By Secretary of the Air Force Public Affairs, / Published
April 20, 2015
WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- The Secretary and Chief of Staff of the
Air Force have directed the realignment of the Air Force’s B-1 bomber fleets
and Long Range Strike-Bomber program from Air Combat Command to Air Force
Global Strike Command, effective Oct. 1.
The move will realign the Air Force’s core mission of global
strike and all of the service’s bombers under a unified command responsible for
organizing, training and equipping Airmen to perform this mission.
“This realignment places all three Air Forces bombers under
one command and brings the LRS-B program with it,” said Secretary of the Air
Force Deborah Lee James. “Consolidating all of our Air Force assets in this
critical mission area under a single command will help provide a unified voice
to maintain the high standards necessary in stewardship of our nation’s bomber
forces.”
Sixty-three aircraft and approximately 7,000 people will
transfer from ACC to AFGSC under the realignment. Since moving from Strategic
Air Command in 1992, the B-1 has played an essential role in combating the
nation’s enemies, either projecting combat power from bases in the United
States or from forward operating locations around the globe.
Airmen who drive B-1 operations have demonstrated the
platform’s long range strike capability, delivering its conventional weapons on
target from home station, making it a perfect fit for joining the B-2 and B-52
under AFGSC, James said.
"With a single command responsible for the Air Force’s
entire long range strike fleet, the Airmen in AFGSC will benefit from better
coordination and increased sharing of expertise across the five bomber wings,”
said Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark A. Welsh III. “Consolidating all
conventional and nuclear capable bombers within the same command allows the Air
Force to streamline the global strike and strategic deterrence missions, and
create a lasting positive impact for the Air Force’s global strike
capabilities.”
Both the 7th Bomb Wing at Dyess Air Force Base, Texas, and
the 28th BW at Ellsworth Air Force Base, South Dakota will continue to serve as
the host wings and provide installation support and services to other units on
the bases.
"We expect the transfer to be imperceptible to the
majority of Airmen at Dyess and Ellsworth as they will continue to work for the
same supervisors and units," said Lt. Gen. Stephen Wilson, Commander, Air
Force Global Strike Command who was recently nominated to serve as the vice
commander of U.S. Strategic Command at Offutt AFB, Neb.
“The impacts of the realignment will become noticeable over
time as crosstalk among maintainers and aviators increases across all three
platforms, creating opportunities in training, tactics development, doctrine
development, aircraft modernization and acquisition,” Wilson said.
The consolidation of the global strike mission under AFGSC
follows the Air Force’s plan to elevate the commander of AFGSC from a
three-star to a four-star general officer position, which Gen. Robin Rand,
currently the commander Air Education and Training Command, will assume.
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