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Home : News
NEWS | May 18, 2009

Air Force leaders chart way forward for service

By Jim Garamone American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, D.C. - The Air Force has made tough choices and some prudent trade-offs to balance the service across the spectrum of capabilities needed for the future, Air Force leaders said.

Air Force Secretary Michael Donley and Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz discussed the service's efforts to balance between today's operations and tomorrow's needs. The two spoke to a group of reporters in the Pentagon today.

The service is working to balance the missions from irregular warfare on one end of the spectrum of conflict to nuclear deterrent operations on the other.

Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates agreed with an Air Force recommendation to retire early 250 older aircraft, to allow the service to reprogram money to other areas. "[The decision] allows us to take some additional strategic risk over the next six to seven years, which we think, given the threat environment and the current strategic interests, is a good time to take this risk," Gates said.

The service will reinvest the money into modifying the remaining aircraft, improving munitions and moving manpower into new high-demand requirements. These requirements include unmanned aerial vehicles, the nuclear enterprise and in intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance.

"At the same time, we also focused on the future of the tactical air force structure and on fifth generation solutions," Donley said. "Our interest is in getting on with the Joint Strike Fighter program."

The service ultimately will buy more than 1,700 of these aircraft. The fiscal 2010 budget request looks to increase testing of the aircraft and buying 30.

The Air Force also intends to go ahead with F-22 modifications, budgeting more than $1 billion for it in fiscal 2010, Donley said. "We think this is a good package for the Air Force and that it makes good strategic sense," he said.

The secretary also highlighted the Air Force acquisition improvement plan, which began after the General Accountability Office found the service erred in its contract for the new tanker.

The first component of the plan is to strengthen and improve the acquisition workforce. The Air Force is to hire about 2,000 employees over the next year; provide additional training to all acquisition personnel; and beef up systems engineering and cost analysis capabilities.

A second area of emphasis is to pay more attention to requirements and to ensure Air Force officials understand the technology risks involved in meeting operator demands for more capabilities.

A third area for improvement is financial stability, and a fourth is a stronger source selection process. "This is where we make the final procurement decisions and the Air Force has already started retraining personnel for this highly visible portion of the acquisition," Donley said.

The final area reviews the Air Force organizational structure.

Schwartz was asked about the plans for the C-27 that were made between him and Gen. George Casey, the chief of staff of the Army.

"It really was a concept that we had that ultimately the department chose to act on," he said. "So what will be required is that we, and the staffs now are working closely together in order to meet the end of May timeline for providing the deputy secretary our initial game plan ...."

Schwartz said this game plan includes two things: 1) to effectively and efficiently transfer the proponency for acquisition from the Army to the Air Force and 2) posture the Air Force to meet the operational demand for the C-27 or succeeding aircraft, such as the C-23 Sherpa.

"There is a deployment requirement in FY10 that will be a pacing item for us," Schwartz said.

"Sort of behind those two primary imperatives are the larger issues of training infrastructure, beddown more broadly, which isn't sufficiently mature to talk about yet in detail."

Donley was then asked if the requirement still remains at 78 aircraft overall.

"I think that was certainly the JROC validated need," Donley said. "The Secretary of Defense I think has a view that perhaps that requirement did not acknowledge the fact that there were other assets in the department that could satisfy the direct support need of the Army -- C-130s for example.

"We understand clearly that he wants us to look at that in detail as a result through the QDR process," he added. "But as you're aware, the budget submission talked about 38 airplanes so that's the floor and we'll see where it goes from there."

Note: Lt. Col. Ellen Krenke of the National Guard Bureau contributed to this report.