EOD Airmen Blow Up TNT Stash Found in Alaska

EOD Airmen Blow Up TNT Stash Found in Alaska

When archeologists found a crate of TNT in Eastern Alaska recently, an Air Force Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) team at Eielson Air Force Base got a chance to practice their skills. And have a blast doing so.

The archaeologists discovered the TNT Sept. 28, but its original source remains a mystery. Soon after they called, Airmen arrived, assessed the materials, and coordinated a controlled explosion the same day, a spokesperson told Air & Space Forces magazine.

Such opportunities are rare, especially for junior personnel. Senior Airmen Andrew Payne, Erik Paulson, and Jonathan Grey, all with the 354th Civil Engineering Squadron, got a charge out of this real-world experience, the spokesperson said.  

354th Civil Engineering Squadron Explosive Ordnance Disposal technicians pose after executing a controlled detonation near Tok, Alaska, September 28. (USAF Photo)

“My main concern is ensuring the tasks I was assigned get completed, like estimating the hazard area, ensuring civilians did not enter the hazard area, and helping set up the demolition shot in a way that made sense and improved safety,” said Grey in a release.

Arriving at the scene, the team confirmed the archeologist’s find was, indeed, 98 half-pound blocks of TNT. Determining that the material could be safely relocated to avoid potential damage to buildings or infrastructure. But they also knew it needed to be neutralized as soon as possible .

Technicians assisted estimating danger zones, kept civilians away from the area, and then safely set up for detonation.

“This response really highlights just a small part of what we do in EOD,” said Staff Sgt. Jason Verhoef, an EOD Technician with the 354th CES. “I really enjoy being able to see first-hand the impact we can make in the local community by dealing with explosive hazards.”

EOD Airmen wield specialized tools to detect and handle dangerous weapons such as explosives.

Airmen lined up 98 blocks of TNT before a controlled detonation near Tok, Alaska, September 28. (USAF Photo)

TNT is a common military explosive, known for its stability and insensitivity to shock and friction. But it is also flammable and toxic, requiring strict controls to limit its exposure ti air, water, soil, and workplaces. TNT can bind to soil and be absorbed by plants.

Why This Staff Sergeant Can Spend ‘Unlimited’ Amounts of Air Force Money

Why This Staff Sergeant Can Spend ‘Unlimited’ Amounts of Air Force Money

Many Airmen have impressive abilities, like flying jets past the sound barrier or performing battlefield surgery. But Staff Sgt. Elijah Braly has his own crucial ability: the power to spend as much money as necessary to get service members what they need at Incirlik Air Base, Turkey. 

As described in a Nov. 2 press release, Braly is the only staff sergeant outside of the continental U.S. with an unlimited warrant, the highest expenditure authority granted to Airmen in the contracting career field. 

“The name says it all, there is no trick meaning in ‘unlimited,’” Incirlik’s 39th Contracting Squadron (CONS) explained to Air & Space Forces Magazine. “Unlimited contracting officers can obligate government funds without limitation.”

Contracting Airmen work with private businesses to help plug the “capability gaps that can’t be resolved from within the military” the squadron said. The contracts are generally used to purchase a commodity, a service, or construction.

“Each base supported is almost like a small town and a contracting officer (enlisted or commissioned) has been involved in purchases ranging from printer paper to forklifts (commodity), groundskeeping to doctors (services), and fences to ATC towers (construction),” the squadron explained.

air force contract
Staff Sgt. Elijah Braly, the 39th Contracting Squadron noncommissioned officer in charge of architect engineering, shows off his unlimited warrant patch at Incirlik Air Base, Türkiye, Nov. 2, 2023. During his tenure at Incirlik AB, Braly was able to earn the unlimited warrant contract, the highest expenditure authority that is granted, which allows holders of the warrant to make purchases of any dollar amount. U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Alexis Sandoval

As the noncommissioned officer in charge of architect-engineering for the 39th CONS, Braly is responsible for the phase before a construction project takes place. If a new facility needs to be constructed, repaired, or altered, he would hire a licensed private contractor to develop architectural drawings showing electrical diagrams, floor plans, egress routes, and other factors that would be used in the actual construction project. It is an important duty, but the new unlimited warrant is an even greater responsibility.

Warrants are special authorizations granting individuals the ability to spend money on behalf of the government, Capt. Gabriel Stelly, director of business operations for the 39th CONS, explained in the press release. Airmen who have more than a year of contracting experience can receive a simplified acquisition threshold capped at $250,000.

