US Next Generation Air Dominance Growth Opportunities

US Next Generation Air Dominance Growth Opportunities

Digital Engineering, Modular Systems, and Hypersonic and Directed-Weapon Technologies will Give the Air Force the Tools it Needs to Win on a New Type of Battlefield

RELEASE DATE
02-Jul-2021
REGION
North America
Research Code: K635-01-00-00-00
SKU: AE01477-NA-MT_25550
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Description

This study provides insights about the state of the US Air Force-managed Next Generation Air Defense (NGAD) program, which is a proposed family of air platforms that would include a 6th-generation fighter, wingman drones capable of combat autonomy, and support drones that can carry a combination of fuel, ammunition, and sensors. One of the more disruptive capabilities would be to fight at “machine speed” thanks to the Internet of Military Things. War at machine speed (searching, identifying, targeting, and destroying automatically) would accelerate and overwhelm the enemy’s decision-making capabilities.

On Sept. 15, 2020, then USAF acquisition chief Will Roper announced that the service had flown a full-scale flight demonstrator as part of the NGAD program. On May 14, 2021, Air Force Deputy Chief of Staff for Strategy, Integration, and Requirements Lt. Gen. Clinton Hinote stated that a second demonstrator might be in some stage of production now.

Roper also introduced a new defense concept that he called “the digital trinity,” saying that it is the true successor to stealth technology and the biggest paradigm shift for military technology dominance. The study looks at the concept in more detail.

Because of delays in the release of the 2022 President’s Budget, all NGAD program budget information in this research product is derived from 2021 budget. Detailed competitor data associated with the NGAD program is unavailable (much of the information is either classified or not releasable to the public). Growth drivers, restraints, and opportunities are based on available data obtained from both primary and secondary resources.

Author: Jorge Carbonell

RESEARCH: INFOGRAPHIC

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Table of Contents

Why Is It Increasingly Difficult to Grow?

The Strategic Imperative 8™

The Impact of the Top Three Strategic Imperatives on the Next Generation Air Dominance Program

Growth Opportunities Fuel the Growth Pipeline Engine™

Scope of Analysis

What You Need to Know First

Top Growth Opportunities

The NGAD Program

The NGAD Program (continued)

The NGAD Program (continued)

NGAD Spending Forecast

NGAD Spending Forecast Discussion

NGAD Competitor—Future Combat Air System

NGAD Competitor—Future Combat Air System Technology Initiative

NGAD Adversary Developments

Growth Drivers

Growth Restraints

Growth Opportunity 1—Digital Engineering for Faster Product Development

Growth Opportunity 1—Digital Engineering for Faster Product Development (continued)

Growth Opportunity 2—Modular Systems with Open Architecture

Growth Opportunity 2—Modular Systems with Open Architecture (continued)

Growth Opportunity 3—Hypersonic Aircraft, Drones, and Missiles

Growth Opportunity 3—Hypersonic Aircraft, Drones, and Missiles (continued)

Growth Opportunity 4—Stealth Manned-Unmanned Teaming

Growth Opportunity 4—Stealth Manned-Unmanned Teaming (continued)

Growth Opportunity 5—Laser Weapons for NGAD Aircraft

Growth Opportunity 5—Laser Weapons for NGAD Aircraft (continued)

Conclusions

List of Exhibits

Legal Disclaimer

This study provides insights about the state of the US Air Force-managed Next Generation Air Defense (NGAD) program, which is a proposed family of air platforms that would include a 6th-generation fighter, wingman drones capable of combat autonomy, and support drones that can carry a combination of fuel, ammunition, and sensors. One of the more disruptive capabilities would be to fight at “machine speed” thanks to the Internet of Military Things. War at machine speed (searching, identifying, targeting, and destroying automatically) would accelerate and overwhelm the enemys decision-making capabilities. On Sept. 15, 2020, then USAF acquisition chief Will Roper announced that the service had flown a full-scale flight demonstrator as part of the NGAD program. On May 14, 2021, Air Force Deputy Chief of Staff for Strategy, Integration, and Requirements Lt. Gen. Clinton Hinote stated that a second demonstrator might be in some stage of production now. Roper also introduced a new defense concept that he called “the digital trinity,” saying that it is the true successor to stealth technology and the biggest paradigm shift for military technology dominance. The study looks at the concept in more detail. Because of delays in the release of the 2022 Presidents Budget, all NGAD program budget information in this research product is derived from 2021 budget. Detailed competitor data associated with the NGAD program is unavailable (much of the information is either classified or not releasable to the public). Growth drivers, restraints, and opportunities are based on available data obtained from both primary and secondary resources. Author: Jorge Carbonell
More Information
No Index No
Podcast No
Author Jorge Carbonell
Industries Aerospace, Defence and Security
WIP Number K635-01-00-00-00
Is Prebook No
GPS Codes 9000-A1