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AETC Prioritizes Data Literacy to Equip Staff for Digital Future

Tuesday, April 1st, 2025

JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-RANDOLPH, Texas (AFNS) —  

In today’s increasingly data-driven landscape, the ability to collect, analyze and interpret information effectively is paramount to developing a lethal and ready force. 

Recognizing this, Air Education and Training Command has launched a comprehensive initiative to enhance the data literacy of its staff, equipping them with essential skills for the digital age. 

“The initiative emerged from the command’s strategic operational approach and supports a key line of effort for the command,” Jerry Perez, AETC Chief of Force Development Experiences and Validation, told attendees during the command’s annual Force Development Summit, March 25. “Failure to adapt puts us behind our peers and competitors, impacting our ability to make the right and best decisions.” 

The initiative began with a self-assessment survey administered to AETC staff in November 2023, revealing that over 50% of respondents assessed their data literacy proficiency as basic or less. 

“This concerning trend underscored the need for upskilling,” Perez said. “We’ve got to be better than that. In today’s environment, a basic level is not going to be good enough.” 

The response to the trend has been a multi-pronged approach, Perez said. 

A new performance element, emphasizing foundational training in data literacy was introduced for this year. 

Three core competencies – data management, data analysis and data visualization – were identified, each with four proficiency levels, with the current focus on achieving basic and intermediate proficiency levels across the staff. 

A foundational data literacy course, developed in collaboration with AETC/A9 and AETC/A6, was made available on the AETC learning platform and is mandatory for all staff. 

Additionally, tailored learning pathways focusing on specific areas like AI and Power BI were created to further enhance data literacy skills. 

Looking ahead, AETC’s commitment to data literacy extends beyond this initial push, said Perez. 

A new civilian performance element for the 2025-2026 appraisal period will focus on the practical application of learned data skills. 

Senior staff at the director level will soon be required to undergo AI training. 

Furthermore, personalized learning pathways based on specific roles and responsibilities are being developed to provide more targeted training. 

“By investing in its workforce’s data literacy, AETC is taking proactive steps to ensure its readiness for the challenges and opportunities of the digital age,” Perez said. “This forward-thinking approach will undoubtedly pay dividends, enabling the command to make more informed decisions and maintain its competitive edge for years to come.” 

By Dreshawn Murray, Air Education and Training Command

Ukrainian Armed Forces Actively Using RAROG Polymer Machine Gun Belts at the Frontline

Monday, March 31st, 2025

Modern warfare involves the infiltration of contemporary technological solutions. One such innovation is the unique development by the Ukrainian company «Kharkiv Factory of Personal Protective Equipment» RAROG, specifically an ammo logistics system for machine guns PK/PKM.

The metal belt for the PK, PKM, and SG serves as the basis for equipping machine guns, but it is not manufactured either in Ukraine or in the overwhelming majority of the 53 countries that have machine guns in their arsenals. In addition to the shortage caused by the lack of production and constant battlefield losses, the metal belt has several significant disadvantages, including the need to remove it from the battlefield, manual loading of rounds, heavy weight, masking noise, corrosion, and so on.

Experts from the Kharkiv Factory of Personal Protective Equipment (Ukrainian Defence Innovations (UDI) Group, former Rarog Group) have found solutions to all these issues by developing a world`s first polymer disintegrated links for machine gun ammo belt, which significantly improves the mobility and effectiveness of machine gunners on the battlefield. This fact has been proven both through field testing and in actual combat. First samples were tested back in 2016. In 2019 Rarog won Sikorsky challenge (competition of innovative startup projects), suggested a new ammo logistic system for Armed Forces of Ukraine based on polymer links.

The polymer machine gun belt consists of a series of links, each of which has three rings connected by a crossbar. The links are hinged and connected by cartridges inserted into the aligned rings. This belt is three times lighter than the metal analogues, has low cost and high production speed, minimal noise during transportation, no corrosion, and prevents snags during operations. A key difference of this system is that the belts could be supplied to the combat zone already loaded, so soldiers do not need to spend time on this task. The standard machine gun belt for the PKM is supplied in solid links of at least 25 units. This creates inconvenience when shooting, the so-called tail. The links of the polymer belt simply fly out along with the cartridge cases. The metal belt must be collected and reloaded, the polymer belt is one-time use (although in training ground conditions Ukrainian soldiers use it up to 4 times in a row). Also, cartridges loaded into a metal belt are subject to corrosion during storage. This creates a risk that the machine gun may fail in a critical situation. Cartridges loaded into a polymer belt make less noise when moving as well.

