Douglas A. Macgregor's Blog, page 19

September 30, 2025

Trump taps Wilsbach as next Air Force chief

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has formally selected Air Force Gen. Kenneth Wilsbach to serve as the next Air Force Chief of Staff, according to a congressional notice.

Breaking Defense on Sept. 26 first reported that Wilsbach was Trump’s choice to replace Air Force Gen. David Allvin, who unexpectedly announced last month that he would retire as the service’s top uniformed officer in November, halfway through his four-year term.

Wilsbach’s path to chief of staff has been unusual compared to the typically rote and bureaucratic nomination process, starting when he stepped down as the head of Air Combat Command in August. The four-star general announced at the time that he planned to retire, though when Allvin announced his departure days later, Wilsbach subsequently emerged as the frontrunner for the job. 

The general’s candidacy then appeared stalled after social media accounts decried Wilsbach’s previous statements on diversity, equity and inclusion, boosting Air Force Global Strike Command chief Gen. Thomas Bussiere for the service’s top job instead. Bussiere was previously tapped to serve as the Air Force’s vice chief, but Aviation Week reported his nomination has since been pulled. 

The unprecedented campaigning for the Air Force’s top military role became the talk of the Air Force community, and was a hot topic among attendees at the Air and Space Forces Association conference last week. Air Force Secretary Troy Meink in a briefing with reporters on Sept. 22 downplayed concerns that the service would be left leaderless in its top uniformed position, saying “the bottom line is we will not not have a chief.”

Then on Sept. 26, sources told Breaking Defense Wilsbach’s chief of staff candidacy had broken through the logjam and that the general’s nomination for the post was expected in the coming days. The Senate formally received his nomination Monday evening, the congressional notice says.

Wilsbach is a fighter pilot by craft, having flown aircraft like the F-22 Raptor, F-15 and F-16. If confirmed, he would guide the Air Force through a series of transformations underway with the Trump administration and serve during a critical window, as fears mount that China could invade Taiwan and invoke a US response. In his own right, Wilsbach has commanded forces amid what he called “completely unprofessional and totally unsafe” intercepts by Chinese pilots.

“What’s disturbing is … their typical response is, ‘This is your fault, because this wouldn’t have happened if you weren’t here,’” Wilsbach told reporters in September 2023, regarding cases where American officials have been able to confront their Chinese counterparts on the intercepts.

“Do it safely, do it professionally and everybody will be okay,” Wilsbach said. “We won’t have a miscalculation. We won’t have a disaster.”

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Published on September 30, 2025 07:25

Lockheed, Pentagon finalize deal for 296 F-35s

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon’s Joint Program Office and manufacturer Lockheed Martin have finalized a deal for roughly $24.3 billion that covers nearly 300 F-35 stealth fighters, the two parties announced Monday evening.

The agreement provides for 148 airframes each in production lots 18 and 19, according to a Pentagon contract announcement, concluding negotiations that have stretched on for roughly two years. The deal includes jets for the US government as well as foreign buyers and deliveries are expected to begin in 2026. 

“The F-35 Lot 18-19 contract represents continued confidence in the most affordable and capable fighter aircraft in production today,” Chauncey McIntosh, Lockheed vice president and general manager of the F-35 program, said in a press release. “We are proud to support our customers and further solidify the F-35’s role in enabling peace through strength.”

A spokesperson for the F-35 JPO did not immediately have a breakdown available of the cost per aircraft of the tri-variant stealth fighter. A comment from Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Greg Masiello, who recently took the reins of the JPO, was also not available. 

The finalized F-35 contract follows an undefinitized contract action, or UCA, awarded to Lockheed in December to kickstart production for Lot 18. The agreement announced Monday evening covers just the airframes of the stealth fighter, whose engines are produced by RTX subsidiary Pratt & Whitney. The engines are awarded separately by the JPO as government-furnished equipment, which are in turn provided to Lockheed. 

The Pentagon awarded Pratt a nearly $2.9 billion UCA in August to begin production on Lot 18 engines, but it’s not clear when the parties expect to finalize the deal. Once the Lot 18 engine UCA is finalized, or “definitized,” a flyaway cost for the aircraft — an approximation of a pricetag for a plane that’s sitting on a runway ready to go — should become clear. The average flyaway cost of an F-35A across lots 15, 16 and 17 is $82.5 million, Breaking Defense previously reported.

