Space Delta 2 Boss: Don’t Just Share Info.  Act on It.

Space Delta 2 Boss: Don’t Just Share Info. Act on It.

Guardians need to be empowered to make their own tactical battle management decisions—and must get the training and investment needed to develop those skills, Space Force. Col. Raj Agrawal said March 5. 

Agrawal commands Space Delta 2, a wide-ranging organization with personnel around the world responsible for tracking tens of thousands of objects in orbit and understanding why and when satellites and other objects move. 

But Agrawal’s delta is also responsible for space battle management. “Space situational awareness … that is knowledge,” Agrawal said during an AFA Warfighters in Action interview. “And then you go to space domain awareness, and that is a military application or understanding. Battle management takes us really to that next evolution forward, and that’s making decisions.” 

Military space has traditionally been a support element for other forces, so specialists tended to see themselves as information providers, rather than decision makers.  

“The translation from understanding to making decisions is where we have to train our military forces, particularly our Guardians, who may have come from other services into the Space Force where they provided a capability for other forces to make decisions with,” Agrawal said. “Now what we’re asking these Guardians and Airmen to do is … understand [when] there’s an opportunity to exploit.’” 

Agrawal wants his squadrons to make decisions faster, armed with the knowledge and awareness that come from monitoring the domain. Space forces can no longer be viewed as merely support forces, because there are advantages to be gained by operating more competitively throughout the domain. 

“If you put your vulnerabilities in place, your adversaries are going to look to exploit that vulnerability and to take it out,” Agrawal said. “Without the ability to protect those critical capabilities, we lose. And so you have to make fighters in space.” 

Decision advantage is also a focus of Air Force leaders, who likewise want Airmen to be able to make tactical-level decisions based on “commander’s intent” rather than simply wait for direction. But adapting to that new mindset is a challenging shift, Agrawal acknowledged. 

“We have to empower our tactical warfighters to be able to make decisions and move and execute without direct oversight,” Agrawal said. “We’ve trained a kind of leadership that built a model off of Predator feeds, where senior leaders could see through a camera onto the battlefield and have the perception of complete knowledge to then make decisions, sometimes from very far away. … We have to change that.” 

The new head of Space Operations Command, Lt. Gen. David N. Miller, has been leading this charge, pushing for integration across deltas and squadrons as a necessary step, Agrawal said. 

“What we want to do is get to where our combat space forces aren’t so dependent on that tactical direction, but know what needs to be done, how to do it, who to work with in the other mission deltas, and how to close on that target,” Agrawal said. “And then be able to operate independent of that move-by-move, play-by-play, operational C2. and that’s going to take some training, and that’s going to take some shared awareness, and that’s going to take a lot of practice and investing across the tactical force.” 

It will also take manpower and focus, something that Space Delta 2 must juggle right now. The delta is responsible for orbital and flight safety for all U.S. commercial and civil spacecraft; when satellites are threatened by orbiting debris, it’s Space Delta 2 that notifies the satellite owners.

That mission will shift in the coming years to the Department of Commerce, which is establishing a space traffic management service. When it does, Space Delta 2 will be off the hook for those notifications. But it will keep tracking objects, Agrawal said, focusing its attention on military threats—and opportunities.  

CMSAF Bass: First Air Force Warrant Officer Class to Be Selected This Summer

CMSAF Bass: First Air Force Warrant Officer Class to Be Selected This Summer

Editor’s Note: This story was updated March 6 with a comment from CMSAF JoAnne S. Bass on details of the warrant officer implementation plan.

The top enlisted leader in the Air Force said the branch’s first batch of new warrant officers since 1959 is due to be selected this summer, with the first class starting later this year.

“The force of the future will look different and we’ve got to figure out ways to attract, onboard, retain the force that we’re going to need,” Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force JoAnne Bass said March 5 in a Facebook livestream with Secretary of the Air Force Frank Kendall. 