The development and testing process of the polymer belt took much time, as Rarog aimed to ensure maximum convenience, reliability, and efficiency in this product. UDI Group`s representatives are in constant communication with Ukrainian defenders participating in combat operations on various parts of the frontline, and receive feedback from them. Over the course of the war, the polymer belt produced by the Kharkiv Factory of Personal Protective Equipment has been used by the soldiers of Airborne Assault Forces, 54th Separate Mechanized Brigade, 24th Separate Mechanized Brigade, 3rd Separate Assault Brigade, and other units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. Soldiers have praised the ergonomics, ease of transport and versatility of the polymer machine gun belt.

The opponents did not ignore this product. In 2022, an article was published on the website of the well-known Russian magazine «Kalashnikov», where the author, a weapons expert and editor-in-chief of the publication, Mikhail Degtyaryov, accused the experts from Rarog of «lack of professional knowledge and ignoring historical experience», while also emphasizing that replacing the usual metal belt with a much lighter and cheaper polymer one was impossible due to several critical shortcomings.

However, two years later, several Russian companies introduced their «new products» – analogs of Ukrainian development, one of which even made it to the cover of the aforementioned expert magazine.

Arctic Mobility Sustainment System Tested at US Army Arctic Regions Test Center

Monday, March 31st, 2025

FORT GREELY, Alaska — Deployed Soldiers are constantly loaded with gear, but are particularly encumbered when operating in a cold weather environment.

In addition to their conventional weapons, Soldiers need to utilize heavy equipment like space heaters, cooking stoves, fuel and heavy-duty thermal tents to survive operations in arctic climates.

The Army’s Arctic Mobility Sustainment System, or AMSS, all-regions tactical clothing with updated cold weather clothing, snowshoes and ski poles underwent rigorous testing at U.S. Army Arctic Regions Test Center — known as ARTC — this winter with the help of Soldiers from the Army’s 11th Airborne stationed at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson.

“We’re traveling longer distances to get the snow that we need,” Hannah Henry, ARTC test officer. “We’re getting a lot more data this year.”

The AMSS items under test will replace the legacy Ahkio sled and 10-person tent the Army currently uses. Testers expected extreme cold for the multi-week test, and the interior Alaska winter delivered a wide span of Arctic conditions, from brutal temperatures below 0 degrees Fahrenheit to rapid, but short-lived swings to relatively mild winter temperatures only slightly below freezing.

“We’re testing some different base layers,” said Steven Prewitt, ARTC test officer. “Our unusually warm winter here has been very good for observing insulating and moisture management factors with the clothing.”

On a typical day, Soldiers would pack an AMSS sled under test with the tent, a heater, and their basic standard issue items for arctic infantry operations, then pull the sleds in either nine-Soldier squads or four to five Soldier teams as ARTC’s test personnel led the way. Moving the heavy sleds across CRTC’s hilly tundra, thickly forested areas and the dense, frozen boggy vegetation called muskeg is challenging in any conditions, but particularly so in extreme cold and deep snow.

“Our snow is so dry and powdery,” said Isaac Howell, Chief of ARTC’s Test Operations Division. “You don’t stand on it at all, whether you are on skis or in snowshoes — you don’t go across the top of it, you go through it. You are plowing snow the entire day regardless of whether you are wearing snowshoes or not.”

After a two-and-a-half-hour movement, testers kept track of how long it took the soldiers to emplace and erect each tent and get the space heaters operating. Following a cold weather MRE for lunch, the Soldiers disassembled the tent and heater and returned to their day’s starting point following a different route. Following a sensing survey on their opinion of the items and hot meal, the Soldiers reassembled the tents and heaters and prepared to sleep in the long, cold Arctic night.

Through it all, telemetry on the Soldiers measured their body core and extremity temperature for both feedback on the clothing and for safety. They also participated in a comprehensive feedback focus group every week that will be used when assessing the effectiveness of the tested gear.

By Mark Schauer

Congressional Caucus Champions Special Ops Amid Rising Threats

Sunday, March 30th, 2025

U.S. Army Gen. Bryan P. Fenton, commander of U.S. Special Operations Command, joined congressional leaders March 26, 2025, to underscore the indispensable role of special operations forces and rally bipartisan support for their growing mission at the Congressional SOF Caucus event on Capitol Hill.

Fenton highlighted the unprecedented demand on SOF, driven by escalating threats from state and non-state actors alike, during his remarks to the caucus co-chaired by Representatives Richard Hudson, Kathy Castor and Scott Peters.

“The demand from your SOF is higher than it’s ever been,” Fenton said. “Crisis response missions are up 170% in three years, and deterrence taskings have risen 35% in two.”