When Braly first enlisted in 2017, usually Airman ranked only at technical sergeant and above received warrants, but the culture is shifting to give more junior enlisted Airmen greater responsibility. Two factors led to this shift, the squadron explained. The first is that the Air Force is trending “towards augmenting their capabilities with more contracts over providing “inhouse” capabilities.” The second is that the Air Force wants to make the most of its people and resources, including high-performing enlisted contracting officers.

“Due to these reasons, junior enlisted have slowly earned more responsibility and authority to execute with higher dollar warrants,” the squadron said. “A higher dollar warrant isn’t just an increase in spending, it increases the impact a contracting officer can have, it allows them to be a bigger force multiplier, and it allows them to tackle bigger issues in the Air Force and military.”

Case in point, Braly received his first warrant capped at $250,000 in 2021. He later applied for the unlimited warrant, though it was not an easy process. The Airman had to have two years of experience with a contracting warrant and a bachelor’s degree. He also had to pass the contracting officer’s test, participate in the contracting study group, receive a nomination from unit leadership, and receive final approval from a board that often includes the director of contracting for U.S. Air Forces in Europe, a lawyer, a policy analyst, and a pricing analyst.

Just 102 enlisted Airmen have unlimited warrants. Now that Braly has one, he can execute multi-million or multi-billion dollar acquisitions, a crucial ability for procuring weapon systems, theater-wide support contracts, and other big-ticket items. One example at Incirlik is the $100 million Multiple Award Construction Contract, split among eight construction contractors to repair base infrastructure.

“While specific examples are abundant, the larger idea is that Elijah has demonstrated unique business acumen and acquisition prowess to a degree that qualifies him to execute contracts at any fiscal level,” the squadron wrote. “Whether it is a $100 million dollar contract local for base support services, a $300 million dollar multiple-award contract for infrastructure repair, or a $1 billion dollar theater-wide dining facility contract, Sgt. Braly is now appointed, endorsed, and uniquely qualified to obtain these capabilities for the Air Force.”

That kind of experience working on large contracts can also make Braly a mentor for younger contracting officers. He already has some advice in mind.

“Be persistent, and really talk to your leadership about your goals and how they can help you get you to that point,” he said in the press release. “Really hone your craft, understand the amount of effort it takes to get to that accomplishment, and piece by piece move toward that goal.”

‘Putin Wins’ If US Cuts Support for Ukraine, Senators Told

‘Putin Wins’ If US Cuts Support for Ukraine, Senators Told

Pitching hard for aid to Ukraine included in a $105 billion security supplemental request, State Department officials told the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee that failing to support Ukraine would help Russia and undermine U.S. credibility worldwide.

“It’s clear President [Vladimir] Putin is now playing a waiting game,” said James O’Brien, assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian affairs, Nov. 8. “He thinks if he can wait for our elections, or for Ukraine to get tired,” Russia can prevail.

The House Republican majority has balked on further aid to Ukraine while supporting aid to Israel in its fight against Hamas in Gaza. The Senate hearing focused on non-military aid for Ukraine to shore up its industry so it can continue exporting grain and metal, preserve its first responder capacity and rebuild its energy infrastructure.

“What we need to do are several things at the same time,” O’Brien said. “We need Ukraine to continue fighting and thrive while this war goes on, and to soften Russia’s hold on parts of Ukraine so that, when the decisive battles come, they are able to fight effectively.”

The supplemental request would “set Ukraine up to thrive through 2024,” O’Brien said, and also “set the stage” for Ukraine’s post-war recovery.

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said he sees the wars in Ukraine and Gaza and China’s aggression in the South China Sea as “an inflection point that will determine, in my view, what much of the rest of the century is going to look like.” But he also asked witnesses what he should tell constituents who ask “why Ukraine is important,” when compared to thousands crossing the U.S. border illegally, the rising national debt, and the fact that “the real military risk is China.”

Obrien answered that the first element of confronting China is ensuring a solid coalition of partners and allies. Backing Ukraine is helpful there, he noted: With “50-odd countries” supporting Ukraine, “we’re set to compete really effectively.” But if the U.S. were to end its support, he added, America will likely pay “more later…in military spending” than it is spending now in various kinds of aid. The U.S. would also cause some friends to rethink their alliances, he said.

Failure to stop Putin in Ukraine could also embolden him to press on into Poland and the other Baltic states.

The U.S. also benefits from supporting Ukraine in that it “allows us to reinvigorate our own industrial base,” O’Brien said, both in the military and energy sectors, strengthening the U.S. as a credible opponent to China. “All of that’s included in this supplemental, and that’s going to make us better able to defend Taiwan,” he said.

