By Claudette Roulo
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
ABOARD A MILITARY AIRCRAFT, Feb. 12, 2015 – Deputy Defense
Secretary Bob Work said morale is strong at Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota,
after he visited facilities and spoke with airmen yesterday at the only base to
host two legs of the nuclear triad.
Work spent the day visiting the base, home to the 91st
Missile Wing, responsible for the operation and maintenance of Minuteman III
intercontinental ballistic missiles, and the 5th Bomb Wing, which flies the
B-52H Stratofortress bomber.
The visit provided the deputy secretary with an opportunity
to speak with service members and get a first-hand look at the issues he has
been discussing in Washington as chairman of the Nuclear Deterrent Enterprise
Review Group.
"Nothing's better than being able to look the troops in
the eye and … hear what they're saying," he said. "I now know what a
‘rising B-plug’ is and what it looks like, and I understand all of the
different challenges they're facing. It's really good to put eyes on
target."
Renewed Effort to Improve Quality of Life
Following a string of incidents dating back to March 2013,
when missile-launch crews failed an inspection, the Defense Department has
focused renewed effort on improving the quality of life for service members and
families at the base.
Some of the facilities the deputy secretary saw during his
tour dated back to the 1950, and are under scrutiny as part of the initiative
to reinvigorate the nuclear force.
“These systems are so old that right now what happens is
[airmen] will order a part and the part has to be fabricated -- there are not a
lot of parts on the shelves -- so it takes longer for them to get parts than
they would like,” Work said.
Outdated facilities and equipment haven't stopped the airmen
at Minot from performing their mission, Work said. The signs over the base’s
gates read “Only the Best Come North,” and outside-the-box thinking by
operators and maintainers is keeping the mission on track, he said.
"Some of the stuff they're doing is just amazing,"
the deputy secretary said. "The stuff they're doing in there is just
unbelievable. … It's because the troops are so damn good, so, the
mission-capable rate of the missiles is really quite high. But man, they're so
old.”
Airmen Outline Concerns
Work held a private lunch with 12 Air Force maintainers who
outlined some of their concerns for the deputy secretary. The airmen agreed
that the attention focused on the aging missile and bomber fleets is beginning
to bear fruit, he said.
“They've seen the improvements in manning already occurring,
they were very happy about that,” the deputy secretary said. “The one area that
they're worried about is the overall experience level of the force.”
As manning levels are brought back up, mid-level
noncommissioned officers are leading an increasing number of new, inexperienced
airmen. At the same time, those NCOs aren’t as experienced as the service would
like, Work said.
“That's going to be something that, as the force grows,
we'll grow out of it,” the deputy secretary said.
Will the Focus Continue?
The airmen he spoke with all are encouraged by the changes,
he said, but they wondered if the attention would continue under the next
defense secretary.
“I told them, 'Look, Ash Carter is literally a nuclear
physicist. This is one of the areas that he really is both strong on and thinks
very much about.' I told them that I thought it would continue, and certainly
as long as I was the deputy secretary, it will continue,” Work said.
Morale is high, he said. “The troops were dedicated to the
mission,” Work said. “Overall, I was pretty pleased.”
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