In its press release announcing the Lot 18 and 19 deal, Lockheed said the “increase in price per jet in Lot 18-19 from previous years was less than the rate of inflation.” The Pentagon previously told Breaking Defense that Lot 18 in particular faced “significant price increase[s]” due to inflation and rising raw material costs. The JPO has said that the costs for the fighter’s air frame are “consistent” with those in lots 15-17 when adjusting for inflation.

The contract finalization wraps up over two years of negotiations for Lockheed and the Pentagon. Greg Ulmer, Lockheed’s aeronautics chief, previously told Breaking Defense that “initial discussions” on lots 18 and 19 were underway in the summer of 2023, and that the two parties aimed to reach a deal by the end of that year. 

F-35 stealth fighters are in high demand around the world amid rising global tensions, though the jet has also found itself in political crosshairs more recently among some customers due to strained ties under the Trump administration. 

The Pentagon is in the midst of several upgrades on the F-35, though the jet’s key modernization program known as Block 4 will now be delayed to 2031 and rescoped to include fewer capabilities than originally envisioned, the Government Accountability Office reported earlier this month.  

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Published on September 30, 2025 06:26

At gathering of top generals, Hegseth outlines anti-‘woke’ vision for the ‘Department of War’

WASHINGTON — After summoning hundreds of US generals and admirals to the Marine Corps Base Quantico in Virginia today, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth used the event to broadly outline his vision for what he calls the Department of War, dismissing Biden-era policies and pushing, for instance, the “highest male standard” of physical fitness for all combat posts.

“Good morning, and welcome to the War Department, because the era of the Department of Defense is over,” Hegseth opened with.

“This is a moment of urgency, mounting urgency,” he later added. “Enemies gather. Threats grow. There’s no time for games. We must be prepared,” he said. “This urgent moment, of course, requires more troops, more munitions, more drones, more Patriots, more submarines, more B-21 bombers. It requires more innovation, more AI in everything and ahead of the curve, more cyber effects, more counter UAS, more space, more speed.”

At the unprecedented gathering of top officers, Hegseth acknowledged he had made some high-profile firings of their colleagues. Hegseth appeared to take a softer line with further firings, saying many were only executing the direction of political leaders at the time. Still, he called on officers who were not fully aligned with the new warrior ethos to do the “honorable thing” and resign.

Hegseth claimed he was targeting “ideological garbage” that had “infected” the department. “No more identity months, DEI [diversity, equity and inclusion] offices, dudes in dresses. No more climate change worship. No more division, distraction or gender delusions. No more debris. As I’ve said before and will say again, we are done with that shit,” he said.

The secretary of defense, who has long taken aim at women serving in combat units, announced elsewhere in the speech that only the “highest male standard” of physical fitness would be accepted for combat positions.

“When it comes to any job that requires physical power to perform in combat, those physical standards must be high and gender neutral. If women can make it excellent. If not, it is what it is. If that means no women qualify for some combat jobs. So be it,” he added.

Hegseth delivered his message ahead of President Donald Trump’s expected appearance at the event later this morning.

Hegseth’s decision to gather that many senior leaders in one location is a highly unusual move, in part, due to security concerns, and the cost and logistics associated with flying them into the nation’s capital. A memo or hosting a secure teleconference is more typical and the sudden summons without a stated reason for the in-person meeting prompted a firestorm of speculation last week when the Washington Post first broke the story.

Palace intrigue over today’s meeting stemmed from a variety of factors including Hegseth’s outing of senior officers, his call in May to cut 20 percent of four-star generals and admirals and even a post on X (previously Twitter) about the Northern Virginia meeting. In that post, Ben Hodges, a former three-star general that headed up US Army Europe, noted that in 1935, German generals were called to a surprise assembly in Berlin and told to swear a personal oath to Adolf Hitler. Hegseth reposted simply writing, “Cool story, General.” No such oath appeared in Hegseth’s speech.

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Published on September 30, 2025 06:07

BAE Systems, Forterra join forces for autonomous AMPV prototype

WASHINGTON — The US arm of British defense giant BAE Systems and Forterra, a company specializing in “driverless technology,” announced a partnership today to develop a prototype version of an Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle (AMPV) outfitted with autonomous capabilities by 2026. 

