that it can’t develop on its own, using cyber espionage and, more subtly, by building ties with international and academic research organizations. China represents a “prolific and effective cyber-espionage threat,” the DNI reported, citing “substantial” cyber attack capabilities, including “localized, temporary disruptions to critical infrastructure.” China is also “hacking journalists, stealing personal information,” and employing tools that attack free speech online, the report said. At home, it routinely blocks internet content it considers threatening.

Militarily, the People’s Liberation Air Force and Navy are the largest in the Indo-Pacific region and are fielding power-projection capabilities at an accelerated rate, the DNI reported. The People’s Liberation Army Rocket Force has “highly accurate short-, medium-, and intermediate-range conventional systems … capable of holding U.S. and allied bases in the region at risk.”

The intel community expects a Chinese space station will be in low Earth orbit by 2024, and is planning a robotic research station on the moon, followed by “an intermittently crewed lunar base.”

Russia, meanwhile, continues its campaign to “undermine U.S. influence, develop new international norms and partnerships,” and divide Western nations and their alliances, hoping to become “a major player in a new multipolar international order.”

While the DNI said Russia doesn’t seek direct conflict with U.S. forces, Moscow thinks the U.S. is trying to undermine the Putin regime and install Western-friendly governments on Russia’s borders. Russia would like “an accommodation” with the U.S. on “mutual noninterference in both countries’ domestic affairs” and wants the U.S. to recognize Russia’s sphere of influence over much of the former Soviet Union.

Among those nations, the DNI thinks Russia is “well positioned” to interfere militarily in Belarus and continues to try to destabilize Ukraine.

The intel community expects Russia to continue using influence campaigns, military aid, combined exercises, etc., to advance its own interest and undermine those of the U.S.

Moscow will “insert itself into crises” when its interests are involved, and will try to “turn a power vacuum into an opportunity” where it can, or where the costs of action are low.

The DNI said Russia is responsible for various assassinations and attempted assassinations—such as opposition activist Alexei Navalny—with chemical weapons. In the Middle East and North Africa, it’s using its involvement in Syria and Libya to “increase its clout, undercut U.S. leadership” and offer itself as “an indispensable mediator,” to gain military basing rights and economic opportunities.

Russia continues to court Venezuela and Cuba with arms sales and energy deals to expand its access to regional resources. It’s also still using its energy assets as a coercive negotiating tool, the main example being its cutting off gas to Ukraine and Europe for two weeks in 2009.

Militarily, Russia is seeing flat or declining spending, but “emphasizes new weapons” that threaten the U.S. and neighboring countries. Its ability to project power is limited by distance, and the DNI judges that Russia would find it hard to “sustain intensive combat operations” far from home. It uses private military companies to extend its reach and conceal its involvement.

Russia will remain the “largest and most capable” threat to the U.S. in terms of weapons of mass destruction, the intel community said. It has modernized all its strategic weapons and increases their capabilities consistently. Though it has stepped up security, its ability to keep its nuclear materials safe is still a “concern.” Russia views strategic weapons as critical to its deterrent, making up for a conventional disadvantage. Meanwhile, it’s developing a “large, diverse, and modern set of nonstrategic systems” which could carry a nuclear warhead.

As a cyber enemy, Russia continues to target critical infrastructure, “including underwater cables and industrial control systems” in the U.S., showing that it could wreak havoc on private information systems if it chose to. Russia is also hacking journalists and organizations critical of its regime. Russia “almost certainly considers cyber attacks an acceptable option to deter adversaries, control escalation, and prosecute conflicts,” the DNI asserted.

Haines labeled Russia one of the “most serious intelligence threats” to the U.S., using various means to undermine the U.S. and its allies, “sowing discord inside the United States and influencing U.S. voters and decision making.” Russia interfered or attempted to interfere in the 2016, 2018, and 2020 U.S. elections, the DNI noted.

In space, Russia remains a key competitor with a large network of sensing and communications satellites, and it is fielding new anti-satellite weapons. These include jamming, cyber, directed energy, on-orbit, and ground-based systems.

Iran will continue to be a threat to the U.S., seeking to become the regional hegemon in the Middle East and reduce U.S. influence there. It views the U.S. as the chief obstacle to its diplomatic, military, and economic goals. It will use proxy forces throughout the region, and calculates its actions to fall just short of what would elicit a significant U.S. military response or trigger “direct conflict.”

