KEY POINTS
  • The U.S. military is expanding a small development program that wants to leverage reusable rockets, like those SpaceX is building, to deliver cargo quickly to anywhere in the world.
  • The experimental program, called Rocket Cargo, will be led by the U.S. Space Force.
  • "We talked to a number of providers that we see potentially coming to the table to compete for these contracts," Dr. Greg Spanjers, the Air Force Research Laboratory's leader on the Rocket Cargo program, said at a news conference on Friday.
Starship prototype SN10 fires its three Raptor engines as it comes in for the landing.

The U.S. Air Force said Friday is expanding a small development program that wants to leverage reusable rockets, like those SpaceX is building, to deliver cargo quickly to anywhere in the world.

Called Rocket Cargo, the experimental military program will be led by the U.S. Space Force, the Pentagon said. The program will research and help develop capabilities such as landing "a rocket on a wide range of non-traditional materials and surfaces," engineering "a rocket cargo bay and logistics for rapid loading and unloading" and air-dropping "cargo from the rocket after re-entry in order to service locations where a rocket or aircraft cannot possibly land."