By Army Sgt. 1st Class Tyrone C. Marshall Jr.
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Feb. 13, 2015 – The demand for Air Force
capabilities is increasing, therefore the service is requesting $10 billion
more than sequestration-level funding provides, Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee
James said today in Orlando, Florida.
Speaking during the Air Force Association Air Warfare
Symposium and Technology Exposition, James discussed why the Air Force is
taking its strongest stand to date against sequestration.
“There is just absolutely no question in my mind that we are
the best Air Force on the planet -- precisely because of who we are, what we
believe and what we do,” she said.
Fully Engaged Air Force
“Today, our Air Force is fully engaged in joint operations
around the world,” James said, to include participating in the fight against
the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in the Middle East, contributing to
the maintenance of a strong NATO alliance or deterring possible conflict in the
Asia-Pacific region.
“Or it might be humanitarian disasters anywhere around the
world,” James added, “or the very important mission of protecting Americans
right here at home.”
Regardless, she said, the demand for Air Force capabilities
across all three of its warfighting domains -- air, space and cyber space --
continues to rise.
“So, in short, the way I put it is, everybody wants more Air
Force,” James said.
Stand Against Sequestration
James explained what the Air Force is doing about a “perfect
storm” of factors that are coming together as the budget forms.
“We are trying to take the strongest stand yet, that we have
taken, to date, on sequestration,” she said. “We have said many, many times
that sequestration, if it is implemented in [Fiscal Year] ’16, will damage our
national security.”
Consequently, James said, the Air Force has submitted a
proposed FY ’16 budget that contains $10 billion more than sequestration-level
funding would provide.
“Now, $10 billion more represents the difference between a
force that our Air Force combatant commanders require and our nation expects,
as compared to an Air Force that, with $10 billion less, will not be able to
meet the defense strategy -- period,” James said.
The Air Force cannot meet the national defense strategy with
$10 billion less in the proposed budget as currently written, James said. The
additional funding being requested, she added, “recognizes just how important
the Air Force is in every joint operation around the world as well as how
important the Air Force is in protecting the homeland.”
Saving Taxpayers’ Dollars
The proposed increase in its budget will enable the Air
Force to better support its top priorities, which include taking care of its
people, striking the right balance between maintaining today’s readiness level
and preparing for tomorrow’s anticipated threats, and ensuring that every
taxpayer-provided dollar counts, James said.
The Air Force also requires more funding to modernize, she
said, while always keeping an eye on spending taxpayer dollars in the most
efficient manner.
Force Readiness
The previous day at the Orlando event, James noted, Air
Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark A. Welsh III discussed the Air Force’s reduced
end strength, making it the smallest Air Force since its establishment in 1947.
“You also heard General Welsh talk about our aging
aircraft,” she said. “The average age is about 27 years and that’s the oldest
that they have ever been in our history.”
The Air Force’s readiness level is also “not where we want
it to be,” James said, “especially not for what we call the high-end fight that
we might, one day, have to fight.”
James said she’s aware of today’s difficult budget
environment. But, she added, the Air Force is under fiscal pressure and it
needs more funding to perform its missions.
“These are all serious facts,” James said. “There’s no
ignoring these facts. We are the best on the planet, but we are also an Air
Force under strain and something’s got to give.”
No comments:
Post a Comment