16th Air Force Achieves Federal Technical Laboratory Status to Accelerate Innovation Published June 18, 2026 16th Air Force (Air Forces Cyber) Public Affairs JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO – LACKLAND, Texas -- The Department of the Air Force Technology Transfer and Transition Program Office officially designated the 16th Air Force (Air Forces Cyber) Office of the Technical Director as a federal defense laboratory for Technology Transfer purposes June 8. This milestone authorization establishes a formalized framework, enabling the command to rapidly co-develop and exchange critical data, advanced research, and cutting-edge concepts across industry, academia, and government. The elevation to laboratory status grants 16th Air Force significant new mechanisms to accelerate its mission capabilities and outpace modern adversaries. "Granting this authority to 16th Air Force allows significant new opportunities and empowers our Numbered Air Force to advance our mission through innovation to outpace emerging threats," said Brian Cook, Technical Director, 16th Air Force, "It also allows for the leveraging of external expertise and resources to solve complex challenges." The laboratory authority paves the way for formalized partnerships with private sector innovators, expanding the unit’s ability to integrate commercial technological advancements into military operations. According to Cook, these collaborative efforts transition cutting-edge research rapidly into real-world capabilities, ensuring Airmen maintain a decisive advantage. Beyond industry ties, the laboratory status bolsters academic collaboration. Sixteenth Air Force now actively supports future workforce development by matching scholars with pressing mission priorities. Recently, the command established Cooperative Research and Development Agreements with The University of Texas at San Antonio and The University of Texas at El Paso through the Department of the Air Force Technology Executive Office. With the new designation, 16th Air Force can now independently coordinate with institutions to explore advancements in technology, education, and innovation. According to Dr. Lisa Bellamy, 16 AF Academic Engagement Lead, these academic partnerships evolved from foundational basic agreements, technical talks, and academic engagement events into highly advanced research exchange. “The elevation to a federal laboratory fundamentally changes how we integrate academic brilliance into our mission,” said Bellamy. “By working hand-in-hand with university scholars, we are directly applying advanced academic research to our cyberspace and ISR operations, turning theoretical concepts into operational realities for our Airmen.” For more information about Sixteenth Air Force and its mission, visit the official website or follow 16 AF social media platforms. About 16th Air Force (AFCYBER) Headquartered at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas, 16th Air Force is responsible for the Air Force’s intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance mission and capabilities; operationalizing weather forecasting for the joint force; leading the cryptologic activities of the Department; operating and defending the Department’s information network; and commanding and controlling the joint forces assigned by U.S. Cyber Command to execute offensive and defensive cyberspace operations that protect national interests and project combat power. Additionally, 16 AF provides critical warfighting expertise and organizational combat support to the execution of the Department’s kill chains, and the disruption of our adversaries’ attempt to do the same. Operationally, 16th Air Force creates decisive advantages for the joint warfighter while simultaneously defending U.S. forces’ command and control (C2) capabilities from adversary disruption. 16th Air Force’s operational footprint includes approximately 49,000 Total Force Airmen spanning 123 locations globally with missions that support all 11 combatant commands.