“Today’s generation, they want to serve, they just want to have different pathways to service and we’ve got to be agile enough as a force to do that,” she added. “I couldn’t be more excited for the warrant officer path.”

Bass and Kendall did not offer more details on the application process or the requirements for the warrant officer program. A spokesperson for Bass later told Air & Space Forces Magazine that “the implementation plans and guidance are currently being developed.”

The news comes about three weeks after Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David Allvin announced that the service will try bringing back warrant officers in the information technology and cyber career fields in a bid to retain highly-skilled technical specialists, 45 years after the last Air Force warrant officer retired in 1980. The Air Force and Space Force are the only military services not to include warrant officers, who fill technical rather than leadership functions in the other military branches.

“We are in a competition for talent, and we understand that technical talent is going to be so critical to our success as an Air Force in the future,” Allvin said Feb. 12 at the AFA Warfare Symposium. The warrant officer track could allow Airmen “to pursue the technical path without having to choose between that and the leadership path.”

Warrant officers could be important in cyber and software, where technology moves particularly fast. Kendall said on Feb. 14 at the symposium that about 100 Airmen joined other branches in recent years so that they could become warrant officers in IT and cyber. Current career tracks often take Airmen out of their specialty for long durations; Kendall recalled meeting officers returning to cyber after three years in a completely different field.

“Now I don’t know about you, but if I had a doctor who had not been doing medicine for three years and who was about to do surgery on me, I would be a little nervous,” the secretary said on the final day of the symposium. “We need continuity in some of these people.”

The initial cohort, according to planning documents posted on the unofficial Air Force amn/nco/snco Facebook page and obtained by Air & Space Forces Magazine, would consist of 30 prior-service personnel, though the pipeline could scale up to 200 junior warrant officers and 50 senior warrant officers a year. Director of the Air National Guard Lt. Gen. Michael Loh told Air & Space Forces Magazine that his troops will be among the first batch.

“The folks that bring the predominant force structure from a cyber, IT perspective is the National Guard; over two-thirds of the Air Force capability resides in the National Guard,” he said.

Allvin cautioned against expanding the program too quickly as the Air Force evaluates the program in the cyber and IT fields. Success may involve measuring how long warrant officers stay in the service, what level of talent they develop as warrant officers, and how much they increase productivity and effectiveness in the IT and cyber arenas. Those metrics may take years to collect, but Kendall has a feeling that the program will someday expand other career fields.

“I expect ultimately, assuming that we’re successful with these initial steps, that we’ll probably expand it,” he said March 5. “I don’t think it’s going to happen immediately, so you shouldn’t hold your breath about this. But my sense is, my own intuition about this, is that we’re going to want to expand it after we see how effective it is for cyber and IT.”

A former Army officer, Kendall recalled seeing how warrant officers in the maintenance career fields “made a major contribution to the force,” he said. “These are people who are going to work in that field and they’re going to be the masters, if you will, of that tradecraft. They’re going to be mentors and trainers for other people.”

Bass, whose tenure as top Air Force enlisted leader ends March 8, echoed that opinion. Warrant officers are a way of “ensuring that we have different pathways and an ability to bring on the talent that we’re going to need to be able to be the force of the future,” she said.

F-35s, F-16s Slated to Fly in Large-Scale US-S Korea Exercise

F-35s, F-16s Slated to Fly in Large-Scale US-S Korea Exercise

Freedom Shield, an annual large-scale exercise led by the United States and South Korea, kicked off March 4, and the U.S. Air Force is slated to contribute multiple fighter types to the training.

USAF F-16s and A-10s are confirmed to participate in different training events throughout the 11-day exercise, and American F-35s are “tentatively confirmed” to participate as well, 7th Air Force Spokeswoman Maj. Rachel Buitrago told Air & Space Forces Magazine in an email statement.