“This partnership isn’t about buzzwords — it’s about rolling up our sleeves and presenting tangible options that empower the Army to maintain its dominance on any battlefield against any current or emerging threat,” Bill Sheehy, Ground Maneuver product line director for BAE, said in a company release today. “Bringing together two of the best in both worlds — to include combat vehicle production and autonomous technology development — means we can move faster, think bigger, and give Soldiers the edge they deserve.”

Today’s announcement comes after BAE Systems launched a program last month to produce a number of “technologically advanced” AMPV prototypes rigged with “different capability kits” using the company’s internal investment funds, BAE announced at the time.

RELATED: Frustrations mount over Army’s Robotic Combat Vehicle autonomy, acquisition approach

In regards to Forterra’s responsibility of integrating autonomy into the vehicle, the company will harness its technology stack called AutoDrive, according to today’s announcement. AutoDrive is a suite of software and hardware capabilities that can be either retrofitted onto a platform or built in partnership with an original equipment manufacturer, Scott Sanders, chief growth officer at Forterra, told Breaking Defense in a recent interview. 

“The capability consists of high-performance safety-critical compute, sensors, communications, user interfaces and networking, so that you can give those commands to the robot from hopefully anywhere in the world, as long as you know the comms pathway and give the user feedback to know what those systems are doing and how they collaborate,” he said. 

“So what AutoDrive is doing is taking all that visual perception, fusing it into an environment that the algorithms can understand, and then creating those paths to operate, both from going from point A to point B, and also collaboratively with the other robots so that you have an effect on target,” he said.

Today’s announcement added that Forterra’s AutoDrive is “also compatible with other modern systems fighting in the U.S. Army’s Armored Brigade Combat Team today, including the Bradley A4 and the M109A7 Paladin Self-Propelled Howitzer.”

Last month the Army awarded three companies, including Forterra, contracts to test the viability of turning Infantry Support Vehicles (ISVs) into autonomous vehicles. However, last week, Breaking Defense confirmed that the Unmanned Systems (UxS) program may entail potentially removing the ISVs from the equation and instead letting industry bring in their own platforms to host the software, a senior defense official and an industry official said at the time. Further, the service may also invite new vendors into the competition, they said.

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Published on September 30, 2025 06:00

Space Force creates new intel ‘production’ unit

WASHINGTON — The Space Force has created a new Space Intelligence Production Center (SIPC) designed to streamline the flow of threat information both to warfighters for day-to-day operations and policymakers for longer-term strategic decisions, according to service officials.

The service cut the ribbon on the new center at the Springfield-Beckley Air National Guard Base, Springfield, Ohio, on Friday. The SIPC combines the 76th Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Squadron (ISRS) from Space Force Delta 7, and the 4th Intelligence Analysis Squadron (IAS) from the National Space Intelligence Center (NSIC).

The move “will allow for more streamlining in integrating foundational and technical intelligence into current Military Space operations,” a Space Force spokesperson said in an email to reporters.

Lt. Col. Stefan Katz, the 76th ISRS commander, told reporters the day of the ceremony that the merger of the two units will benefit both sides, as well as future space operations.

“There’s a great symbiosis here,” he said. “The crews from the 76th are focused on today’s tasking, today’s situation, today’s mission and objectives, and the 4th [on] thinking longer term, and what are the implications.”

Katz explained that his squadron is “very junior,” made of personnel on their first assignment with the Space Force.

By contrast, the commander of the 4th IAS, Lt. Col. Aaron Echols, said that the 4th is made up of seasoned intelligence professionals working on data exploitation, including analysts specializing in integrated input from all types of sources, but also “single source experts.”

Echols said the new unit will look across intelligence “disciplines” — for example, geospatial intelligence (GEOINT) and signals intelligence (SIGINT) — “that is giving information from all over the place, any time, any day.

“Our uniformed Guardians and our civilian Guardians are looking at this from that space lens, that same information can be utilized by multitude of other services and combat commands, but really the purpose for our field is that space domain piece to it,” he said.

Katz added that the new center also “can help drive future force design based off of the knowledge that is we are using from literally dozens of different types of unique sensors across GEOINT, SIGINT, MASINT [measurement and signature intelligence], even OSINT [open source intelligence].

