The week of April 21, 2026, did not lack for big moves. The Space Force put $3.2 billion on the table for orbital interceptors, acknowledged it may need to nearly double its heavy-lift launch capacity, completed a decade-long GPS modernization program, and sat through a bipartisan congressional flogging of NASA’s budget. Meanwhile, the chief of space operations laid out a 104-page blueprint for how he thinks the Space Force should fight by 2040. A busy week by any measure.
Here is what happened, why it matters, and what to watch.
Golden Dome Gets Twelve Competitors for Orbital Interceptors
The story everyone in this community has been watching took a significant step forward on April 24. The Space Systems Command announced it had awarded agreements worth up to $3.2 billion to 12 companies to develop prototypes for space-based interceptors (SBIs), the satellites that would destroy ballistic, hypersonic, and cruise missiles in their boost phase shortly after launch.
The 20 agreements, made using Other Transaction Authority contracts in late 2025 and early 2026, went to a notable mix of recipients: Anduril Industries, Booz Allen Hamilton, General Dynamics Mission Systems, GITAI USA, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Quindar, Raytheon, Sci-Tec, SpaceX, True Anomaly, and Turion Space. That combination of primes and venture-funded new entrants is intentional. The Pentagon is trying to broaden its industrial base and bring commercial pace innovation to a mission that has historically moved at government speed.
Col. Bryon McClain, the program executive officer for space combat power, set a hard marker: demonstrate an initial capability by 2028.
The harder question came from Gen. Michael Guetlein, who runs the Golden Dome program office. Guetlein told the House Armed Services strategic forces subcommittee last week that affordability may determine whether space-based interceptors make the final Golden Dome architecture at all. The cost-exchange problem is real: a missile or drone designed to overwhelm defenses can be built for a fraction of the cost of an interceptor designed to destroy it. A system that cannot intercept at volume is a system that can be saturated.
“If boost phase intercept from space is not affordable and scalable, we will not produce it because we have other options,” Guetlein said. Ref: Defense One
What to watch: Whether any of the 12 companies can crack the cost problem, not just the physics problem. Interceptor economics will drive architecture decisions more than technology does.
Separately, Space Systems Command awarded SpaceX a $57 million contract on April 22 to demonstrate satellite-to-satellite communications using Link-182, the radio-frequency data link standard the Space Force has designated as the communications backbone for MILNET. MILNET is SpaceX’s Starshield relay constellation in low Earth orbit. Under the Golden Dome architecture, space-based interceptors would use Link-182 radios to pass data across satellites without routing it through ground stations. The demo must be complete by April 2027.
Ref: SpaceNews
That contract matters because a network of interceptors in orbit is only as useful as its ability to communicate faster than the threat it is tracking. MILNET is the connective tissue. Getting SpaceX to prove Link-182 works at scale is a prerequisite to everything else in the SBI architecture.
The Space Force Needs to Launch a Lot More Stuff
A “sources sought” notice published by Space Systems Command this month carried a number worth paying attention to. The Space Force plans to add 25 missions to its National Security Space Launch Phase 3 Lane 2 program, a nearly 50% increase over the original 54-mission plan. These are the most demanding launches in the portfolio, involving direct insertion of large satellites into geosynchronous orbit, medium Earth orbit deployments of 20,000-pound payloads, and multi-manifest missions carrying multiple high-value spacecraft on a single rocket.
The fiscal 2027 budget request reflects this: roughly $5 billion for 31 national security launches, more than double the $2 billion enacted for 2026.
There is a supply-side problem attached to this demand. Lane 2 has three certified providers: SpaceX, United Launch Alliance, and Blue Origin. Only SpaceX and ULA are certified for these missions. Only SpaceX is currently flying. ULA’s Vulcan Centaur has been grounded since February 12 following a solid-rocket motor anomaly, and ULA has a backlog from its earlier Phase 2 contracts. The “sources sought” notice appears partly aimed at gauging whether Blue Origin’s New Glenn can accelerate its certification timeline.
Ref: SpaceNews
The operational implication is straightforward: if Golden Dome requires tens of thousands of satellites in orbit and the country’s current certified heavy-lift infrastructure is run by a single company, that creates a single point of failure in the national security launch base. Diversification is not just good industrial policy. It is a warfighting requirement.
GPS 3 Is Complete. It Took 26 Years.
