Daily Report

May 5, 2011

B-52 Conversion Plan Still Maturing

The Defense Department is still developing the plan for converting a portion of the B-52 bomber fleet to conventional-only roles, senior defense officials told lawmakers Wednesday. "We are still working through exactly how that will be done," said James Miller, principal deputy undersecretary of defense for policy, before the Senate Armed Services Committee's strategic forces panel. This conversion will allow the United States to exclude these B-52s—expected to be at least some 30 in number—from being counted as nuclear delivery platforms under the New START agreement with Russia and conform the US bomber force to the Obama Administration's nuclear force posture. Testifying with Miller, Gen. Robert Kehler, commander of US Strategic Command, said officials will propose the conversion plan at some point to US treaty-compliance experts for approval. The proposal will "make it clear" that these B-52 are "not capable of carrying or delivering nuclear weapons," he said. "We believe we have a good way to do that that still allows them to be capable for conventional missions," Kehler added. After approval, US officials will exhibit a B-52, per the treaty's terms, so the Russians may see the conversion. (Kehler's prepared remarks) (Miller written statement)

House Begins Defense Bill Mark-up

Members of the House Armed Services Committee on Wednesday began their mark-up of the Pentagon’s $670.9 billion budget request for Fiscal 2012. Among the Air Force-related highlights, the seapower and projection forces subcommittee would allow the retirement of six B-1B...

New Boss at 24th Air Force

Maj. Gen. Richard Webber, the first commander of the 24th Air Force, USAF’s cyber arm, relinquished command to Maj. Gen. Suzanne Vautrinot during a ceremony at Lackland AFB, Tex. Under Webber’s leadership, 24th AF went from activation to full operational...

Eglin Picked as Candidate Site for Reserve Predator Unit

Eglin AFB, Fla., is a candidate to host an Air Force Reserve Command MQ-1 remotely piloted aircraft squadron. If the Air Force leadership ultimately decides to station this unit at Eglin, the base would welcome about 140 Reservists and associated...

White House Recants Some Details on Bin Laden Raid

Osama bin Laden did resist a team of US special forces during Sunday’s raid of his compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, but he was not armed as White House officials originally reported. Initial statements that bin Laden used his wife as...

Sky Not Falling on Defense Industry

The US defense industry will still enjoy “large and fairly stable markets” domestically even with projected flat or declining defense budgets in coming years, said Frank Kendall, the Pentagon’s deputy acquisition executive. “It should be clear that while we anticipate...

Thracian Spring in Bulgaria

Airmen from Ramstein AB, Germany, are among the contingent of more than 90 US military personnel participating in Exercise Thracian Spring 2011 with Bulgarian paratroopers in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. The 11-day event, which concludes on Friday, has already included static-line and...

US Missile Defense Site in Romania Picked

The United States and Romania have jointly selected Deveselu Air Base near Caracal, Romania, to host land-based Standard Missile-3 interceptors in the 2015 timeframe as part of the US national contribution to NATO’s ballistic missile defense architecture. The BMD site,...

Reservist Reaches 10,000 Flight Hours

SMSgt. Paul Houser, a KC-135 instructor boom operator assigned to Air Force Reserve Command’s 434th Operations Support Squadron at Grissom ARB, Ind., has surpassed 10,000 flight hours for his career, a rare feat for an airman. He reached this milestone...