“No one will be better suited to explain to the acquisition community, ‘Hey, sensors XYZ: awesome. ABC: could be good, but they’re always broken. And then these three: would be better if the following’ — so we can drive that longer-term automation to make the different systems, current and yet to come, be more effective for both current operations and then the bigger picture analysis.”

While the SIPC now includes some 140 personnel, Echols said that over time “there will be more” as there already are plans for growth.

“The endgame is 150 or more person ops floor that probably is going to involve about a half dozen different organizations,” he said.

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Published on September 30, 2025 05:08

September 29, 2025

NATO needs accelerated counter-drone tech to fend off Russian incursions: Official 

BELFAST — NATO’s fielding of counter-drone systems must be expediated so the threat of Russian drones violating alliance airspace can be better dealt with, according to a senior NATO official.

Counter-drone technology is “something we really have to field now, not in years,” Gen. Ingo Gerhartz, commander of NATO Allied Joint Force Command Brunssum, told the Warsaw Security Forum today. “It has to be fielded in months, in a multi-domain approach.”

He said NATO, the European Union and individual nations need to be a “bit faster” at acquiring counter drone systems.

Shooting down cheap drones that cost $2,000 to $3,000 with million-dollar missiles is neither effective nor sustainable, shared Gerhartz.

In the wake of Russia’s drone incursion into Poland, NATO launched Eastern Sentry to boost its air defenses across the Eastern Flank, chiefly through the deployment of British, Danish, French and German weapon systems.

“Putting more assets in there [Eastern flank] more fighters [combat jets] … gives us a good feeling,” said Gerhartz. “It signals that NATO and the countries can react. But we need other equipment, even more. We need low cost sensors. We need low cost effectors.”

In addition to flying drones over Poland, Moscow has done the same over Romania and has flown fighter jets over Estonia, moves that European officials have widely condemned.

In a joint statement today, the foreign ministers of France, Germany and Poland called the Russian actions “reckless, hostile acts.”

Signaling increased efforts on the continent to respond to drone threats, France, Germany and Sweden are among a number of countries that have agreed to supply Denmark with counter drone systems in order to enhance security for a European Council (EC) meeting in Copenhagen on Wednesday, the Danish Ministry of Defense announced today.

The allied support follows on from Denmark temporarily banning civilian drone flights over its airspace after a series of drone sightings and related incidents involving the Nordic nation’s military bases and local airports.

When asked, Gerhartz said that it would be for “someone” from Denmark to determine if “capacities” were in place to “secure” Copenhagen, ahead of the forthcoming EC summit, but from a “NATO perspective” the alliance is ready to defend against future Russian incursions involving “missiles or aircraft or whatever.”

Responding to NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte’s assessment from July that the alliance requires a 400 percent increase in its air and missile defense capabilities, Gerhartz said the figure could be met “very soon” and it “doesn’t matter” if NATO members decide to buy different air defense systems, so long as the platforms can be integrated.

Speaking alongside Gerhartz in Warsaw, Ben Hodges, former Commander of US Army Europe, said that NATO has not “mentally prepared” for daily Russian drone strikes involving “hundreds” of aircraft. “We absolutely have not exercised for that,” he added. “Think about 10,000 American troops in Poland and the Russians are willing to launch 21 drones into Poland. That tells you they are not concerned [or] that we were actually going to do anything about it.”

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Published on September 29, 2025 11:58

AI will make drone threats a nightmare – it could also save us

Imagine you’re standing watch on a military base’s security forces team, monitoring for potential air threats. Your radar screen is cluttered with tracks – commercial aircraft, flocks of birds, and civilian and commercial drones. You see what looks like a small aircraft veering towards your fence line.

Is that a threat? A delivery drone flying off course? A hobbyist drone operator snapping a picture of a sunset? Or is it an AI-trained distraction while the real threat masks its approach from another direction? 

Drones already present a formidable challenge for military and homeland security forces. AI-guided drones could be a nightmare, using advanced tactics to hide their movements or coordinate swarming attacks custom-designed to overwhelm defenses. 

The good news? AI is uniquely suited to powering exceptional drone defenses. Here’s how: 

Learning algorithms are excellent at spotting and tracking drones: In a noisy or cluttered radar environment, drones could slip through cracks in sensor detection. But AI can be trained specifically to separate signal from noise in a given environment. 

