This Friday INSIDER Daily Digest has news on the Senate hearing that considered the nomination of the next Air Force chief of staff, plus early coverage of next week's AUSA conference and more.
We start off with coverage of retired Air Force Gen. Kenneth Wilsbach's testimony to Capitol Hill regarding his nomination to be the service's top uniformed officer:
Wilsbach: Pentagon-level test and evaluation needs to 'support, not hinder' service efforts
The Pentagon's operational test and evaluation office should only play an advisory role to the services without having the power to mandate testing structures, said retired Gen. Kenneth Wilsbach, President Trump's nominee for Air Force chief of staff.
Air Force readiness, maintenance accounts would take priority under Wilsbach
Solving staggering readiness and parts availability issues should be pushed to the forefront of the Air Force's program planning and budgeting activities, according to service chief of staff nominee and retired Gen. Kenneth Wilsbach.
Compass Call facing 10 months of 'risk,' CSAF nominee says
While anticipating the delivery of two more EA-37B Compass Call aircraft by the end of the year, the delivery of the next slate of the electronic warfare aircraft "is at risk by 10 months," according to retired Gen. Kenneth Wilsbach, the Air Force chief of staff nominee.
Document: Wilsbach nomination hearing testimony
We also have a preview of next week's AUSA Conference:
Right to repair or not, Army already has the tools to fix its tactical vehicles, Mack Defense CEO says
While the Army wants more technical data access from manufacturers under its Common Tactical Truck (CTT) program, Mack Defense President and CEO David Hartzell says the service already has what it needs to maintain the tactical vehicles it has.
AM General bets on reimagined 105mm mobile artillery to win Pentagon interest at AUSA
AM General will arrive at next week's Association of the U.S. Army conference with a fresh pitch to the Pentagon: a reimagined version of its Hawkeye mobile artillery system that it says is lighter, faster and deadlier than before.
Since the Army's transformation initiative was announced, the service has been zeroing in on Red River Army Depot as a facility that could potentially be repurposed through a public-private partnership:
Army moving forward on private-sector involvement for Red River with CSO
With a new solicitation issued today, the Army is signaling it plans to competitively procure "innovative commercial items, technologies and services" at Red River Army Depot, TX through a commercial solutions opening, or CSO.
Document: Army's RRAD 'innovative commercial items' solicitation
Document: SkyFoundry Act of 2025