Freedom Shield marks the first major multi-domain exercise between the U.S. and South Korea in 2024 and will focus on combined, multi-domain operations with land, air, sea, and non-kinetic assets, according to the U.S. Forces Korea.

“Freedom Shield 24 is tough and realistic exercise, to strengthen the combined defensive posture and alliance response capabilities, based off scenarios that reflect diverse threats within the security environment,” USFK director of public affairs Army Col. Isaac Taylor said during a press conference.

The overall exercise will include 48 individual “Field Training Exercises,” more than doubling last year’s edition, which also features a B-1 bomber. It is being observed by service members from 12 United Nations Command (UNC) Member States, including the United Kingdom, Australia, France, and Italy.

One element of the exercise highlighted by South Korea’s Ministry of National Defense will be a ‘Buddy Squadron’ event near Osan Air Force Base, home of the 7th Air Force, which will involve 20 aircraft, including American F-16s and Republic of Korea Air Force’s F-15Ks.

Airmen from both nations are engaged in practical training, such as Defensive Counter Air (DCA) missions and discuss the latest tactics during the training, according to the Ministry of National Defense.

Additionally, U.S. RC-135V Rivet Joint and ROK’s high-altitude unmanned reconnaissance aircraft Global Hawk (RQ-4) were deployed to closely monitor North Korean military movements on the first day of the Freedom Shield exercise.

Meanwhile, North Korea has condemned the exercise and issued a warning, stating that the U.S. and South Korea will pay a “dear price,”through its state-owned media on March 5.

During last year’s Freedom Shield exercise in March, North Korea carried out test launches of an intercontinental ballistic missile, known as the Hwasong-17, and short-range ballistic missiles. The DPRK has also pledged to launch three more spy satellites this year following on the launch of its first satellite last November.

South Korea’s Defense Minister Shin Won-Sik, while warning that satellite launches could happen as early as this month, also indicated that the satellite Pyongyang launched in November appears to be non-operational.

Air Force Deploys Live Hypersonic ARRW Missile to Guam

Air Force Deploys Live Hypersonic ARRW Missile to Guam

The Air Force has published images of an operational hypersonic Air-Launched Rapid-Response Weapon (ARRW) in Guam; a disclosure possibly meant to send a message to China but which raises questions about the future of the ARRW, which the Air Force insists it is not planning to procure in quantity.

The images, released by the 36th Wing, showed air and ground crews at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, receiving “hypersonic weapon familiarization” with the AGM-183A ARRW on Feb. 27. The missile, which was mounted under the wing of a B-52H bomber, had yellow stripes, indicating it has a live warhead. Blue stripes indicate an inert weapon without a warhead, typically used for captive-carry tests or loading training.

B-52 Stratofortress crews from the 23rd Expeditionary Bomb Squadron, Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota and the 49th Test and Evaluation Squadron, Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana, participated in hypersonic weapon familiarization training at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, Feb. 27, 2024. U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Pedro Tenorio

The Air Force’s unveiling of the ARRW in a forward location may be a message to China that the U.S. can now field a hypersonic capability in the Pacific. It may also be the simple familiarization described, but it would be unusual to take a highly limited test asset to a forward base without another purpose in mind. The Air Force did not disclose whether the missile would remain at the base.   

Andersen is a key base in the Pacific, and Air Force bombers routinely deploy there for weeks at a time, engaging in training, wargames, and show-the-flag messaging operations. These include “freedom of navigation” flights through China’s air defense identification zone. Such Bomber Task Forces (BTFs) have increased in the last few years, while at the same time China has stepped up the frequency of exercises in which it bluff-charges Taiwan’s ADIZ with as many as 80 aircraft, a pattern seemingly meant to test Taiwan’s air defenses but also potentially intended to reduce Taiwan’s alertness with chronic false alarms of an invasion.

It’s not clear from the photos released whether more than one missile was included in the training. All the photos showed a single missile mounted on a pylon under the aircraft’s starboard wing. The Air Force has said a B-52 can carry up to four ARRWs on wing pylons.