An AI-powered system can become an expert in the area around a military base, for example, learning the local landscape, structures, and even weather patterns so it knows how to pick out and track drone anomalies with exceptional accuracy. 

AI can match defensive weapons to drone targets much faster than humans: Once the drone is spotted, a counter-UAS system has to know how to best determine intent and to plan for mitigation. But that depends on many complex factors. Is the drone carrying explosives? Is it vulnerable to a cyber or electronic attack? Could a laser take it down safely? 

For operators in a command center, making those decisions from a dozen or so football fields away can cost precious minutes. But an AI algorithm can be trained to recognize and evaluate different drone threats in an instant, evaluating its weaknesses and capabilities to quickly find and recommend the best way to maintain safety and sovereignty. It can also be trained on policy and rules of engagement to know which responses best align to regulations, assisting operators in a complex data rich environment. 

AI might be the only way to move fast enough to repel a drone swarm: In a large swarm scenario, human operators can be quickly overwhelmed. A well-trained AI system, governed by robust safety protocols, could take over defenses, rapidly prioritizing and engaging drones to stave off a powerful assault. Such a defense would require layering offensive and defensive tactics, a feat only an AI-powered system could likely pull off. 

Image courtesy of Lockheed Martin.

Building an Intelligent Counter-UAS Network

Sanctum™, Lockheed Martin’s Counter-UAS system, is proving out those AI-driven capabilities in joint exercises worldwide. From precision tracking and targeting to real-world takedowns of drone threats, Sanctum is demonstrating the power of smart, layered defense. 

Sanctum is customized for each deployment, using a combination of layered defensive systems and a core AI mission management system that is trained to detect drones in cluttered environments, track them with confidence, and identify the level of threat they pose. The system then recommends the ideal weapon-target pairing to take them out quickly and safely. 

Sanctum’s AI is a learning algorithm. What Sanctum sees in one location trains the system everywhere. When Sanctum tracks a new threat or recognizes a different UAS behavior, it shares those updates across the network. That makes each node smarter, and helps keep Sanctum-equipped defenses ahead of the threat.

That software is built on the same Lockheed Martin-designed air and missile defense technology like the Aegis Combat System that’s countering drone and cruise missile threats in places like the Red Sea. From sensors and sensor fusion to automated weapon-target pairing and precision intercepts, these technologies are battle-tested, not just beta-tested. 

We combine that AI mission management brain with a mix of the top-performing sensors and effectors from across the commercial and defense tech industry. Sanctum’s open architecture means there’s no vendor lock and no requirement to use Lockheed Martin tech. Each defensive network is built for what the mission needs, from software to sensors to shooters. And as new innovations come online, Sanctum can integrate new tech with ease. 

The result is a system that’s custom-designed and diligently trained to defend each unique location. That delivers more effective security, with better chances of seeing and stopping drones in their tracks without risking the safety of a base or the surrounding area. 

Sanctum gives operators a decisive edge over a rapidly evolving drone threat. 

Paul Lemmo is the Vice President and General Manager of Integrated Warfare Systems and Sensors at Lockheed Martin.

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Published on September 29, 2025 11:19

Northrop Grumman’s partners tout AI software, from AR training to mission planning

WASHINGTON — Northrop Grumman’s AI testbed aircraft is back in the air, and at least half-a-dozen partner companies are readying their autonomy software to install on it. The partners’ software modules range from an augmented reality training system to tactical combat algorithms and even mission planning and analysis, executives from each company told reporters last week at the Air Force Association‘s conference.

The physical centerpiece of the program, the Scaled Composites Model 437 Vanguard jet, took off Sept. 20 for the first time in roughly a year. Most of that time was spent installing Northrop Grumman’s Prism autonomy package, which is designed not only to fly the aircraft but also to accept specialized software modules from any company that conforms to certain common technical standards.

So far, six companies — Red 6, Autonodyne, EpiSci, Merlin Labs, Soar Technology and Shield AI — have publicly announced their participation in Northrop’s flight test program, known overall as Beacon. Beacon includes the Vanguard aircraft, its Prism software, and assorted support systems on the ground.