Iran is still trying to destabilize Iraq and build its influence there, seeking to create a consensus to push the U.S. out of the area. It’s looking for a permanent military presence in Syria and doing so by striking economic deals with Damascus. These efforts are aimed at threatening Israel and supporting Hezbollah. Likewise, it will continue its presence and involvement in Yemen, supplying missiles and unmanned systems to strike at U.S. and Saudi interests in the area. Teheran is building ties with Afghanistan in order to be a major influence there when the U.S. withdraws its forces.

Iran’s military has improved, developing highly precise tactical ballistic missiles, with the largest such inventory in the Middle East. Its pursuit of new weapons continues despite its economic troubles.  

The intelligence community said U.S. law enforcement has “arrested numerous individuals with connections to Iran as agents of influence or for collecting information on Iranian dissidents in the U.S.” Iran’s intelligence agency has also attempted assassinations and kidnappings in Europe.

Although Iran continues some nuclear activities, “we continue to assess that Iran is not currently undertaking” the activities needed to achieve a nuclear “breakout,” Haines said. It is, however, building a new 40 megawatt heavy water reactor.

Iran also is engaging in cyber espionage and election interference, having attacked an Israeli water facility last year. It also attempted to influence the 2020 U.S. election by undermining voter confidence in election officials.

North Korea continues to see nuclear weapons as its guarantor of survival against foreign intervention and attack, and the intel community believes that Kim Jong Un thinks he will “over time … gain international acceptance and respect as a nuclear power.” He is apparently not swayed by pressures to change course in this regard. Kim is also building his conventional forces and cyber capabilities as further deterrents and coercive capabilities.

Haines said North Korea’s conventional military power will pose “an increasing threat to the United States, South Korea, and Japan.” Pyongyang paraded its growing missile capability in January 2021 and October 2020.

Although North Korea ended its self-imposed moratorium on nuclear weapons and ICBM testing in late 2019, it hasn’t conducted any new tests of such systems since.

“Kim may be considering whether to resume long-range missile or nuclear testing this year to try to force the United States to deal with him on [his own] terms,” the DNI said.

In cyber, North Korea “probably possesses the expertise” to cause “temporary, limited disruptions of some critical infrastructure … and business networks” in the U.S. and may be able to disrupt software supply chains. It has conducted cyber theft operations “against financial institutions and cryptocurrency exchanges worldwide,” and likely has gotten away with stealing “hundreds of millions of dollars,” which it‘s likely using to fund missile development, the DNI said.

‘Hat-in-the-Ring’ Squadron Helps Commemorate New World War I Memorial

‘Hat-in-the-Ring’ Squadron Helps Commemorate New World War I Memorial

The World War I Centennial Commission officially raised the flag at the new National World War I Memorial in Washington, D.C., with a unique salute to the early days of air power.

During the April 16 ceremony, two F-22s from the 94th Fighter Squadron at Joint Base Langley, Va., performed a flyover of the memorial site. The 94th Fighter Squadron dates back to the famed “Hat-in-the-Ring” 94th Aero Squadron, which was designated as an independent unit under the VIII French Army and deployed to France in 1918 as part of the allied war effort.

The National World War I Memorial, the nation’s newest national memorial, dates back to the 2014 creation of the World War I Centennial Commission, which was tasked for creating a public space to remember the lives lost in the great war. The commission worked with the National Park Service, the American Battle Monuments Commission, and the Doughboy Foundation to create the space.

“The great war touched every American family at the time,” President Joe Biden said in recorded remarks for the ceremony. “For too long, that nation-wide service has not been fully commemorated here in the nation’s capital. This memorial finally will offer a chance for people to visit and reflect and remember. More than 100 years have passed since World War I ended, but the legacy and courage of those doughboys sailing off to war and the values that they fought to defend still live in our nation today.”

The commission in 2015 launched an open competition to redevelop Pershing Park in Washington, D.C., for the memorial. The winner was picked out of 350 entries, and involves new elements including a sculpture of soldiers, lines from the poem “The Young Dead Soldiers Do Not Speak” by Archibald Macleish, a belvedere with references to major campaigns, and quotes from President Woodrow Wilson, from Willa Cather’s novel “One of Us,” and from Alta May Andrews of the Army Nurse Corps.

“The National World War I memorial is a testament to the strength of the American people and honors the bravery and sacrifice our warriors made in the great war,” Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark A. Milley said as part of the ceremony.