“The final point I’d make is, this is the wrong time to walk away, because Ukraine is winning,” O’Brien declared. “It’s already taken back half the territory Putin seized since February ’22. … You don’t walk away when you’re partway through the job.”

Erin McKee, Assistant Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development for Europe and Eurasia, added that the U.S. has “unlocked the alliances and mobilization” of dozens of countries in suport of Ukraine. “If we falter in our support, Russia will win,” she said. “And they won’t stop at Ukraine.”

Helping Ukraine defend itself also weakens Russia, noted Geoffrey Pyatt, Assistant Secretary of State for Energy Resources. He noted that U.S. suppliers have benefited from Europe’s shift away from Russian oil and gas, and that even if the war ended now, Russia’s Gross Domestic Product has suffered a 20 percent loss, which should deplete its war chest for future aggression.

Gaza and Russia

Asked by Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Ha.) if there are linkages between the Ukraine war and the war in Gaza, O’Brien said there were.

“Putin sees Hamas as a way to distract us and to weaken the coalition that we have built against him,” O’Brien said. “His unwillingness to vote to condemn what Hamas did October 7, and his unwillingness to use any leverage he might have to get them to, say, move out of Gaza City…is a sign that he prefers to see us distracted by this fight. And he prefers to see Hamas as a sort of second front against us. And that’s the connection that’s most troubling.”

Putin wants “instability around his borders” as well, O’Brien said, and McKee added that Ukraine needs help to remain a functioning society.

“They don’t have any resources to take care of their people and govern, which is as vital to keeping up the unity of purpose and the resilience that we’ve seen from the Ukrainian people because they’re all-in, both on the civilian and the military side,” McKee said. Aid is needed to fund first responders and provide medical care, as well as to keep schools operating so that “they don’t lose a generation as a result of Putin’s attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure.”

Bottom line, she said: “If their economy collapses, Putin will have won.”

Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) appeared to be the lone committee member present to object to further funding for Ukraine. He suggested the funds only prolong the war and that the put off negotiations to end it. Meanwhile, the U.S. is being asked “to fix the world’s problems” with borrowed money, he said.

“You’re ignoring the rot and ruin you’re creating in your own country, Mr. O’Brien,” Paul said. He warned that a nuclear-armed Russia may soon be “forced to choose between humiliating defeat on the one hand and escalating the level of destruction. There’s every reason to believe he chooses the latter.”

O’Brien stood his ground. “My belief is, if we don’t stand with Ukraine now, we’ll be spending much more on defense in the future.” But when he added that much of the spending actually goes to U.S. providers, Paul called “reprehensible” any explanation that “the war’s really not that bad.”

“Broken windows are not that bad because we pay people to fix them,” he said. “Broken countries are not so bad because hey, look, the armaments industry is gonna get billions of dollars out of this. That’s a terrible argument.”

Asked about a future off-ramp to war in Ukraine, O’Brien said negotiation is inevitable.

“All wars end with a negotiation,” he said. “. We’ve made clear we’ll do that with Ukraine, [and] not [go] over Ukraine’s head. “It takes two parties to negotiate the end of war. President Putin is not serious about negotiating the end of the war. He has said he wants to wait and see what happens in November ‘24,” after the U.S. presidential election.

“I just spent last weekend with 66 countries talking about the basis of a successful peace in in Ukraine,” O’Brien said. “Russia didn’t show up. That again is the problem. You don’t have a willing partner on the other side. So simply saying that there must be talks…you’re asking for a monologue, not…diplomacy.”

USAF Airstrike Hits Iranian-Backed Facility in Syria; MQ-9 Shot Down

USAF Airstrike Hits Iranian-Backed Facility in Syria; MQ-9 Shot Down

Two U.S. Air Force F-15E Strike Eagles conducted an airstrike in eastern Syria in response to escalating attacks against U.S. forces by Iranian-backed groups, the Defense Department said Nov. 8.

The target was a weapons storage facility used by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and affiliated groups, the Pentagon said.

The location housed “weapons that we believe are likely used in many of the strikes that have taken place against our forces,” a senior military official told reporters Nov. 8.

The strike was ordered by President Joe Biden and follows at least 40 attacks on U.S. troops in Iraq and Syria by Iranian-backed militias since Oct. 17. It marks the second use of force against Iran and its proxies in Syria in the past two weeks. The previous airstrikes were on Oct. 26.

“The United States is fully prepared to take further necessary measures to protect our people and our facilities,” Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III said in a statement. “We urge against any escalation.”

But the militia attacks show no sign of abating, prompting some former officials to say that the Pentagon may need to take more forceful action. Current officials say the latest airstrike was “necessary and proportionate.”