About two dozen Air Force personnel were shown receiving the instruction.

B-52 Stratofortress crews from the 23rd Expeditionary Bomb Squadron, Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota and the 49th Test and Evaluation Squadron, Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana, participated in hypersonic weapon familiarization training at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, Feb. 27, 2024. U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Pedro Tenorio

The missile in the photos carries the serial number AR-AUR-005. The “AUR” likely references the term “All-Up Round,” the nomenclature for ARRWs that have a live ATACMS booster and live warhead. The Air Force released images of a similar training event at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., last year, and the missile in those photos had the serial AR-AUR-004.

If the Air Force plans to test-launch the missile in the photos in the Western Pacific, it would be the first time such a launch has occurred away from the coast of California, where all ARRW tests have been conducted so far.    

The release said B-52 crews of the 23rd Expeditionary Bomb Squadron out of Minot Air Force Base, N.D., and the 49th Test and Evaluation Squadron out of Barksdale Air Force Base, La., conducted the familiarization. Personnel received “expert academics and training on hypersonic fundamentals and participated in tactical discussion on hypersonic operations to increase operational readiness,” the release stated. The instruction also included a discussion about logistics for hypersonic weapons.

The program is meant to “prepare multiple Air Force aircraft communities for hypersonics, including the Hypersonic Attack Cruise Missile,” ARRW, and “other programs under development,” according to the release. It did not provide further details.

Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control is the prime contractor for ARRW—a boost-glide type of hypersonic weapon—while Raytheon is developing the HACM, which is a smaller, longer-ranged, air-breathing weapon, the engine for which is being developed by Northrop Grumman.

The ARRW has a checkered track record in Air Force tests, with at least two outright launch failures as well as test glitches during the captive-carry phase of evaluation. The first test reported as a full success of the all-up round was flown on Dec. 9, 2022; two others were flown in August and October last year, apparently successful. The Pentagon’s Director of Operational Test and Evaluation, in his recent report about 2023 activities, said the all-up ARRW flown last August had some problems with telemetry in the endgame but otherwise flew a nominal mission and achieved successful warhead detonation.

Air Force officials said there is one formal ARRW test yet to go.

Just a year ago, Air Force acquisition executive Andrew Hunter told the House Armed Services Committee in written prepared testimony that the Air Force “does not intend to pursue follow-on procurement” of ARRW. However, he said there is “inherent benefit to completing All-Up Round test flights … to garner the learning and test data that will help inform future hypersonic programs and potential leave-behind capability.”

Air Force budget documents said closeout testing of the ARRW would take place in fiscal year 2024, during which the flight envelope for launch will be further expanded, flying qualities will be assessed, and the weapon will be tested against ground targets.

Much about the ARRW contract is classified, but the Air Force has acknowledged that Lockheed Martin was to conduct design and development, produce a certain number of missiles for test, and produce an undisclosed number of “leave behind,” or left-over assets after testing that could be used operationally. Lockheed was also to demonstrate that it could produce the ARRW at scale, something the company has said it accomplished.

Subsequent to Hunter’s comment, Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall said the Air Force has shifted its focus to the HACM, which will be a smaller, longer-ranged weapon that could be carried by fighter-sized aircraft. The ARRW can only be carried by bombers.

It’s not clear if the Air Force is changing its procurement position on ARRW. William LaPlante, undersecretary of defense for acquisition and sustainment, deferred questions on hypersonics and ARRW in particular during a House Armed Services Committee hearing in mid-February, asking for a closed session to discuss the subject in a secure facility.

Asked why ARRW isn’t being procured, despite being the only successfully-tested U.S. hypersonic weapon so far, LaPante said, “Let’s just say there is a plan. It’s not something we can talk about in this open session.”

Air Force officials said ARRW plans will become more clear in the budget request that will be forwarded to Congress on March 11.