A SpaceX Falcon 9 lifted off from Cape Canaveral at 2:53 a.m. Eastern on April 21, carrying GPS 3 SV-10, the tenth and final satellite in the GPS 3 series built by Lockheed Martin. GPS 3 SV-10 launched four days after a weather delay and reached medium Earth orbit about 12,550 miles above Earth.
The GPS 3 program dates back to the early 2000s. These satellites deliver improved accuracy, stronger anti-jamming, the encrypted M‑code military signal, the L5 safety-of-life signal for aviation, and the L1C civil signal for interoperability with other global navigation systems. SV-10 also carried an experimental optical communications terminal and an advanced Digital Rubidium Atomic Frequency Standard clock.
Worth noting: SV-10 is the fourth consecutive GPS mission originally assigned to ULA and later transferred to SpaceX because of the Vulcan grounding.
Ref: SpaceNews
The next generation, GPS 3F, is in development. The gap between completing GPS 3 and fielding GPS 3F will determine how long the current constellation must carry the load. GPS is not an optional infrastructure. Every joint force operation depends on it. The Space Force needs to move the GPS 3F program with the same urgency it is applying to Golden Dome.
Saltzman Laid Down the 2040 Warfighting Blueprint
At the Space Symposium in Colorado Springs on April 15, Gen. Chance Saltzman used what may be his final appearance as chief of space operations to release two foundational documents: the 68-page Future Operating Environment 2040 and the 104-page Objective Force 2040.
The pair functions as a problem-solution set. The Future Operating Environment describes the threat landscape the Space Force expects to face: China as the primary pacing challenge, Russia as a secondary one, both capable of disrupting or destroying satellites and exploiting U.S. dependence on GPS, communications, and missile warning. The character of conflict in this framing is less about decisive space battles and more about persistent interference below the threshold of open war. Cyberattacks, electronic warfare, and spoofing have become the daily operating environment.
The Objective Force document describes what the Space Force must become in response: faster decision-making, compressing to machine speed, proliferated constellations replacing single large exquisite satellites, expanded operations out to cislunar space, and governance frameworks that can handle orbital congestion from tens of thousands of commercial satellites.
Ref: SpaceNews
Saltzman asked the audience to critique the documents. That is the right instinct. A blueprint that cannot survive outside scrutiny is not a strategy; it is a wish list.
What matters operationally: the Objective Force 2040 framework will shape requirements for years. If program managers are not reading it and checking their acquisition plans against it, they should be.
Congress to NASA: This Budget Does Not Add Up
The House Science Committee held a four-hour hearing on April 22 that produced a rare moment of bipartisan agreement: the proposed fiscal year 2027 NASA budget does not work.
The White House proposal, released April 3, calls for a 23% overall cut to NASA, with a 47% reduction to the Science Mission Directorate. Rep. Brian Babin (R‑TX), the committee chairman and a self-described fiscal conservative, said plainly: “I simply do not believe that this budget proposal is capable of supporting what President Trump himself has directed the agency to accomplish.” Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D‑CA), the ranking member, said OMB was the source of the problem, not NASA itself.
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman argued the agency can achieve more with less by eliminating inefficient programs. He cited specific overruns on the X‑59 aircraft, the Dragonfly Titan mission, Mars Sample Return, and the Space Launch System Block 1B. His argument: capital allocation within NASA has been poor, and cutting the waste should enable the priorities to survive. The committee was not persuaded that a 47% cut in science produces the same scientific output with different efficiency.
Ref: SpaceNews
The path forward here is a committee markup that restores science funding while forcing NASA to identify specific programs for elimination or restructuring. Congress needs to pick targets, not defend the entire budget line. Isaacman’s instinct to challenge inefficiency is sound. The proposed cut is too blunt an instrument to do that job cleanly.
What to Watch This Week
The Golden Dome architecture review will continue to develop, with the focus shifting toward whether space-based interceptors survive the affordability test or get replaced by ground- and sea-based alternatives. The Space Force’s heavy-lift demand signal is now public, which means Blue Origin will face direct pressure to accelerate New Glenn certification. On the budget front, Senate appropriators will be watching how the House Science Committee responds to the NASA hearing before drafting their own markup.
The 2040 Objective Force documents are public. Read them. The Space Force rarely provides the acquisition community with this kind of explicit guidance on where program requirements are headed.