“We hold Iran accountable for these attacks, not just the militia groups,” a senior defense official told reporters. “The message is to Iranian senior leaders: ‘We want you to direct your proxies in militia groups to stop attacking us.'”

The nighttime strike was intended to limit casualties, unlike the milita attacks against the U.S. that are attempting to kill American troops, the senior military official said. The official added that the U.S. had yet to fully assess whether there were any casualties.

President Biden’s first use of force was in February 2021 when he ordered an airstrike against an Iranian-backed militia in Syria. That action came in response to a rocket attack against U.S. forces in Erbil, Iraq, earlier that month. In this and a subsequent military response in March 2023, the White House has stayed clear of striking targets in Iraq for fear of inflaming the political situation in the country where the U.S. is operating at the invitation of the Iraqi government.

U.S. troops are in Iraq and Syria to advise and mentor local partners who are working to prevent a resurgence of the Islamic State group. Some 2,500 U.S. troops are in Iraq working with Iraqi forces, while 900 troops are in Syria.

The most recent U.S. airstrike occurred the same day a U.S. military drone was shot down by the Iranian-backed Houthis, the DOD said Nov. 8. The MQ-9 Reaper was lost off the coast of Yemen over the Red Sea, U.S. officials said.

The MQ-9 belonged to the U.S. Air Force, a senior military official told Air & Space Forces Magazine. It is the third Reaper shot down while operating over or near Yemen since 2017. But it is the first drone shot down since Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel and the Israeli military’s intervention in Gaza inflamed tensions in the Middle East. 

“We are concerned about all elements of Iran’s threat network increasing their attacks in a way that risks miscalculation or tipping the region into war,” the senior U.S. defense official told reporters Oct. 30. 

The Houthis have become an increasingly worrisome part of that network.  

On Oct. 19, the Houthis launched five land-attack cruise missiles toward Israel. The USS Carney, a guided missile destroyer that was operating in the northern Red Sea, shot down four of the cruise missiles. The fifth cruise missile was intercepted by Saudi Arabia as it was defending the Kingdom’s airspace. 

On Oct. 31, the Houthis fired a ballistic missile and two cruise missiles toward Israel. Israel’s Arrow air defense system intercepted the ballistic missile while the cruise missiles were shot down by air-to-air missiles fired by Israeli F-35s. 

The Houthis did not try to deflect responsibility for their action. They claimed the drone was carrying out “hostile, monitoring, and spying activities in the airspace of Yemeni territorial waters,” a spokesman from the group said. The group also posted a purported video of the engagement.

 “There should be no question or doubt that President Biden if he deems it necessary will direct additional strikes to defend U.S. forces and interests,” the senior defense official said.

NORAD Receives New Cloud-Based Command and Control Capability

NORAD Receives New Cloud-Based Command and Control Capability

The U.S. took a significant step in modernizing its air defense recently when a new system, known as Cloud-Based Command and Control (CBC2), came online at one of the key centers monitoring the skies over North America.

The event marked a “pivotal milestone in the service’s modernization of tactical command and control capabilities,” according to a news release from a component of North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD).

The Eastern Air Defense Sector, one of NORAD’s regional commands, recently rolled out its initial operating capability of CBC2, which uses artificial intelligence to help personnel monitor more information in a simpler way than the current system.

“Instead of an air battle manager having to consult different screens or systems for different sensor inputs or data, CBC2 brings together those inputs,” a NORAD official explained to Air & Space Forces Magazine. “The effect is a more streamlined connection between sensors, systems, and decision-makers.”

The new system is part of the Air Force’s push towards greater connectivity as part of the Advanced Battle Management System (ABMS). The Air Force plans to expand CBC2 to the Pacific and other locations, using a model known as agile development, security, and operations (DevSecOps)—software that will continually receive updates.

“We didn’t do an overall CBC2 contract and hand it off to somebody that kind of did all the typical integration kinds of things,” Brig. Gen. Luke C.G. Cropsey, who is in charge of the Department of the Air Force’s ambitious ABMS efforts, said at AFA’s Air, Space & Cyber conference in September. “We actually went directly to the experts in their respective layer of the stack, and we said, ‘Hey, who’s the best at ‘fill in the blank’ and we went and we got them on contract.”

CBC2 will aggregate and integrate military and commercial air defense data sources into one common picture to support homeland defense, the service says.

NORAD and U.S. Northern Command, which is responsible for the defense of North America, are the first to receive the capability, starting with EADS, which covers the eastern United States, including Washington, D.C.