Last March, the Congressional Budget Office pegged the unit cost of an air-launched hypersonic missile “similar to” the ARRW at between $15 million and $18 million across a production run of 300 missiles, but a ground-launched version would cost three times as much, due to the special launch infrastructure and additional boost capacity required. The CBO said it used the term “similar” because the actual numbers are classified.

Kendall has said that while hypersonic missiles match well to China’s operational concepts, they are less critical to USAF’s concepts of fighting and are important but not a top priority for investment.

A hypersonic ground-attack missile is best suited for striking high-value targets like command-and-control centers from long range, at high speed. Such weapons derive their destructive force both from a warhead and from the kinetic force of striking the ground at five times the speed of sound. Defense against hypersonic missiles, particularly if they are maneuvering, is difficult.  

China is known to have deployed an undisclosed number of hypersonic DF-17 missiles with a long-range, tactical capability, while it has also developed hypersonic weapons to be mounted on intercontinental ballistic missiles. The DF-17 has been called a “carrier killer” and is also suited to a strike on a base like Guam.

“The Department of Defense is developing hypersonic science and technology to ensure the U.S. can rapidly field operational hypersonic systems,” the USAF said in its release about the familiarization program in Guam. The Air Force specifically “will continue to invest in researching, developing, testing, producing and fielding cost-effective weapons,” it continued. “These weapons are a mix of stand-off, stand-in hypersonic and subsonic precision-guided munitions. The Air Force also continues to develop revolutionary advanced weapon capabilities to maintain a competitive advantage over the pacing threat.”

PHOTOS: In Brunei, USAF F-35s Are First 5th-Gen Fighters to Land on Island Nation

PHOTOS: In Brunei, USAF F-35s Are First 5th-Gen Fighters to Land on Island Nation

U.S. Air Force F-35 fighters landed in Brunei on March 1, the first time U.S. stealth jets have landed on the small Pacific Island nation.

Two F-35s made the trek from Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska, to Rimba Air Base, Brunei, a visit that coincided with a diplomatic visit by Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Indo-Pacific Security Affairs Jedidiah Royal. Also making the trip was Maj. Gen. Mark Weber, Air National Guard assistant to the commander of PACAF. 

Members of the Royal Brunei Air Force, including commander Brig. Gen. Dato Sharif, viewed the aircraft, which was on static display, and asked questions of USAF Airmen. The aircraft departed March 2.

The F-35s’ visit came 40 years after the U.S. officially recognized Brunei, following its independence from the United Kingdom, which assumed control after World War II, when the nation was occupied by Japanese Imperial forces. The visit comes as the United States aims to bolster cooperation with a broad array of allies in the Indo-Pacific.

Brunei and the U.S. signed a defense cooperation memorandum of understanding in 1994 and have regularly exercised together since then. The two countries’ air forces worked together in September 2023 as part of the exercise Pacific Angel 23-3, focused on humanitarian assistance and disaster relief. As part of that exercise, the U.S. Air Force deployed a HC130-J Combat King II, HH-60G Pave Hawk, and C-17 Globemaster III to Brunei. 

In December 2023, U.S. Indo-Pacific Command hosted Bruneian officials for bilateral talks that included the signing of a “Section 505 agreement,” a prerequisite to granting military training or equipment to a foreign nation. 

Though only 5,765 square kilometers—slightly smaller than the state of Delaware—Brunei lays claim to a slice of the South China Sea that is less than 1,000 miles from China. With China as its largest trading partner and foreign investor, according to the U.S. Insitute of Peace, Brunei has sought to “hedge” its dependence on China by building a stronger relationship with the U.S., researcher Sufrizul Husseini wrote. 

In the growing great power competition between the two, however, the U.S. wants to build ties with countries across the region and has used vists by Air Force fighters and bombers as one of the ways it demonstrates its commitment to allies. 

