Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Air Force Secretary Outlines Priorities

Left
U.S. War Department: News
Air Force Secretary Outlines Priorities
Feb. 24, 2026 |  By David Vergun

The Department of the Air Force's priorities are readiness, modernization, defending the homeland — including the entire hemisphere, border security, missile defense, nuclear deterrence and people, said Air Force Secretary Troy Meink, who spoke yesterday during the Air and Space Forces Association's 2026 Warfare Symposium in Aurora, Colorado.

From a conventional deterrence perspective, the focus is on China, which continues to expand and modernize its military at an extremely fast pace, making deterrence in the Indo-Pacific region the biggest challenge by far, he said.

"Given that threat environment, the Air Force and the Space Force must be ready at any time for any threat across the entire spectrum of conflict," Meink said.

One of the challenges is scaling up production of weapon systems and munitions. Accomplishing that requires the revival of the defense industrial base, which has experienced decades of neglect, he said.

The good news is that beginning last year, production of advanced aircraft and munitions has ramped up. Not as fast as needed, but faster than in the past, the secretary said, adding the testing program for the LGM-35A Sentinel is proceeding well.

The Air Force will replace the aging LGM-30 Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile with the Sentinel ICBM. This represents the modernization of the land-based leg of the nuclear triad.

In the space domain, an increase in rocket launches has put more capability into orbit than ever before, thanks to help from commercial partnerships and other military services, as well as the National Reconnaissance Office.

Acquisition transformation includes delivering mission-effective capabilities faster.

"To do that, we must innovate faster than our adversaries," the secretary said.

To accomplish this, the workforce must be empowered to unleash their talent, take the initiative and know that supervisors have their backs, Meink said, adding that the Department of the Air Force has a phenomenal team.

Right

 

ABOUT   NEWS   HELP CENTER   PRESS PRODUCTS
Facebook   X   Instagram   Youtube

Unsubscribe | Contact Us

 


This email was sent to sajanram1986.channel@blogger.com using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: U.S. Department of War
1400 Defense Pentagon Washington, DC 20301-1400

Forecasting the Fight: How Meteorology, Oceanography Marines Support Operational Planning

Left
U.S. War Department: News
Forecasting the Fight: How Meteorology, Oceanography Marines Support Operational Planning
Feb. 24, 2026 |  By Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Kindsey Calvert, III Marine Expeditionary Force

Weather, while it cannot be controlled, can be predicted, which helps commanders make informed decisions about planning exercises and troop movements. Meteorology and oceanography Marines support battlefield capabilities through forecasting and predicting how weather will impact operations.

 

These Marines are trained meteorologists and oceanographers who look at the current state of the environment and create weather forecasts that support operational planning and execution. They create routine forecasts, 96-120 hours out, using satellite data and weather patterns, in addition to future forecasts for exercise planning, using historical weather data over a 20-year period.

 

"Out here in the Pacific, weather can determine both friendly and adversarial pacing of operations," said Marine Corps Sgt. Priya Hasham, a meteorology and oceanography analyst forecaster with the III Marine Expeditionary Force. 

To learn this field, Marines attend a yearlong program where they are taught basic physics, develop an understanding of the atmosphere and how it affects the weather and gain the ability to interpret weather radar data to create forecasts. 

In creating a forecast, satellite imagery, radar and data from weather stations around the world can be used. Pattern recognition also plays a significant role in forecasting, making personal experience an important factor. Since weather is influenced by local terrain, the longer a Marine has been in an area, the more familiar they are with local weather patterns, improving their ability to create accurate predictions.




Most Marine Corps installations have these specialized Marines, whose responsibilities vary between units. At the III Marine Expeditionary Force, their weather predictions support intelligence and battlespace awareness by looking at the big picture of air, land and sea operations to inform commanders as to how assets will operate in various weather conditions.

"Forecasting is an art and science," Hasham said. "There is a lot of technical skill involved."