EADS headquarters is located at Griffiss Business and Technology Park in Rome, New York, and is largely staffed by the Air National Guard. Despite its nondescript location, the rollout was attended by senior military officials, including Secretary of the Air Force Frank Kendall, Cropsey, and high-level representatives from the Royal Canadian Air Force, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and the Joint Staff Director for Force Development (J7) USAF Lt. Gen. Dagvin R.M. Anderson.

Pictured left to right, Brig. Gen. Daniel Clayton, Director, ABMS Cross-Functional Team, Brig. Gen. Luke Cropsy, DAF Integrating Program Executive Officer, C3BM, Lt. Gen. Davgin R.M. Anderson, Joint Chiefs J7, Maj. Gen. Denise Donell, Commander, NY Air National Guard, Secretary of the Air Force Frank Kendall, Deputy Under Secretary of Defense, Acquisition & Sustainment Radha Inyengar Plumb, Brig. Gen. Paul Bishop, Chief of Staff, N.Y. Air National Guard. Eastern Air Defense Sector photo by Patrick Young

“Advancing our command-and-control capabilities is instrumental in achieving the department’s Second Operational imperative—achieving operationally optimized Advanced Battle Management Systems—while maintaining technological superiority in a rapidly evolving threat landscape,” Kendall said in remarks at the ceremony.

NORAD is a joint U.S. and Canadian command. CBC2, therefore, is a multinational effort.

“CBC2 incorporates a large number of tactically relevant data feeds as well as artificial intelligence and machine learning to assist decision makers with maintaining detailed situational awareness of the battlespace,” EADS said in its news release. “The platform uses this data to develop courses of action from which leaders can make higher quality and faster decisions that improve operational outcomes.”

Next to get CBC2 will be the Canadian Air Defense Sector (CADS), which is expected to field the new technology by mid-2024. NORAD expects to roll out CBC2 to the air defense sectors in Alaska, Hawaii, and Washington throughout 2024.

“NORAD will apply CBC2 in our air defense sectors to modernize air battle management software interfaces,” the official from the command said.

CBC2 is expected to be upgraded to fit in with hardware updates as they are fielded, such as NORAD’s planned new over-the-horizon radar, the NORAD official said.

“We’re deploying capability starting now,” Cropsey said in September. “It will obviously continue to happen in the future. But this isn’t something that’s five years away. This is today.”

200+ More Airmen to Get Medals for 2021 Afghan Evacuation

200+ More Airmen to Get Medals for 2021 Afghan Evacuation

More than 200 Airmen will receive medals for their roles in Operation Allies Refuge, the evacuation of Afghanistan in summer 2021 as the U.S. completed its withdrawal. Eight Distinguished Flying Crosses, two Bronze Star Medals, 229 Air Medals, and 98 Meritorious Service Medals will be presented to Airmen on Nov. 9 at the 2023 Airlift Tanker Association Convention in Grapevine, Texas.

“It is with great humility, gratitude and honor that I have the opportunity to recognize the actions of these mobility heroes,” said Gen. Mike Minihan, head of Air Mobility Command, in a statement. “This recognition is long overdue but I hope everyone involved in this incredible operation knows our deepest appreciation for their sacrifice while saving more than 124,000 American and Afghan lives.”

The medals are in addition to the 96 Distinguished Flying Crosses and 12 Bronze Stars already awarded about a year ago, along with the Gallant Unit Citation awarded to the 621st Contingency Response Group following OAR. The entire operation lasted 17 days, including round-the-clock operations involving some 800 military and civilian aircraft from more than 30 nations, including about half the Air Force’s C-17 transport jets and more than 500 U.S. Air Force aircrews, along with hundreds of support Airmen on the ground. It was the largest non-combatant evacuation operation in U.S. Air Force history.

Operation Allies Refuge
The U.S. Air Force conducted airlift operations to transport approximately 124,000 people from Kabul, Afghanistan, as part Operation Allies Refuge in August 2021. The operation was one of the largest air evacuations of civilians in American history. Courtesy photo.

Airmen delivered three babies during the airlift operation, all aboard C-17s, and created medical augmentation teams to care for the hundreds of evacuees crammed onto each flight. Both Airmen and aircraft were pushed to their operational limits. Aeromedical evacuation teams also transported 35 patients after a suicide bombing killed 11 Marines, a soldier, a sailor, and at least 170 Afghan civilians at Kabul’s airport on Aug 26, 2021. 

“I’ve flown the C-17 for 15 years, and that was not only the most important and significant mission I ever flew, it was also the most challenging,” Lt. Col. Austin Street told Air & Space Forces Magazine last year about evacuating patients wounded by the attack. “That’s why I’m so proud of my crew for pushing through and overcoming the most challenging conditions I ever witnessed.”

