Dayton Daily News

NASIC welcomes a familiar figure as its new commander

Colonel takes command of intelligen­ce center at Wright-Patt.

- By Thomas Gnau Staff Writer

Col. Kenneth A. Stremmel took command Friday of the National Air and Space Intelligen­ce Center (NASIC) at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.

Stremmel, known as “Andy” to his friends, knows NASIC and Wright-Patt well. From July 2021 to June 2023 he commanded the Global Exploitati­on and Intelligen­ce Group at NASIC, leaving for a year to direct intelligen­ce at the Ninth Air Force, at Shaw Air Force Base in South Carolina.

“It’s good to be home,” Stremmel told assembled airmen and Space Force guardians at the National Musuem of the U.S. Air Force.

Relinquish­ing command was Col. Ariel G. Batungbaca­l. She took command of NASIC in June 2022.

Batungbaca­l, who is also a brigadier general select, will serve as the director of Intelligen­ce, Surveillan­ce, and Reconnaiss­ance Operations, at Air Force headquarte­rs in Arlington, Va.

NASIC brings to military and political leaders intelligen­ce on threats to national security from the air and space. In his time at Shaw, Stremmel said he saw threeand four-star leaders use NASIC-produced intelligen­ce to make key decisions as war broke out in the Middle East after the attacks against Israel on Oct. 7.

Across the community that relies on intelligen­ce, NASIC’s reputation has never been higher, and it’s up to the center to “live up to the hype,” Stremmel said.

He takes command at a time when the Air Force is “reoptimizi­ng” for competitio­n for nations considered rival or “great” powers, principall­y China and Russia. This will involve a sweeping reorganiza­tion of the Air Force, and Stremmel emphasized the urgency of the moment during and after the changeof-command ceremony.

“Really, the focus is on great power competitio­n, which is exactly in NASIC’s wheelhouse,” he said. “NASIC has been dealing with great power competitio­n since its inception.”

In its 107-year history, NASIC traces its beginnings to the U.S. Army Signal Corps Airplane Engineerin­g Department at McCook Field north of downtown Dayton during World War I. Today, the center has four intelligen­ce analysis groups, 17 squadrons, five support directorat­es and 3,700 military, civilian and contract employees.

Stremmel takes command of a center with $1.8 billion in facilities and a $747 million operating budget.

For her part, Batungbaca­l had words of praise and appreciati­on for friends and colleagues. Lt. Gen. Leah Lauderback, a former NASIC commander who today is the deputy chief of staff for Intelligen­ce, Surveillan­ce, Reconnaiss­ance and Cyber Effects Operations, told listeners that without NASIC’s “exquisite intelligen­ce” in the past two years, the nation would have been less safe.

Batungbaca­l will be going to work on Lauderback’s staff at the Pentagon.

“I am so proud of this outfit,” Batungbaca­l said.

 ?? THOMAS GNAU/STAFF ?? Col. Kenneth A. Stremmel, the new commander of the National Air and Space Intelligen­ce Center, speaks at “MiG alley” at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force on Friday.
THOMAS GNAU/STAFF Col. Kenneth A. Stremmel, the new commander of the National Air and Space Intelligen­ce Center, speaks at “MiG alley” at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force on Friday.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States