Hudson, representing North Carolina’s 9th Congressional District, home to Fort Bragg, opened the event by detailing SOF’s vital footprint nationwide — from his state to Naval Base Coronado in California. He emphasized the strain on operators and their families amid the relentless operational tempo.

“We give you a broom handle and some bailing wire, and you go do it, and you’re excellent,” he said.

Hudson’s focus on resources echoed a recurring theme of the evening. Castor, a co-chair from Tampa, Florida — home to Socom headquarters — pointed to the disparity between SOF’s outsized contributions and its modest share of the Defense Department’s resources.

“You carry the load on the most sophisticated missions out there with just 2% of the defense budget,” she said.

Castor pressed for modernizing the command’s aging facilities at MacDill Air Force Base, contrasting those with U.S. Central Command’s state-of-the-art headquarters nearby.

“It’s time for that headquarters to live up to what we ask of the men and women who serve,” she urged, calling for bipartisan backing to ensure SOF’s infrastructure matches its mission.

The critical value of SOF emerged as a cornerstone of the discussion. Peters, representing San Diego’s Naval Special Warfare community, cited a recent bipartisan win — securing $310 million to address sewage flows impacting SEAL training waters — as proof of the caucus’ impact. He stressed SOF’s role in deterrence and crisis response amid threats from China, Russia, Iran and terrorist groups.

Fenton elaborated on SOF’s unique adaptability, describing the current era as “a SOF renaissance” tailor-made for converging challenges like unmanned systems and artificial intelligence. He cited recent successes, including eliminating hundreds of terrorists and rescuing Americans abroad.

“We’ve been called out 14 times in three years on short notice to be somewhere in the world,” he said.

He urged sustained investment in scalable capabilities to keep pace with adversaries exploiting new technologies.

Colby Jenkins, a former Geen Beret and combat veteran, who is currently performing the duties of assistant secretary of defense for special operations and low-intensity conflict, emphasized SOF’s relational edge. He praised the caucus for supporting families and empowering Socom as a service-like entity.

“That’s where we bring value — with relationships of trust that span decades,” Jenkins said.

Fenton also called for deeper ties between Socom and Congress to address installation needs and family support. He lauded the caucus’ role in bridging gaps for members without SOF bases in their districts, ensuring broad awareness of the community’s challenges.

“You watch over our families — we couldn’t do what we do without them,” he noted.

Fenton expressed confidence in SOF’s readiness, bolstered by the caucus’ commitment, highlighting the need for bipartisan resolve to equip operators for an uncertain future.

“SOF readiness is important now more than ever. “[Our] job [is] to … make sure that you’re getting the resources you need, the training you need and support you need,” Hudson said.

By Army MAJ Wes Shinego, DOD News

Register Now for LEGION Legends

Saturday, March 29th, 2025


SIG SAUER Presents the First LEGION LEGENDS Event

This is a fully immersive range experience featuring veterans of the US military’s most elite forces, brought to you by the team who hosts the legendary Camp LEGION.

At this industry first event, level up your shooting game with combat professionals – Kyle Lamb, Kevin Holland, JR Cook and Chili Palmer – four legends that have fought for our freedoms.

DATES: May 21-24, 2025

LOCATION: Dallas, Texas

LEGION LEGENDS builds off the iconic Camp LEGION event and adds a truly unique experience to enhance your firearm skills with a curriculum designed by legendary combat professionals.

With the small group attending this event, attendees will have an unprecedented opportunity to engage exclusively in powerful discussions and 1-on-1 with the LEGION LEGENDS, learning the core values and skills that define the most elite military leaders.

About LEGION LEGENDS Event:

An all-inclusive three-night / four-day experience and range program. From the time you check-in with the SIG Events team, your experience includes:

Luxury hotel accommodation at the Omni Frisco at the Star located just north of Dallas, Texas.

All meals

Event transportation

Firearms and ammunition for range events

LEGION LEGENDS swag pack

Event firearms purchase opportunities and discounts

Wednesday, May 21 – Saturday, May 24, 2025

Limited spots available. The experience is $4,199 per guest.

LEARN MORE AND REGISTER NOW FOR LEGION LEGENDS

Melrose Air Force Range Achieves Milestone Joint National Training Capability Certification

Saturday, March 29th, 2025

CANNON AIR FORCE BASE, N.M. —  

Melrose Air Force Range has reached a new milestone – achieving Joint National Training Capability accreditation.

The JNTC program provides consistent, holistic, and relevant assessment of joint training programs across the armed services and U.S. Special Operations Command. The program documents capabilities and enables valid comparisons of joint training challenges, setting the standard for training capabilities.

