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![]() by Staff Writers Wright-Patterson AFB OH (AFNS) Apr 26, 2019
The commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory presented highlights of the new Air Force Science and Technology Strategy for 2030 and beyond to members of the local media April 18 at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force. Speaking in front of several experimental aircraft on display that implemented technologies developed at AFRL, Maj. Gen. William Cooley told reporters that the new strategy prioritizes demands on time, space and complexity in future conflicts across all domains. The strategy aligns with the National Security Strategy and the National Defense Strategy and lays out a path forward for the Air Force Science and Technology ecosystem to deliver warfighting capabilities at the speed of relevance and necessity. AFRL collected over 1,500 ideas from academia, industry and government during the 18 months the strategy was being developed that address the "what" and the "how" of the strategy.
The Air Force S and T 2030 Strategy has three objectives:
+ Global persistent awareness 2. Reform the way science and technology are led and managed through the appointment of an Air Force Chief Technology officer. 3. Deepen and expand the science and technology enterprise through an increased focus on partnerships and adopting agile and innovative business processes. "To ensure that we have confidence in, and understand how to employ these new technologies and capabilities, we have to demonstrate them in a relevant environment, build prototypes and perform experimentation," Cooley said. "This will build confidence in these new technologies for our warfighter." "We believe that bringing a stronger voice for science and technology across the Air Force will help us achieve the objectives laid out in this strategy," Cooley said of the objective to appoint an Air Force Chief Technology Officer. Speaking on the third objective, Cooley said there are two key components to this objective - the first being AFRL's internal workforce. "We must continue to attract, develop and retain the best and brightest from across the United States and our allies. This will require extra effort to partner with universities and technology ecosystems to enhance and expand our bench of researchers." The second component is to continue and expand AFRL partnerships with other stakeholders in the science and technology ecosystem, which includes universities, industry, both large and small businesses, other defense laboratories and other government laboratories. "The reemergence of great power competition demands that our science and technology ecosystem expand to include not just the whole of the defense department, or the whole of government - we seek to engage the whole of nation as a science and technology ecosystem to ensure we dominate time, space and complexity in future conflict across all operating domains," Cooley said. "We also recognize that we need to be easier to work with and connect with, so to do this, we are implementing what we call a 'front door' to better enable partnerships - www.afresearchlab.com, a new website that will act as our digital front door," he said. One of the things the lab needs to do better is to engage small businesses who are not aware of the needs of the Air Force, and yet have terrific ideas that can help the Air Force and the national security enterprise. "Pitch Day was a shift in how we're engaging small business enterprises to enable us to pay them faster, so that it's easier to work with the Air Force, but also to pull in small businesses who may not have historically known about us or worked with the Air Force in the past," Cooley said.
![]() ![]() China uses US-made satellites for internal security: report Washington (AFP) April 23, 2019 A fleet of US-made satellites helps China's government police its people and supports its military despite growing wariness in Washington over Beijing's power, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday. While the United States will not let China buy US-made satellites for national security reasons, it sells them to partly Chinese-controlled, Hong Kong-based Asia Satellite Communications, which then leases out capacity to Chinese and other customers. Under that arrangement China's Ministry of Stat ... read more
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