afferty’s promotion to lieutenant general and his new command of U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command place him at the front line of a rapidly changing battlefield. From orbiting satellites to hypersonic threats, he will oversee systems designed to detect, deter, and, if necessary, defeat attacks that could unfold in minutes. His decades in field artillery and strategic planning have prepared him for a mission where miscalculation is measured in lives and seconds, not miles and days.
Stepping in for the retiring Lt. Gen. Sean A. Gainey, Rafferty inherits not only a complex technical enterprise but a symbol of American resolve in an era of rising global tension. His confirmation, pushed through amid a storm of partisan clashes and a flood of other presidential nominees, underscores how vital this role has become: quietly guarding the skies while politics rages below.