Right

 

ABOUT   NEWS   HELP CENTER   PRESS PRODUCTS
Facebook   X   Instagram   Youtube

Unsubscribe | Contact Us

 


This email was sent to sajanram1986.channel@blogger.com using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: U.S. Department of War
1400 Defense Pentagon Washington, DC 20301-1400

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Delivering Peace Through Strength

Left
U.S. Department of Defense: Interactive
Delivering Peace Through Strength
Feb. 24, 2026
From defending America's borders and fighting drug trafficking to changes in culture and business operations to better build the nation's arsenal of freedom, President Donald J. Trump and Secretary of War Pete Hegseth are ushering in a new era characterized by peace through strength.
Right

 

ABOUT   NEWS   HELP CENTER   PRESS PRODUCTS
Facebook   X   Instagram   Youtube

Unsubscribe | Contact Us


This email was sent to sajanram1986.channel@blogger.com using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: U.S. Department of War
1400 Defense Pentagon Washington, DC 20301-1400

Pay twice or get it right: A call for quality in SA's construction |

R20bn Granger Bay expansion: Public invited to weigh in
Bizcommunity.com
CONSTRUCTION & ENGINEERING
ALL INDUSTRIES  | PRESS OFFICES  | COMPANIES  | JOBS  | EVENTS  | PEOPLE  | MULTIMEDIA  | SUBMIT NEWS  | ADVERTISE  | LIST COMPANY  | SHARE  | FOLLOW  | MY ACCOUNT  | MY NEWSLETTERS  | SUBSCRIBE  | BROWSE  |  UNSUBSCRIBE
Pay twice or get it right: A call for quality in SA's construction
Rework driven by poor quality and fragmented systems is costing South Africa’s construction sector billions, making prevention cheaper than repairs... read
Cape Town Airport announces R10bn upgrade to boost capacity, tourism
Cape Town International Airport launches a R10bn upgrade, including a new runway and expanded terminals, aimed at boosting capacity, efficiency, and tourism... read
Rand Water gets more Vaal River access to fix Gauteng water supply
According to DWS, recovery efforts were further hampered by a heatwave in the province since early February... read
Why facilities management is critical to smart buildings and safer operations

ISSUED BY FACILITIES MANAGEMENT EXPO

Read
Construction & Engineering
R20bn Granger Bay expansion: Public invited to weigh in
Read
Infrastructure & Utilities
A R7bn dam but no tap water for local villagers in Lesotho

SECHABA MOKHETHI

Read
Serco boosts SA production with Johannesburg facility expansion
Read
Uganda plans new rail link to Tanzania for mineral export boost

ELIAS BIRYABAREMA

Read
Property Development
Land reform must be a priority in 2026, says Vumelana Advisory Fund
Read
Assassinated Abahlali leader praised for fighting land grab “mafia"

IHSAAN HAFFEJEE

Read
Africa
Call for entries: 2026 Sovereign African Art Prize
Read
Business
Remembering Clem Sunter: The strategist who envisioned South Africa’s future
Read
2026 Budget Speech: Will South Africans get the tax relief they need?
Read
National minimum wage 2026: What workers (and employers) need to know

DANELLE PLAATJIES AND LUDWIG FRAHM-ARP

Read
Entrepreneurs fuel record high business confidence in Cape Town’s CBD
Read
SA's unemployment rate dips in final quarter of 2025
Read
New Press Offices on BizcommunityMore   |   Join
Agencydesk
Agencydesk is profitability-first project management software for creative agencies, integrating job costing, resource-driven scheduling, time tracking, multi-currency billing, and real-time profit insights into one seamless platform.
Contact  |  News  |  VISIT PRESS OFFICE  |  Linkedin
Alpvest Institute for FutureTech
Welcome to Alpvest Institute for FutureTech (AIFT), where we are redefining the landscape of higher education in Africa and beyond.
Contact  |  News  |  VISIT PRESS OFFICE  |  Linkedin  |  Facebook
FOLLOW US
List company
List CV
List new business
List portfolio showcase
List profile
Submit event
Submit gallery
Submit job ad
Submit new appointment
Submit news
Submit noticeboard
Submit op-ed contribution
Home
My job ads
My events
My company
My CV
Advertising: We welcome your sales enquiries! Email sales and read more about our advertising rates

3rd Floor, 62 Roeland St, Gardens, Cape Town, 8001, South Africa. Tel +27 (0)21 404 1460
© 2026 bizcommunity.com. All rights reserved.

Unsubscribe. Manage subscription. Subscribe. Change email.
open

Today in DOW: Feb. 25, 2026

Today in DOW: Feb. 25, 2026 Open Press Events Se...