Red 6 specializes in augmented-reality training for military pilots. Their software populates the real skies with virtual aircraft that a real plane can interact with, both as friends and foes. The Red 6 tech superimposes VR aircraft on the pilot’s field of vision — and feeds realistic data about these unreal planes to the real aircraft’s sensors. That allows a single pilot in a single aircraft to train in scenarios too complex, too expensive, or just too dangerous to try out in real life.

“You can define the terrain, you define the threat, you can define the friendly forces, the electromagnetic spectrum,” said Red 6 Chief Strategy Officer Kevin Fesler, a former Air Force fighter group commander.

Autonodyne is also bringing the ability for the real aircraft to interact with multiple virtual ones. But its software’s initial focus is on coordinating the maneuvers of that entire formation, both its physical and digital elements, “in a tactically optimal way,” said CEO Steve Jacobson.

EpiSci, which was acquired earlier this year by Applied Intuition, is offering autonomy software with a focus on human-machine teaming — the art and science of getting AI and people to work together effectively.

“Getting the reps and sets with human pilots is something that we are very interested in doing,” said EpiSci President Dan Javorsek, a former Air Force squadron commander himself.

Merlin Labs is working with Northrop Grumman’s Beacon program to test “a package of mission autonomy behaviors,” said Merlin General Manager for Tactical Autonomy Chris Gentile. That means Merlin’s tactical algorithms will take in sensor data from the aircraft about its internal functioning and external conditions — augmented, on occasion, by Red 6’s synthetic data about simulated threats and allies — and then tell the aircraft how to react.

“We’re going to show that we can use that to make dynamic, highly effective human or superhuman decisions,” Gentile said.

Soar Technology focuses on “collaborative autonomy,” the ability of multiple systems — both manned and unmanned — to work together towards a common mission. The specific software module they’re bringing to Beacon, said Vice President for Autonomy Jack Zaientz, enables the aircraft to conduct what’s called a Combat Air Patrol. A CAP is a standardized but complex set of actions that requires multiple aircraft to coordinate their movements, get on station, patrol their assigned area, and keep their radars properly aimed to detect incoming threats.

Shield AI is delivering software that can learn and adapt over multiple autonomous missions, said Chief Strategy Officer Ryan Tseng. Its algorithms help the aircraft carry out its mission in flight, he explained, but they also help plan the mission before takeoff and analyze the outcome afterwards, potentially even updating the software and tactics before taking off on the next mission.

“Our focus is … the ability to exercise the full lifecycle of autonomy — from the mission plans, through the mission execution, through the debrief and the learning,” Tseng said.

The Vanguard aircraft still needs a few more test flights before it starts trying out all the partner software, cautioned Northrop President of Aeronautics Tom Jones. The Sept. 20 flight had the full Prism package up and running, he said, but not in control — that was still in the hands of a human test pilot. The company has five more such test flights before it flips the switch and lets Prism take full control, which should happen by the end of the year.

Then, once Prism is thoroughly proven, the partners can start plugging their software into it for flight tests. The plan is for multiple partners’ modules to be running at the same time during the same flight, executives said, allowing for complex interactions that are more than the sum of the individual parts.

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Published on September 29, 2025 10:37

Why Anduril, RTX are pushing new ground-launched munition variants

WASHINGTON — Defense contractors Anduril and RTX both unveiled ground-launched versions of existing munitions at the AFA conference outside Washington last week, pointing to growing market demand for the weapons amid trials on the modern battlefield.  

Some of that demand is coming from the US government. Just one day after the conference ended, the Republican majority for the Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday praised Anduril’s offering in particular, pledging that a dedicated military program would procure the new capability.

“There is currently no program for these types of missiles, but there will be soon,” the Republican SASC account posted on X, adding that $25 million set aside in President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill will “accelerate development” of the class of weapons.

Anduril announced at the AFA conference that it is updating the company’s Barracuda-500 cruise missile to launch from the ground. When the Barracuda-500’s air-launched version was announced last year, the company said the weapon could offer a range over 500 nautical miles and carry more than 100 pounds of payload. 

“Over the past several months, it’s been very clear that the priority” for Pentagon and congressional leadership “is fixing our munitions gap,” Diem Salmon, Anduril’s vice president for Air Dominance and Strike, said in a briefing with reporters Tuesday. “I think this has picked up actually in terms of prioritization and focus recently, and the desire is to finally fix what has been a problem in our missile inventory that’s decades old at this point.”

