Dr. Troy E. Meink, principal deputy director of the National Reconnaissance Office

President-elect Donald J. Trump has named his pick for Air Force[1] secretary, finally announcing the last service secretary nominee under his administration.

Trump said on social media Thursday that Troy Meink, currently the principal director of the National Reconnaissance Office, was his choice to be the 27th secretary of the Air Force, which also oversees the Space Force[2].

"I am pleased to announce that Dr. Troy Meink will be the next United States secretary of the Air Force," Trump wrote Thursday in a social media post. "Troy will work with our incredible secretary of defense nominee, Pete Hegseth, to ensure that our nation's Air Force is the most effective and deadly force in the world, as we secure peace through strength."

Read Next: In Her Final Days in Office, Army Secretary Formally Establishes Service's Command Review Program[3]

Meink joined the Air Force through the Reserve Officers' Training Corps program at South Dakota State University in 1998. He served as a KC-135 Stratotanker[4] navigator and instructor, as well as a lead test engineer for the Missile Defense Agency, according to his past service biography.

Other roles he's held include deputy under secretary of the Air Force for space under President Barack Obama's administration and also director of signals intelligence systems acquisition for the National Reconnaissance Office.

Meink also completed 100 sorties, eight combat and 29 combat support missions supporting Operations Desert Shield, Desert Storm and Provide Comfort, his biography detailed.

Policy and defense experts told Military.com on Thursday that Trump's selection of Meink showcases the importance that the president-elect puts on space in his national defense policy. He made creating the Space Force, which is under the Department of the Air Force, a major defense priority during his previous term.

"Clearly, there is focus on space," retired Lt. Gen. Dave Deptula, the dean of the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies, told Military.com. "That's evident."

Meink did not return a request for comment. A spokesperson for the National Reconnaissance Office declined to provide any information.

The South Dakota native, if confirmed by the Senate, will replace Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall, who made a farewell speech this week[5] and will leave office Sunday.

In his last major public appearance, Kendall highlighted the need for a bigger Space Force to compete against adversaries like China and Russia.

In an outgoing report he authored titled "The Department of the Air Force in 2050," Kendall wrote that "space will be recognized as the decisive domain for almost all military operations"

Todd Harrison, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute who focuses on space policy, told Military.com that Meink would be the "first space-focused" Air Force secretary ever if confirmed, which he believes is highly likely.

"He has a tremendous amount of experience with the Air Force, with the Space Force, with the intel community, and working in previous Pentagon positions. I think he is going to have a major bureaucratic advantage over the other service secretaries that have been nominated," Harrison said. "I don't think he's going to face headwinds at all."

Aviation Week, which first reported[6] Trump's pick for Air Force secretary, also named Matt Lohmeier, a former Space Force lieutenant colonel, as the president-elect's pick to be the service under secretary.

Lohmeier was fired from his command of the 11th Space Warning Squadron at Buckley Space Force Base[7] in Colorado after making comments on a podcast promoting his self-published book that claims the military was being gripped by a neo-Marxist agenda, Military.com first reported in 2021[8].

Lohmeier did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Trump had not announced the former Space Force officer's nomination as of Thursday evening.

Related: Air Force Secretary Kendall's Parting Advice: Military Needs a 'Much More Powerful Space Force'[9]

© Copyright 2025 Military.com. All rights reserved. This article may not be republished, rebroadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without written permission. To reprint or license this article or any content from Military.com, please submit your request here[10].

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The Army[1] is doubling down on its centralized screening program, which was established in 2020 to reduce bias during the selection process for the service's command leadership.

Army Secretary Christine Wormuth issued a directive Thursday permanently establishing the Command Assessment Program, introduced as a pilot[2] nearly five years ago to review officers and senior enlisted personnel in line for command billets or sergeants major jobs.

Eligible service members go through a series of physical, mental and professional assessments, as well as a blind interview before a diverse panel directed to consider the candidate without conscious or unconscious bias regarding race, gender, service branch or military experience.

Read Next: The Battle over Veterans' Health Care: How the Republican Majority Hopes to Reshape the VA[3]

Army officials say the program provides a "deliberate approach to identify, assess and select" the most qualified candidates.

"For the past five years, CAP has successfully demonstrated itself to be a critical component of the Army's service selection process," Wormuth wrote in Army Directive 2024-14[4]. "This directive formally institutionalizes CAP as an enduring program."

Critics, including some general officers interviewed by Military.com, say the system is susceptible to favoritism and point to the recent firing[5] of Gen. Charles Hamilton, former chief of Army Material Command, after he intervened in the evaluation process[6] of a potential battalion commander who had been deemed unfit for the job and was ranked as one of the lowest-performing candidates in her peer group.

Hamilton arranged a second evaluation, which the officer also failed, but she nonetheless was included on a list of eligible candidates. Following investigative reporting by Military.com in March, the officer was immediately removed from the command list, and Wormuth relieved Hamilton of his duties[7].

CAP supporters say Wormuth's decisive response to the incident shows that the service is committed to a fair and rigorous selection process.

In addition to establishing a permanent CAP, Wormuth also directed a review of the program to examine how it has affected demographic trends in leadership and the impact on officer retention.

A recent report found that 54% of officers eligible for command chose not to participate[8] in the selection process, compared with the 40% average rate since 2019.

As a result of the review of the centralized process, the Army will publish selection rates, weighting criteria and other data annually "to reinforce the integrity and transparency" of the process, according to a statement.

"As we face an increasingly complex and unpredictable global security environment, it is more important than ever that we select and develop the most qualified soldiers to lead our formations," said Cynthia Smith, the deputy chief for the Army's media relations division.

According to the directive, the Army secretary will directly approve the weight of CAP-scored variables such as written and verbal communication, physical fitness, strategic potential and leadership effectiveness.

The secretary or his or her representative will convene selection boards to establish an order of merit list for those screened successfully by CAP, which in turn will be approved by the Army chief of staff; previously, the Army chief largely was responsible for approving the list.

The service also will establish an assessment directorate within Human Resources Command and will update all relative policies within a year to incorporate CAP into the command billet selection process for active-duty personnel and noncommissioned officers.

Wormuth will step down effective Monday with the second inauguration of President Donald Trump. Daniel Driscoll, a former Army soldier and Iraq war veteran, with a background in private equity, is the Trump administration's nominee for the job.

He will need to be confirmed by the Senate.

Related: Army Secretary Fires 4-Star General Who Meddled in Promotion of Unfit Subordinate[9]

© Copyright 2025 Military.com. All rights reserved. This article may not be republished, rebroadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without written permission. To reprint or license this article or any content from Military.com, please submit your request here[10].

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