by Tech. Sgt. Natalie Stanley
Secretary of the Air Force Public Affairs Command Information
1/16/2015 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- Senior
leadership addressed the key issues, priorities, initiatives and
challenges facing the Air Force during the State of the Air Force press
briefing, Jan. 15 at the Pentagon.
Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee James and Air Force Chief of
Staff Gen. Mark A. Welsh III, focused on the Air Force's highest
priorities and said they have been working hard to balance resources and
preserve combat capability in a tough fiscal environment.
"Everyone wants more Air Force," James said. "We're meeting those
demands with the smallest force in our history. Couple a smaller force
against the backdrop of austere budgets, and you have a total force that
is under significant strain: active duty, Guard, Reserve, civilian, and
their families."
Welsh had the same concern.
"It's about some very tough decisions we have to make to recapitalize on
the Air Force for the threat 10 years from now," Welsh said. "We don't
have enough money last year or this coming year to fund all the things
that we currently have in our force structure."
While fiscal year 2015 still presents some enormous budget challenges
for the Air Force, James and Welsh strongly agree enough is enough when
it comes to force shaping and stated Airmen will see no involuntary
boards in 2015.
"We cannot go any lower," Welsh said. "We are getting too small to succeed as opposed to too big to fail."
James said challenges with the budget in no way minimalize the responsibilities of the Air Force.
"As Air Force demands around the world continue to increase," she said.
"We cannot afford to get smaller and sacrifice capability."
One of greatest demands James and Welsh addressed was intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance requirements.
"Not only do combatant commanders want more ISR, they want the
globally-integrated, persistent ISR that Air Force capabilities
provide," the secretary said.
James and Welsh acknowledged the significant stress the high operations
tempo has placed on its experienced operators. To combat that, they have
developed a plan to meet combatant commander warfighting requirements
while relieving some of the unrelenting strain felt by operators.
The intentions of the ISR goals outlined by James and Welsh will provide
near-term relief to stressed crews by implementing a number of options
to immediately increase manning.
The future of the Air Force continues its focus on balancing today's readiness with tomorrow's modernization.
"The American people expect our Air Force to fly, fight and win against
any advisory," James said. "It is important that we continue to afford
our nation the Air Force capability it needs well into the future by
appropriately investing in our people and in our platforms.
Friday, January 16, 2015
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