These most recent medals recognizes maintainers, loadmasters, pilots, aeromedical evacuation specialists, and Ravens, the security forces Airmen trained to keep transport planes and jets secure while on the ground in dangerous areas. The medals were approved by the sixth awards board to review the records of Airmen involved in OAR. Another board is scheduled next week.

“We continue to reveal incredible actions taken to carry out this mission and it is our duty to recognize each and every one of them,” said Minihan. “Airmen proved, once again, that they can make the impossible, possible. But, it came with great personal sacrifice and risk.”

What’s an Attack? In Iraq and Syria, That’s Not Always Clear

What’s an Attack? In Iraq and Syria, That’s Not Always Clear

U.S. forces continue to come under attack from Iran-backed militias in Iraq and Syria, with “conservative” estimates of at least 40 attacks, mostly with drones and rockets, since Oct. 17. But U.S. leaders are fuzzy on what constitutes an attack on U.S. forces.  

“I think part of the challenge here—and I know that you all wrestle with this as well—is defining an attack,” acknowledged Pentagon Press Secretary Air Force Brig. Gen. Patrick S. Ryder at a Nov. 2 press briefing. “It’s going to be an art, not a science, depending on a situation.”

The Pentagon calls its measure “conservative,” meaning it measures only those attacks in which U.S. personnel were “threatened.” The proximity to U.S. forces to an attack is one basic indicator, but it is not clear how close attacks must be to constitute a threat. Most attacks are defeated by air defense systems.

The Pentagon, U.S. Central Command, and Joint Task Force Operation Inherent Resolve, which is charged with helping partner forces in Iraq and Syria fight against ISIS, are all involved in the calculus, according to U.S. officials.

Outside experts and claims by militias suggest the number of attacks may be greater than the Pentagon is acknowledging. The Islamic Resistance of Iraq, an umbrella title for multiple militias, claims it has carried out almost 60 attacks.

“Official claims of responsibility from the Islamic Resistance in Iraq are—in my experience—reliable indicators that an attack was launched,” said Charles Lister of the Middle East Institute.

Lister added that a likely explanation for the lower U.S. government number is due to attacks that land further afield from the U.S. forces.

What is not in dispute is that the threats against U.S. forces grew dramatically in the past month, with some causing injuries and one resulting in the death of a contractor, who suffered a heart attack while sheltering in place. In all, the Pentagon assesses there have now been 46 injuries to U.S. personnel, almost all of which occurred on Oct. 17 and Oct. 18 at Al Asad airbase in Iraq and Al Tanf Garrison in Syria. They suffered a mix of traumatic brain injuries (TBI) and “minor injuries.”

Among the wounded, virtually all quickly returned to duty. Two of those diagnosed with TBI were later transported to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, Germany, for “further examination and care,” according to Ryder. 

Before Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel and the Israeli military’s forceful response that followed, U.S. forces in Iraq and Syria had been attacked about 80 times by Iranian-aligned militias since the start of the Biden Administration. Not one of those took place in Iraq for at least the past year. Now, however, the militias are making repeated attacks in Iraq and have executed scores of strikes overall.

Some of those have been close calls. The Wall Street Journal reported that one drone landed on top of a barracks in Iraq but failed to explode. At Al Asad, a hanger was destroyed and, with it, a small aircraft inside, according to a U.S. military official.

Spc. Jeremy Pratt, an unmanned aerial system repairer from Company D, 10th Aviation Regiment, 10th Mountain Division, guides an MQ-1C Gray Eagle Unmanned Aerial System into position following the completion of a mission at Al Asad Air Base, Iraq, August 1, 2017. U.S. Army photo by Capt. Stephen James

Air Force F-15E and F-16 jets carried out retaliatory airstrikes on Oct. 26, hitting sites linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). But the Biden administration has not struck back since, noting that little harm has been done to American troops and personnel.

“While we see these attacks increase, we’re not seeing significant casualties or significant harm to our service members,” said Deputy Pentagon Press Secretary Sabrina Singh on Nov. 7.

Complicating the tallying of attacks is the possibility that some attacks may not have been intended for U.S. targets, but rather at the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a U.S. partner in the fight against Islamic State militants, according to an analysis from the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

Militia estimates may be inflated, as well. Whether the groups are merely trying to harass U.S. forces or are attempting to inflict serious casualties can be a complex undertaking. Michael Knights of the Washington Institute notes that even “performative attacks” can be dangerous because some militias’ rockets are inaccurate and could pose a threat to U.S. forces even if the group intends to miss.

“For me, it’s about intent,” said Knights. “It’s about the fact that they’re risking hitting and killing our troops.”