Just a year ago, for example, Air Force F-22s deployed to the Philippines, becoming the first fifth-generation fighters to that country. In April, a pair of B-1B Lancers participated in an exercise with the Indian Air Force for the first time. And in June, a B-52 landed in Indonesia, another first. And in October, a B-52 landed in South Korea, the first such landing in more than 30 years.

These strategic visits send a message about security cooperation and partnership intended to dissuade China from risking a wider conflict through expansion into neighboring territory. 

Watch and Read: How to See Every Video and Transcript from AFA Colorado

Watch and Read: How to See Every Video and Transcript from AFA Colorado

Thousands of Airmen, Guardians, civilians, industry officials, and airpower advocates gathered in Aurora, Colo., from Feb. 12-14 for the AFA Warfare Symposium.

Department of the Air Force leaders unveiled sweeping, historic changes as part of their “re-optimization for great power competition” and unpacked what it all will mean over the course of 30 panel discussions.

Find video and text transcripts of the top sessions, including keynote addresses, here:

In addition, video and transcripts for every session are now posted on AFA’s official conference page.

All of Air & Space Forces Magazine’s comprehensive coverage of the conference is compiled here and will be featured in the March/April issue to come.

Space Force Gives Boeing $439 Million Contract For New SATCOM Satellite

Space Force Gives Boeing $439 Million Contract For New SATCOM Satellite

The Space Force awarded Boeing’s space division a $439 million contract to build and launch the next satellite of its Wideband Global Satellite Communications (WGS) fleet, the Department of Defense announced March 1. Expected to be finished by Jan. 31, 2029, the WGS-12 satellite is part of an effort to improve flexibility and security for high-bandwidth military communications.

“The revolutionary WGS-11+ satellite will have more communications flexibility than the entire existing WGS constellation and will provide combatant commanders with twice the mission capability in contested environments,” Space Systems Command wrote in 2022 about WGS-12’s predecessor, WGS-11+, which is expected to launch later this year. WGS-12 is expected to be a “clone” of WGS-11, according to budget documents.

“Communication channels and terrestrial footprints can be uniquely tailored to warfighter demands,” Space Systems Command wrote. “This enables increased mission flexibility and responsiveness with smaller footprints that help protect against jamming.”

The first WGS satellite launched in 2007, and the constellation has since become “the backbone of the U.S. military’s satellite communications” according to the Space Force. Nine more satellites were launched through 2019, providing the U.S., allies, and partners with full-motion video, sensor data from airborne drones, video teleconferencing, and other data-intensive communications. 

But as the original WGS satellites aged, the Department of Defense sought to augment the system with better anti-jamming capabilities. The new satellites will feature a Protected Tactical SATCOM Prototype that uses a Protected Tactical Waveform for jam-resistant communications. According to Boeing, PTS-P “features automated anti-jam capabilities, including jammer geolocation, real-time adaptive nulling, frequency hopping and other techniques … to ensure the warfighter can stay connected in a contested environment.”

The design of the new WGS satellites is based on the company’s 702X commercial bus integrated with the PTS system, SpaceNews reported in September: a blend of military and commercial satellite communication systems.

USAF C-130s Conduct Humanitarian Aid Airdrops Into Gaza

USAF C-130s Conduct Humanitarian Aid Airdrops Into Gaza

Three U.S. Air Force C-130J Super Hercules aircraft conducted airdrops of humanitarian aid into Gaza on March 2, U.S. officials said.

The aircraft took off from Jordan and dropped 66 bundles—22 per aircraft—with over 38,000 meals ready to eat (MREs), senior administration officials told reporters. The U.S. airdrops occurred over southwest Gaza, a U.S. defense official told Air & Space Forces Magazine.

The U.S. C-130s were assigned to Air Forces Central (AFCENT), the USAF’s Middle East command. U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said in a statement the operation was carried out between 3 and 5 p.m. local time alongside Royal Jordanian Air Force C-130s.

