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Readjusting: 

Readjusting: The Air Force isn’t ready to say that budgetary and planning changes in the Transformational Satellite Communications program will necessarily push the launch of the first TSAT satellite out from 2016 to 2018, a senior service space official said March 4. “We are not necessarily married to a 2018 launch,” Gary Payton, deputy under secretary of the Air Force for Space Programs, told the Senate Armed Service strategic forces subcommittee. Instead USAF is currently examining how best to synchronize the fielding schedule of TSAT satellites with the plans of the US military’s user community that will rely on the secure communications-on-the-go capabilities provided by the constellation, he said. For example, TSAT is considered a critical enabler for the Army’s Future Combat Systems. According to Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.), who heads the subcommittee, the Air Force has slashed $3.6 billion from the TSAT program between Fiscal 2009 and Fiscal 2013, thereby slipping the previously stated goal of achieving first launch in 2016 to 2018 “at the earliest.” But Payton said these changes may not actually have the schedule impact that they may appear to have on paper. “We do not know yet what the first spacecraft launch schedule is like until we define the content of that first block of spacecraft,” he said. “It could be earlier than 2018 ... depending on the needs of the warfighters.” The decision to procure a fourth Advanced Extremely High Frequency satellite for launch prior to TSAT has removed one of the schedule drivers for launching the first TSAT spacecraft by a certain point next decade, essentially giving the Air Force more time to decide, he said. “That vehicle completes a global ring or geosynchronous satellites for protected strategic communications,” he said. At the same hearing, Gen. Robert Kehler, head of Air Force Space Command, said the fourth AEHF satellite “allows us not to take the next couple of months to assess what the pace and scope of TSAT needs to look like.”
 
3/10/2008 
Verbatim

Appreciative Host
"I know you're here during a difficult time. You're here through Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's. I promise you, we will find turkeys."
—Republic of Lithuania Chief of Defence Maj. Gen. Arvydas Pocius, expressing his thanks to airmen of the 493rd Fighter Squadron from RAF Lakenheath, Britain, who on Sept. 1, 2010, began a four-month stint with their F-15s in Lithuania to protect the airspace of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania under NATO's Baltic air policing mission.

Verbatim

Family Momentum
"In many ways, this was what the Year of the Air Force Family was all about—connecting airmen and their families with the resources they need. I have confidence the Air Force will capitalize on this strong momentum in the years ahead by continuing to improve our family support programs and ensuring people know what resources are available."
—Suzie Schwartz, wife of USAF Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz, commenting on the accomplishments of the Year of the Air Force Family initiative that concluded in July, in a statement provided to the Daily Report, Aug. 22, 2010.

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