Military Growing More Distant from Most Americans, Hicks Says

Military Growing More Distant from Most Americans, Hicks Says

After 50 years, the All-Volunteer Force still works and is the right model, Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks said Nov. 7. However, to fill the ranks in a hot labor market, the Pentagon needs to expand its eligibilities and make the benefits it offers more relevant and well known.

Congress also needs to stop using the military as a political pawn and predictably fund the defense budget, she asserted, calling out Sen. Tommy Tuberville’s (R-Ala.) ongoing hold on military promotions and noting that since 2010, the Defense Department has operated for a cumulative four years under continuing resolutions.

Speaking at the Center for a New American Security to talk about the All-Volunteer Force, which took effect in 1973, Hicks said the fact that “it has lasted for 50 years and that we have built the finest force in the world is a testament to its strength, and I believe that it remains the best model for the U.S. military,”

Its success can’t be taken for granted. She said the two goals facing the creators of the AVF—“healthy civil-military relations and recruiting and retaining the force we need”—require constant attention.

Recruiting for all the services has gotten tougher in the last few years, Hicks acknowledged, attributing a good portion of that challenge to the COVID-19 pandemic, which closed schools and halted face-to-face recruiting with teens and those in their early 20s.

Add to that “the lowest unemployment rate in more than 50 years,” and it should come as no surprise that recruitment is not hitting targets, Hicks said, and “we’ve been hard at work recovering.”

Among the approaches are “programs and policy changes that will increase the pool of eligible candidates, from raising the maximum ages of enlistment and launching new programs that help potential recruits meet eligibility requirements; to offering a variety of incentives, such as bonuses, to recruits and recruiters, and releasing targeted ad campaigns that amplify the benefits of military service. And we continue to look for creative solutions.”

The biggest draws to military service remain educational opportunities, training, the opportunity to lead, travel, to fulfill a willingness to serve, and be part of “something bigger than your self,” Hicks said.

But along with those broad benefits, the DOD is focusing on practical benefits, Hicks said. It’s making more commissaries available, and lowering their prices, and especially working toward making childcare more available. The Defense Department provides care for more than 360,000 children already, but Hicks acknowledged that there are “long waiting lists” and that this issue is getting top-level attention.

Hicks also said the Pentagon is setting new standards for pay and allowances to keep soldiers with families out of poverty, so that minimum compensation is “150 percent of the poverty level.”  

On the bright side, Hicks said, “we have been surpassing our retention goals, and we take that as a strong indicator that we’re meeting our value proposition, and that matters.”

A chronic recruiting problem is the dwindling number of Americans who have served in the military, Hicks said. Whereas in 1980, some 18 percent of Americans had served, today it is only seven percent. There is a growing deficit of veterans who can explain the benefits of military service to friends and family members, she said.

The U.S. military relies on “society’s familiarity with the military as a recruitment tool and to bridge the divide between civilians and service members and their families,” Hicks noted. Fewer and fewer eligible recruits have “direct ties” to someone who served.

That also makes it harder to maintain “healthy civil-military relations,” she said.

“We must ensure that as a society, we are familiar with the military, with military families, and what they do, and the sacrifices that they make for the nation,” Hicks asserted. While Americans’ trust in entities such as “Congress, the courts, our justice system, public schools, the press, businesses small and large, and so on has been on decline,” the military remains “one of our more trusted institutions,” she said, and both trust and recruiting is helped by ensuring “fairness, equality, and personal liberties” in the ranks.

“For our part, remaining an apolitical institution is critical to maintaining that trust and confidence, and especially in this moment in history,” Hicks insisted. It’s critical that the armed forces avoid “politicization and remain nonpartisan.” Servicemembers are “routinely trained and educated on this very issue,” she said.

Leaders should reinforce this norm and protect servicemembers “from being dragged into the political fray or being colored or affected by policy disagreements that they, by design, have no control over,” Hicks observed.

Passing the fiscal 2024 Defense Appropriations Act would go a long way toward reinforcing the idea of apolitical support of the military, she said, noting that “the clock is ticking” on the current continuing resolution, which expires Nov. 17.

“The now-routine failure to secure needed resources for defense and for the whole government erodes military trust in civilian leaders,” she said.

“We cannot afford any further delays. I can assure you that Russia and the [People’s Republic of China] are not going to slow down while we get our house in order.”

She criticized Tuberville’s months-long hold on general and flag officer promotions as “unnecessary, unprecedented, and unsafe. It’s bad for the military, it’s bad for military families, and it’s bad for America, and it needs to stop now.”

