Boeing has announced that the Royal Air Force will acquire a seventh C-17 transport aircraft under an agreement with the British Ministry of Defence. Boeing is scheduled to deliver this aircraft in December 2010. “The RAF has an urgent need for additional airlift capability,” said Robin Philip, head of MoD’s commercial air support. He added, “We know firsthand the capabilities and reliability the C-17 brings to every mission, and that’s why we’re adding another one to our fleet.” The RAF’s current fleet of six C-17s has logged more than 50,000 flight hours to date in missions that include supporting operations in Iraq and Afghanistan and ferrying humanitarian relief supplies to Southeast Asia after tsunamis and Pakistan after earthquakes. The new C-17, like the RAF’s others, will operate out of RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire, England.
North Korea conducted it’s 17th round of ballistic missile tests of the year May 24, including a believed intercontinental ballistic missile, in the skies over the Pacific while President Joe Biden was returning to the United States from the region. U.S. Indo-Pacific Command reported that the tests did not pose…