“The combined operation included U.S. Air Force and RJAF C-130 aircraft and respective Army Soldiers specialized in aerial delivery of supplies, built bundles, and ensured the safe drop of food aid,” CENTCOM said. “U.S. C-130s dropped over 38,000 meals along the coastline of Gaza allowing for civilian access to the critical aid.”

“We are conducting planning for potential follow-on airborne aid delivery missions,” CENTCOM said in its statement.

“The fact that today’s airdrop was successful is an important test case to show that we can do this again in the coming days and weeks successfully,” a senior administration official added.

President Joe Biden announced March 1 the U.S. would conduct humanitarian airdrops into Gaza. During an Oval Office meeting with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, Biden said the U.S. would join other countries in air-dropping assistance amid the Israel-Hamas war that has resulted in a humanitarian crisis.

“We need to do more and the United States will do more,” Biden said.

“The planning will be robust on this,” National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said March 1. “I know that we will learn from the first airdrops, and this will be a part of a sustained effort. This isn’t going to be one and done.”

“There’s few military operations that are more complicated than humanitarian assistance airdrops,” said Kirby, a retired Navy rear admiral. “This is a tough military mission to do because so many parameters have to be exactly right.”

The U.S. Air Force has previously flown C-17s filled with humanitarian aid into Egypt that was then delivered into Gaza in United Nations trucks via a land crossing. Kirby said the U.S. also hoped to deliver “large amounts” of aid by sea and expand land routes.

“I commend the outstanding efforts of our Airmen and Soldiers who made today’s airdrop a success and helped deliver more than 38,000 meals to civilians affected by the ongoing conflict in Gaza,” AFCENT commander Lt. Gen. Alexus G. Grynkewich said in a statement.

Jordan has been using C-130s to airdrop pallets of aid into Gaza for the past few days and has been joined by a growing coalition of countries that now includes aircraft from the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, France, and the U.S. A spokesperson for the Jordanian Embassy in Washington said two Jordanian C-130s took part in the March 2 operation with the USAF.

Biden said Israel is not allowing enough assistance into the beleaguered enclave during its war with Hamas.

“We’re going to insist that Israel facilitate more trucks and more routes to get more and more people the help they need,” Biden said. “No excuses, because the truth is aid flowing to Gaza is nowhere nearly enough now—it’s nowhere nearly enough. Innocent lives are on the line and children’s lives are on the line”

Two U.S. Air Force C-130J Super Hercules aircraft fly information in preparation to release 66 bundles of humanitarian aid over Gaza, March 2, 2024. U.S. Air Force photo

The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza says over 30,000 people have died in the conflict. Civilians in Gaza have struggled to get food, water, medicine, and other essential supplies.

The Biden administration, along with Egypt and Qatar, has been working to broker a roughly six-week pause in fighting.

“Probably not by Monday, but I’m hopeful,” Biden said Feb. 29 when asked about progress on the ceasefire talks, the same day he spoke to Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi and Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al-Thani.

Dozens of civilians were killed racing to an aid convoy in Gaza City, which is in the north of the Strip, on Feb. 29. The Israel Defense Forces fired weapons during the incident, but the circumstances of the deaths are disputed.

Biden and the Egyptian and Qatari leaders “discussed planning to surge humanitarian assistance into Gaza and how the ceasefire under the hostage deal would further help enable those efforts and ensure that assistance reached civilians in need throughout Gaza” and “the tragic and alarming incident” of the civilian deaths on Feb. 29, according to White House readouts of the calls.

“Hopefully, we will know shortly,” Biden said of the ceasefire March 1. “We are trying to work out a deal between Israel and Hamas—the hostages being returned and the immediate ceasefire in Gaza for at least the next six weeks, and to allow the surge of aid to the entire Gaza Strip, not just the south.”

The White House blamed Hamas for failing to reach an agreement.

“The framework is there,” a senior administration official said March 2. “The Israelis have basically signed on to the elements of the arrangement, and right now, the ball is in the court of Hamas.”