She offered appreciation for the confirmation of senior officers who have been cleared to their new jobs in recent weeks—including the Chief of Staff of the Air Force Gen. David W. Allvin—“but it is not enough. We need all these nominations to move forward now, and I hope that the Senate will recognize that and move swiftly to confirm the nearly 360 remaining men and women into their positions.”

Hicks said the Pentagon will continue to “amplify” the benefits of military service, promoting military-wide pay raises of more than 10 percent over two years, if the fiscal 2024 budget is approved. These raises are the highest military raises in 20 years, she said.

Hicks said the DOD is also looking at Space Force’s success in “career permeability,” which allows movement back and forth between full-time and part-time work, as a way to fill the ranks.

The Pentagon is working with the various states to ensure licensing reciprocity and similar spousal career protection so partners don’t have to abandon a career when a military family moves from one state to another. She’s also pushing for more “career intermissions,” where service members can take a leave to work with industry and return to service later; a program that only some 500 people have taken advantage of in the years it’s been available.

The Marine Corps “has not had a recruiting challenge,” Hicks noted, and the other services are looking at how that branch “selects its recruiters and rewards them” in an effort to “take what works for them out of that model.”

From the various panels commissioned to examine the recruiting issue, one recommendation was to establish a “chief talent management officer” for the DOD, “which is a best practice in other organizations and institutions. We’ve done that and he’s getting going, starting with some pilots in some key areas and trying to, again, build a community of practice both around function — what we call functional community managers.” Those communities include cyber experts and financial managers. “This is “really getting leadership focus,” she said.

The controversial policy compensating members for out-of-state travel “if they can’t get” needed healthcare reproductive nearby is one of the ways the administration is addressing that issue, Hicks said.    

The good news: surveys show “strong evidence that [Generation] Z has a deep desire, like many generations before” for service and “to make sure they’re contributing to something bigger than themselves.” Gen Z is generally considered to be those born from the late 1990s to around 2010.

“We just have to make sure the military is a place both that really delivers on that and that they see us delivering on that, and that’s the job that’s left to us,” Hicks said.

Austin Heads to Indo-Pacific as Space Race Heats Up on Korean Peninsula

Austin Heads to Indo-Pacific as Space Race Heats Up on Korean Peninsula

Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III embarks this weekend on his ninth trip to the Indo-Pacific theater, with visits set for India, South Korea, and Indonesia. Austin’s visit follows the announcement last week that South Korea’s first-ever reconnaissance satellite will be launched into space aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Vandenberg Space Force Base, Calif., Nov. 30.

Austin’s trip will take him, among other meetings, to the 55th U.S.-ROK Security Consultative Meeting (SCM) and the Defense Ministers’ Meeting of the United Nations Command in South Korea, the Pentagon said in a Nov. 7 release.

Seoul’s first recon satellite is one of five planned by the Republic of Korea’s Defense Acquisition Program Administration. Known as Project 425 and begun in 2018, the $900 million program aims to include four Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) satellites and a fifth featuring electro-optical (EO) and infrared (IR) capabilities.

The satellites are key to Korea’s “Kill Chain” strategy, designed to counter North Korean missile attacks through early detection and preemptive strikes. Some experts worry, however, that the two Koreas are too close and that the decision window for launching such strikes is too short, inviting error and disaster.

Eric Brewer, deputy vice president for the Nuclear Materials Security Program at the Nuclear Threat Initiative, said the South’s Kill Chain strategy has already forced Pyongyang to accelerate its nuclear launch procedures, increasing risk.

“The end result is that warning times for our thinking and decision-making timelines are drastically reduced, which raises the risks of nuclear use in a conflict,” Brewer said Nov. 6 at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

U.S. missile restriction guidelines imposed in 1979 had kept South Korea from launching its own satellites until the U.S. lifted those restrictions in 2021. Once the entire constellation is in place in the mid-2020s, South Korea’s Ministry of National Defense expects to be able to detect, identify, decide, and strike within 30 minutes of an initial indicator.

North Korea, meanwhile, is turning up the heat on its own satellite intelligence program. North Korea promised its third spy satellite launch in October, but that appears so far to not have occurred. Pyongyang previously failed in two successive launch attempts, in May and August this year.

Russia, which is buying artillery rounds from North Korea, may be helping with its space program. On Nov. 6, South Korea’s Unification Minister asserted Russia may be providing technical support, according to the Yonhap News Agency.

North Korea launched two short-range ballistic missiles in late summer, ahead of Kim Jong Un’s visit to Russia for meetings with Vladimir Putin there on Sept. 13.

Austin’s trip to South Korea, meanwhile, continues U.S. efforts to deter aggressors in the region and strengthen U.S. alliances.