How the Pentagon Is Buying Launch Services Like a Rideshare episode artwork

EPISODE · Jul 17, 2026 · 6 MIN

How the Pentagon Is Buying Launch Services Like a Rideshare

from The Defense Tech Podcast with Fexingo: Government Contracting, Aerospace, and Military Tech · host Fexingo

In this episode, Lucas and Luna drill into the Pentagon's new approach to procuring space launch services: buying rideshares on commercial rockets rather than owning the whole mission. With Northrop Grumman down nearly 4% in the last five days and the broader defense sector under pressure amid a global chip sell-off, they ask whether the Space Force's 'tactically responsive launch' program is a genuine shift or just a pilot with limited impact. They trace the logic through a specific recent example: the July 2026 launch of a small satellite on a Firefly Aerospace Alpha rocket, booked through the Space Force's OSP-4 contract. Lucas explains how this model cuts costs and timelines but raises hard questions about surge capacity and supply chain risk. Luna pushes back on whether 'renting a seat' can work when a conflict breaks out and launch slots are suddenly precious. The conversation lands on whether the Pentagon is truly embracing the commercial model or just dabbling. The episode closes with an organic donation pitch tied to the value of honest analysis. #SpaceForce #LaunchServices #Rideshare #FireflyAerospace #PentagonProcurement #TacticalLaunch #OSPC4 #DefenseTech #SpaceLift #SmallSatellite #NorthropGrumman #LMT #RocketLab #SpaceX #MilitarySpace #Business #FexingoBusiness #BusinessPodcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Jul 17, 2026

In this episode, Lucas and Luna drill into the Pentagon's new approach to procuring space launch services: buying rideshares on commercial rockets rather than owning the whole mission. With Northrop Grumman down nearly 4% in the last five days and the broader defense sector under pressure amid a global chip sell-off, they ask whether the Space Force's 'tactically responsive launch' program is a genuine shift or just a pilot with limited impact. They trace the logic through a specific recent example: the July 2026 launch of a small satellite on a Firefly Aerospace Alpha rocket, booked through the Space Force's OSP-4 contract. Lucas explains how this model cuts costs and timelines but raises hard questions about surge capacity and supply chain risk. Luna pushes back on whether 'renting a seat' can work when a conflict breaks out and launch slots are suddenly precious. The conversation lands on whether the Pentagon is truly embracing the commercial model or just dabbling. The episode closes with an organic donation pitch tied to the value of honest analysis. #SpaceForce #LaunchServices #Rideshare #FireflyAerospace #PentagonProcurement #TacticalLaunch #OSPC4 #DefenseTech #SpaceLift #SmallSatellite #NorthropGrumman #LMT #RocketLab #SpaceX #MilitarySpace #Business #FexingoBusiness #BusinessPodcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo

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How the Pentagon Is Buying Launch Services Like a Rideshare

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This episode is 6 minutes long.

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This episode was published on July 17, 2026.

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In this episode, Lucas and Luna drill into the Pentagon's new approach to procuring space launch services: buying rideshares on commercial rockets rather than owning the whole mission. With Northrop Grumman down nearly 4% in the last five days and...

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