Air Power at the Edge – Securing NATO’s New Frontiers

Introducing our JAPCC Annual Theme

By Colonel

By Col

 Kevin

 Anderson

, USA

 AF

Joint Air Power Competence Centre (2024-2026)

Published:
 April 2026
 in 
Warfare Domains: Air Operations

Abstract

From the Arctic to the Indo-Pacific—and from near-space to the cognitive battlefield—NATO is confronting a rapidly expanding set of frontiers. In this forward-looking piece, Colonel Kevin “Tread” Anderson introduces a bold new vision for air and space power at the edge, where emerging threats, new technologies, and human decision-making collide. The message is clear: to stay ahead, the Alliance must think beyond today’s battles and prepare for tomorrow’s boundaries.

Introduction

We are proud of the incredible work the JAPCC has accomplished over the last year. In 2025, our research and analysis remained focused on the conflict in Ukraine and NATO’s collective defence in Eastern Europe. This focus is driven by the significant risks of large-scale conflict at the border. Our support for these efforts is essential and will continue as long as necessary. However, as the Alliance addresses the fires burning to the east, our Centre of Excellence must also look past the smoke, ensuring that our attention to our near borders does not blind us to the embers smouldering elsewhere.

To that end, at JAPCC we are shifting from a reactive scan across the border to a proactive scan of emerging threats on the horizon. We see this in the Arctic, for instance, where receding ice opens new avenues for strategic competition. We also observe this along key trade routes from the Red Sea to the Indo-Pacific, where freedom of navigation is being challenged. Above us, the space domain is growing increasingly contested. Consequently, for the first time in our history, we have established an Annual Theme to guide our research and discussions: Air Power at the Edge: Securing NATO’s New Frontiers.

This theme explores the physical and conceptual boundaries of air and space power employment. The ‘Edge’ is not simply a reference to front lines. It includes the geographic edge, extending our operational reach into the High North and Indo-Pacific; the vertical edge, surpassing traditional altitude boundaries into near-space; the cognitive edge, where, despite the rise of artificial intelligence (AI), the human mind remains our ultimate asymmetric advantage; and it is the digital and logistical edge, where we must shoot, move, and communicate in austere environments where our supply chains are contested. This year, we will assess how NATO operates at these limits and advances into new frontiers.

The Geographic Frontier

Our first step is to challenge our mental maps, beginning in the Arctic. For too long, we have accepted an artificial divide: a ‘North American Arctic’ secured by North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), and a ‘European High North’ defended by NATO. While the environmental characteristics of these subregions differ, we plan to address the potential vulnerabilities created by this operational split, which creates a ‘seam’ in command authorities, data sharing, and situational awareness. This year, the JAPCC will explore how to close that seam and move towards a unified, trans-polar defence architecture. Our goal is to allow air power and information to flow without friction.

Simultaneously, we will turn our eyes toward the Indo-Pacific. This region is outside our traditional treaty area, but recent NATO summits underscore a fundamental truth: the security of the Euro-Atlantic and Indo-Pacific is increasingly interconnected. In this theatre, the Edge refers to the tyranny of distance. The Indo-Pacific therefore offers us lessons of scale, such as how to move, disperse, sustain, and protect forces across vast distances. It also demonstrates the application of Agile Combat Employment (ACE) across island chains versus the European continent, and the logistics networks needed for austere locations. Most importantly, we will consider how stronger Indo-Pacific partnerships can reinforce deterrence, uphold shared norms, and safeguard the global commons.

The Vertical Frontier

Currently, the Alliance operates in two main altitude bands: traditional air power (up to about 20 km) and space power (above the 100 km Kármán line). We think there is a strategic ‘seam’ in between those levels. The near-space domain is emerging as a frontier for hypersonics, high-altitude platform systems (HAPS), and very low Earth orbit (VLEO) technologies. This region offers opportunities for surveillance and rapid strike, but it also creates strategic ambiguity. It is too high for air traffic regulations and too low for current space treaties, creating potential blind spots in both sensor coverage and international governance. As activity in this zone increases, NATO must address this vertical gap before competitors do.

The Digital and Energy Frontiers

Beyond geography and orbits, we must also address the Digital Frontier. Future conflicts will require robust data processing at the tactical edge instead of relying on centralised headquarters. This shift to ‘Edge Computing’ is key to maintaining decision superiority in contested and degraded environments.

We must also consider the Energy Frontier. Edge data processing and projecting air power over long distances strains logistics if we rely solely on traditional fuels. Alternatives such as modular micro-reactors and synthetic fuels may help. Ultimately, without resilient power and rapid infrastructure, our advanced platforms cannot be sustained.

The Cognitive Frontier

This year, we will also examine the Cognitive Frontier. Despite advances in AI and autonomous warfare, war remains a human endeavour. As the tempo of combat accelerates, decisions will occur at machine speed and personnel will face greater pressure. We will explore how we train for uncertainty, build resilience against cognitive warfare, and optimise decision-making under extreme stress. While we develop sixth-generation fighters, we must also ensure we are preparing sixth-generation minds. Securing the cognitive frontier requires investment in our military culture, exercises, and readiness to ensure our people remain our greatest advantage.

We look forward to a year of bold ideas. In 2026, you will find thought-provoking research on our website and in this journal, addressing these topics in depth. This theme will build toward our flagship event, the 2026 Joint Air and Space Power Conference, which will bring together leading experts to discuss Air Power at the Edge.

We cannot explore these frontiers alone. If you have relevant expertise or think we have overlooked an important area, we want to hear from you. Visit japcc.org and join the conversation. The world is changing fast, and the Alliance needs your perspective.

Author
Colonel
 Kevin
 Anderson
Joint Air Power Competence Centre (2024-2026)

Colonel Kevin “Tread” Anderson entered the United States Air Force in June 2005 when he graduated from the US Air Force Academy with a Bachelor of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering. After his commission, he attended Euro-NATO Joint Jet Pilot Training at Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas, and completed the F-16 Basic Operational Training Course as a Distinguished Graduate in 2008. Since then, Colonel Anderson has had various assignments across four MAJCOMs, as well as an Olmsted Scholar international exchange program in Valparaíso, Chile. His operational experience includes four deployments in support of Operations ENDURING FREEDOM, ODYSSEY DAWN, INHERENT RESOLVE, FREEDOM’s SENTINEL, and SPARTAN SHIELD, as well as numerous NATO Air Policing taskings.

Colonel Anderson commanded the 510th Fighter Squadron at Aviano Air Base, Italy, and most recently, graduated with Academic Distinction from Air War College at Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama. Colonel Anderson is a graduate of the US Air Force Weapons Instructor Course, and holds master’s degrees in Systems Engineering, International Relations, and Military Strategic Studies with an emphasis on joint planning.

Colonel Anderson is a Wild Weasel instructor pilot and Forward Air Controller (Airborne) with over 3,600 flight hours, over 190 combat missions, and over 1,000 combat hours in the F-16.

Information provided is current as of July 2025

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Wargaming the Complex Battlespace

Rethinking Targeting for Multi-Domain Operations

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The Effective Pilot Training Framework

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