An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | Sept. 20, 2013

Generals stress collaboration, innovation during forum

By Tech. Sgt. Tammie Moore Air Force District of Washington

WASHINGTON - General officers candidly discussed innovation, concerns and the service's future during the professional development portion of the Air Force Association's Air & Space Conference & Technology Exposition 2013 here Sept. 18.

The panel featured nine major command generals, the Air Force Reserve commander, the Air National Guard director and Chief Master Sgt. of the Air Force James A. Cody.

Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark A. Welsh III led the panel and stressed the importance of engaging a cross-section of leadership to learn from, tackle challenges and remain a healthy force.

Everything we do, every decision we make, has to cross organization and functional boundaries, he said. There are no more fiefdoms.

Leaders stressed the importance of innovation to active-duty, Reserve and Guard components, highlighting recent examples like the certification of the first Air Force tactical critical care evacuation team of medical professionals, maintainers and aerial porters that occurred earlier this week.

We now have a team of surgeons who can provide life-saving surgical intervention en route between a trauma hospital and the point of final medical care, said Commander of Air Mobility Command Gen. Paul J. Selva.

We had been working on the problem end to end for decades, he said. We have finally linked the last piece of the chain.

Selva noted the feat could not have been accomplished without the contributions of the Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve, who represent more than half of all the mobility capability the nation offers the warfighter.

For warfighters returning home from outside the wire, Air Force Special Operations Command Commander Lt. Gen. Eric E. Fiel said he's moved resources into squadrons to provide commandos direct access to mental health specialists.

We started realizing a lot of physical issues coming back from combat, but more important we started seeing a lot of mental issues, he said. We've put resources in the squadron not just to work with the physical ailments but also the mental. It is really having an impact.

Commander of Air Force Global Strike Command Lt. Gen. James Kowalski described incredible strides in the Air Force's nuclear enterprise and its associated readiness, training and inspections.

Since summer of 2009, the readiness of those (combat-ready forces) has increased about 37 percent (and) this is a credit to the entire Air Force, Kowalski said. When the Air Force said, 'We're going to reinvigorate the nuclear enterprise,' we did that.

Gen. Edward Rice, the commander of Air Education and Training Command, said the Air Force is doubling down on the business of force development.

We understand that the value of the individual increases in a time of resource constraints and so we're going to need every Airman to be able to do more and to do it better, Rice said. We're continuing to turn out world-class Airmen.

Commander of Air Force Material Command Gen. Janet C. Wolfenbarger said her 80,000-member organization is making substantial progress in its reorganization, enabling mission-effective and affordable global vigilance, reach and power.

When the warfighter calls for a new capability, we think it, we build it ... we make it better, we deliver it to the fight and we keep it in the fight for as long as its needed, Wolfenbarger said. All of the indicators are going in the right direction in terms of our ability to truly bring integrated life-cycle management to our United States Air Force.

The generals also reflected on challenges and issues that keep them up at night, while caveating that having great Airmen ease many if not all concerns.

But the Air Force's highest-ranking Airman acknowledged one worry: letting Airmen down.

I can live with all of the changes that come about in a (constrained) resource environment, Welsh said. I can live with all of that, but if I let (Airmen) down, it would kill me.

 

 

Related Articles
Soldiers from the 972nd Military Police Company and 211th Military Police Battalion, Massachusetts National Guard, provide security at the fan experience zone at Boston Stadium before a FIFA World Cup game, June 26, 2026. The Mass Guard military police Soldiers are part of a larger security presence at the stadium, including police from Foxboro, Attleboro and other towns; Massachusetts State Police; and federal authorities, including the FBI. Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Steven Eaton.
Massachusetts Guard Supports World Cup Security
By Sgt. 1st Class Steven Eaton, | June 30, 2026
FOXBORO, Mass. – As soccer fans from around the world gather across North America for the FIFA World Cup, Massachusetts National Guard Soldiers are helping support public safety at one of the tournament’s host sites.In...

U.S. Financial Management Airman participate in an open ranks inspection during Exercise Arctic Ledger at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, June 13, 2026. Arctic Ledger is a multi-state exercise that challenged Airmen to strengthen their understanding of financial processes while preparing them to operate alongside partner units in contested environments. By investing in this essential training, participating units improved their readiness and ability to provide reliable financial support during future exercise, deployments, and real-world missions. Photo by Airman 1st Class Ian Carton.
Air Guardsmen Strengthen Financial Management Readiness
By Airman 1st Class Ian Carton, | June 30, 2026
JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska – U.S. Airmen from multiple Air National Guard comptroller flights gathered for Exercise Arctic Ledger 2026, a financial management exercise designed to strengthen deployment readiness,...

U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. Michael Cazares Montano, noncommissioned officer in charge of the Air National Guard and U.S. Air Force Capt. Savanna Cuestes, Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance deputy lead, pose for a photo June 16, 2026, in Bodø, Norway, during exercise Ramstein Flag 2026. Cuestes and Cazares were joined by fellow intelligence analysts from the 162nd Wing’s 214th Attack Group during the two-week NATO exercise. Courtesy photo.
Arizona Airmen Enable NATO Deterrence, Article 5 Response During Ramstein Flag ‘26
By Maj. Jon LaDue, | June 30, 2026
ARLINGTON, Va. – Intelligence analysts from the Arizona Air National Guard’s 214th Attack Group bolstered their wartime readiness while supporting NATO Allied Air Command’s (AIRCOM’s) exercise Ramstein Flag 2026 in the...