RTX subsidiary Raytheon also adapted one of its own existing munitions for a surface-launched role and unveiled it at AFA: the GBU-53/B StormBreaker, also known as the 250-pound class Small Diameter Bomb II, that can be launched from Air Force and Navy aircraft. 

“Recent global conflicts have highlighted the need for a smart, ground-launched, precision strike weapon that can perform in GPS-contested areas,” Sam Deneke, Raytheon’s president of Air & Space Defense Systems, said in a company press release published on Wednesday. “StormBreaker is a composable weapon, which allows it to be customized to meet mission demands. Using the foundational components of air-launched StormBreaker allowed us to move faster than ever before, going from concept to test flight in under two months.”

The Pentagon and foreign customers have shown keen interest in the StormBreaker. For example, an Air Force notice published last year that outlined a plan for the next dozen production lots set an annual manufacturing rate target of up to 2,240 units.

The war in Ukraine in particular has highlighted the need for various munitions, and modes of launching them, that can strike long-distance targets. Ukrainian defense firm Fire Point, for example, recently unveiled a ground-launched cruise missile called Flamingo that can carry a roughly 2,500-pound warhead and travel over 1,800 miles. 

Steve Milano, Anduril’s senior director for advanced effects, said alongside Salmon in the Tuesday briefing that the company is poised to manufacture thousands of Barracuda-500s as early as next year, cautioning that “demand needs to solidify for us to make the investments that are necessary.”

A key opportunity, according to Milano, is the Air Force’s new Family of Affordable Mass Missiles program, which fiscal 2026 budget documents showed a desire to buy approximately 3,000 units using One Big Beautiful Bill funds, otherwise known as reconciliation. Beyond the Pentagon, Milano said that there’s “a lot” of demand from international customers, leading to co-development agreements like one underway with Taiwan.

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Published on September 29, 2025 09:29

Pentagon readies contingency plans for government shutdown

WASHINGTON — With less than two days left before the US government potentially shuts down, the Department of Defense has issued contingency guidance to the force outlining six priorities and contracting plans.

“Activities that are determined not to be excepted, and which cannot be performed by utilizing military personnel in place of furloughed civilian personnel, will be suspended when appropriated funds are no longer available,” the document said. The secretary of defense “may, at any time, determine that additional activities shall be treated as excepted,” it added.

Fiscal 2025 is sunsetting when the clock strikes midnight Wednesday. Congress has not yet approved FY26 spending bills, and Democrats and Republicans have not reached an agreement on a continuing resolution to keep the government open. If a stopgap measure is not approved by both chambers and signed by President Donald Trump, the federal government will shut down.

For DoD, that means that military personnel on active duty — including reserve component personnel on federal active duty — will continue reporting for duty and may be asked to carry out non-excepted activities normally done by civilian personnel that have been furloughed.

“Civilian personnel, including military technicians, who are not necessary to carry out or support excepted activities, are to be furloughed using lapse in appropriations (often referred to as ‘shutdown’) procedures and guidance provided by the Office of Personnel Management,” the Pentagon guidance said. “Only the minimum number of civilian employees necessary to carry out excepted activities will be excepted from furlough.”

The department’s “highest priorities,” according to the guidance, will revolve around operations securing the US Southern border, operations in the Middle East, designing Golden Dome, depot maintenance, shipbuilding and critical munitions.

“As in every case, efforts supporting these activities may occur during a lapse when resourced with funds that remain available,” the planning guidance said.

“Where costs for such efforts must be charged against a lapsed appropriation, Component and subordinate leaders will closely evaluate individual activities to determine whether they are ‘excepted’ consistent with this planning guidance and continue or initiate them, as appropriate, when supported by the facts,” the document later added. 

When it comes to work on big-ticket weapons programs, contractors are able to continue working on previously awarded deals. However, the department is not allowed to execute new contracts.

“The expiration of an appropriation does not require the termination of contracts (or issuance of stop work orders) funded by that appropriation unless a new obligation of funds is required under the contract and the contract is not required to support an excepted activity,” the guidance continues.

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Published on September 29, 2025 08:49

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