A U.S. Air Force C-130J Super Hercules conducts an airdrop of humanitarian assistance over Gaza, Mar. 2, 2024. U.S. Air Force photo
Wilsbach Takes Command of ACC, Vowing to ‘Create Dilemmas’ for China

Wilsbach Takes Command of ACC, Vowing to ‘Create Dilemmas’ for China

Gen. Kenneth S. Wilsbach assumed leadership of Air Combat Command on Feb. 29, succeeding Gen. Mark D. Kelly, during a change of command ceremony at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Va. And the former Pacific Air Forces commander underscored the Air Force’s pivot toward the Indo-Pacific by emphasizing China in his first address.

“We’re going to work on creating dilemmas for China,” Wilsbach said. “How will we create those dilemmas for China in ACC? First of all, we have to work on readiness, we have to work on modernization, we’ve got to work on Agile Combat Employment. And all those things, are the things Gen. Kelly has been working on. We’re going to pick up where he left off, and we’re going to carry and expand the envelope on all of those.”

In more than three years at PACAF, Wilsbach stressed combat readiness and creating strategic challenges for China, which is now the U.S.’s “pacing challenge,” according to the National Defense Strategy, and has indicated it plans to take Taiwan by force, if necessary. Under Wilsbach, PACAF leaned into the Agile Combat Employment concept, deploying fifth-generation fighters to Tinian and the Philippines for the first time, as well as deploying bombers to train with South Korean and Japanese fighters.

“China has been very clear about what their intentions are towards Taiwan,” Wilsbach said. In contrast, he said, the people of Taiwan “are pretty happy with the way things are.” It’s the mission of the Air Force to deter conflict and protect stability in the region.

Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David Allvin passes the Air Combat Command guidon to Gen. Ken Wilsbach at ACC’s change of command ceremony, Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Virginia, Feb. 29, 2024. During the ceremony, Wilsbach assumed command of ACC from Gen. Mark Kelly.

In his role new role, Wilsbach assumes oversight of nearly 80,000 Active-Duty Airmen. He will lead several ongoing initiatives, including the transition of units to the F-35, the deployment of the F-15EX to operational units, the phased retirement of the A-10 and F-22 aircraft, and the rapid development and integration of Collaborative Combat Aircraft into the fleet.

He will also be responsible for leading the Air Force’s largest major command by active-duty personnel and combat aircraft as the entire Department of the Air Force starts to “re-optimize” for Great Power Competition.

Chief of Staff Gen. David W. Allvin said ACC will play a key role in that re-optimization, particularly given the urgency of the task.

“We are reoptimizing for Great Power Competition, and we are not starting from scratch,” Allvin said. “Many of the key elements associated with the reoptimization began in Air Combat Command, and we will proliferate them throughout the Air Force, because that is where the future is taking us.”

Wilsbach commended Kelly’s leadership for fostering collaboration among the major commands and leaving ACC well situated for the road ahead. Kelly assumed command of ACC in August 2020 and is retiring after nearly 40 years of service.

With all these changes coming, Wilsbach also reaffirmed his dedication to personnel. Referring to the ACC slogan, “People First, Mission Always,” he pledged to prioritize Airmen’s quality of life.

“We will continue to put an emphasis on the people,” Wilsbach said. “It’s because the people are the ones who do the mission and if the people are hurting, if the people don’t have what they need, they can’t do the mission. So, we will continue to put an emphasis on making sure that those high performing team members can continue to be high performing.”

Wilsbach also acknowledged enlisted Airmen as fundamental to ACC’s capabilities, prompting a round of applause from the audience.

“The enlisted force of the United States military is the reason that we are as good as we are,” Wilsbach said. “It’s not the fact that we’re the richest country in the world, it’s not the fact that we have good officers. It’s because we have good enlisted—those good enlisted that allow us to be able to employ the way that we do, and to execute the way that we do.”