“This certification enables the DOD’s ability to conduct training scenarios which translate to battlefield application here at MAFR, ultimately enabling the strategic advantage and lethality of Special Operations Forces to accomplish their mission,” said Col. Robert Johnston, 27th Special Operations Wing commander.

Due to its prime location west of Cannon Air Force Base, MAFR is the crown jewel of Air Force Special Operations Command, providing more than 4,500 training hours for Special Operation Forces every year.

These future upgrades will enhance MAFR’s existing capabilities and introduce new features, further solidifying its role as a premiere training location. This includes bolstering the range’s ability to provide critical Certification, Validation, and Verification (CV2) for its primary users: AFSOC Special Operations Task Groups and Special Operations Task Units.

Achieving CV2 for SOTU’s and SOTG’s here at MAFR helps AFSOC align with the Department of the Air Force AFORGEN cycles. Upgrades to the range also align with the Secretary of Defense’s priority of ensuring Cannon’s Air Commandos are a ready, modern, and lethal fighting force prepared to defeat and destroy our nations enemies.

The range is a training site for multiple iterations of Emerald Warrior exercises annually. This joint, combined exercise provides realistic and relevant, high-end training to prepare special operations forces, conventional forces, and international partners for the evolving strategic environment. Emerald Warrior shifts the focus to growing kinetic and non-kinetic effects in strategic competition.

EW training sites are assessed to provide seven core joint functions: Command and Control (C2), Intelligence, Fires, Movement and Maneuver, Protection, Sustainment, and Information.

“In an effort to improve our joint warfighters training experience on the range, we have identified limitations that are being targeted for improvement,” said Johnston. “The JNTC certification will provide additional financial support through Unfunded Requirements and Presidential Budget Requests to the Joint Staff.”

By TSgt Jacob Albers

FirstSpear Friday Focus – Rash Guard

Friday, March 28th, 2025

The FIRSTSPEAR RASH GUARD is built for performance and protection in training, maritime, and watersport environments. Made in the USA from a high-performance poly/spandex blend, this ultralight top offers a compression fit that conforms to your body for streamlined comfort.

Its quick-drying fabric ensures you stay comfortable even after repeated exposure to water, while the smooth flat seams reduce chafing and skin irritation caused by rubbing or abrasion. Designed for versatility, the Rash Guard provides natural sun and UV protection, making it ideal for extended hours in the sun.

Whether you’re tackling aquatic adventures, training in humid conditions, or seeking extra protection during water-based activities, this Rash Guard delivers. Its durable, American-made construction ensures it can handle the demands of intense use while maintaining its shape and performance.

Perfect for divers, kayakers, surfers, and tactical operators, the FIRSTSPEAR RASH GUARD is offered in both long and short-sleeve varieties and provides the perfect blend of protection, comfort, and reliability. For optimal performance, order your standard t-shirt size for a true compression fit, or size up 1-2 sizes for a more relaxed feel.

FirstSpear is the premier source for cutting edge-tactical gear for military, law enforcement and those who train. For more information visit First-Spear.com.

Army Collaborates with Ride-Share Companies to Improve Transportation

Friday, March 28th, 2025

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Army launched a pilot ride-share access program to improve installation access for over 600,000 military members, their families, retirees and civilians living at six Army installations. Over the next two months, ride-share access will be re-envisioned at Fort Bliss, Texas; Fort Bragg, North Carolina; Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington; Schofield Barracks, Hawaii; Fort Shafter, Hawaii; and Tripler Army Medical Center, Hawaii.

“This program demonstrates our commitment to addressing the challenges faced by our military communities,” said Dan Driscoll, Secretary of the Army. “Through collaboration with the ride-share industry, we’re able to provide our Soldiers and their families with safe, reliable and convenient transportation options that support their unique needs and enhance their overall quality of life.”

The ride-share access pilot will standardize access procedures and requirements to safely increase ridership and promote additional transportation options. If successful, the Army plans to expand the program to additional installations across the country.

In accordance with the Army’s strict security standards, all visitors, including taxi and ride-sharing vehicle drivers, will undergo identity proofing and vetting through the FBI’s National Crime Information Center and Terrorist Screening Database. In addition to this credential vetting, drivers will also be required to establish their purpose for each visit by showing the ride-sharing hail on their smartphones and/or identifying the person and building for the pickup.

“This pilot is our response to see if we can safely collaborate with the ride-share industry to simplify transportation options for everyone living on, working on or even visiting our camps, posts and installations,” said Sgt. Maj. of the Army Michael Weimer. “We heard you and agree, it shouldn’t be so hard to coordinate transportation onto our installations, but also in and around some of our larger ones.”

By U.S. Army Public Affairs