by Army Sgt. 1st Class Tyrone C. Marshall Jr
American Forces Press Service
3/28/2014 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- Painful
budget reductions will reduce the future capabilities of combatant
commanders, Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark A. Welsh III told
Congress here March 26.
Testifying alongside Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee James at a
hearing of the House Appropriations Committee's defense subcommittee,
Welsh discussed the difficult decisions budget constraints have
presented and will continue to present to the Air Force's role in
defending national security.
"Every major decision reflected in this budget proposal hurts," he said.
"Each of them reduces the capabilities our combatant commanders would
love to have and believe they need. Your Air Force is the finest in the
world, and we need to keep it that way. We built this budget to ensure
that Air Force combat power remains unequaled, but that does not mean it
will remain unaffected."
There are no more easy cuts, the general said.
"We simply can't ignore the fact that the law is currently written [to
return] us to sequestered funding levels in [fiscal year 2016]," Welsh
said. "So that's also considered as part of our plan. To prepare for
that, we must cut people and force structure now to create a balanced
Air Force that we can afford to train and operate in [fiscal 2016] and
beyond."
Because the Air Force needed to cut billions rather than millions of
dollars out of its budget, "the normal trimming around the edges just
wasn't going to get it done," Welsh said.
"So we looked at cutting fleets of aircraft as a way to get to the significant savings that are required," he added.
Welsh explained the logic of the "very tough decisions" that had to be made.
"In our air superiority mission area, we already have reductions in our
proposal," he said. "But eliminating an entire fleet would leave us
unable to provide air superiority for an entire theater of operations.
We are the only service that can do so."
Intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance constitute the No. 1
shortfall of the combatant commanders year after year, Welsh noted.
"They would never support even more cuts than we already have in our
budget proposal," he said.
Noting the Air Force has "several aircraft" in the global mobility
mission area, Welsh said he spoke with Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ray
Odierno during budget planning to get his thoughts on reducing the
airlift fleet.
"His view was that a smaller Army would need to be more responsive and
able to move quicker," Welsh said. "He did not think that reducing
airlift assets further was a good idea, and the [Air Force] secretary
and I agree. We looked at our air refueling fleets and considered
divesting the KC-10 as an option.
Just one example, but the analysis showed us that the mission impact was too significant."
Welsh echoed testimony from James, who told the panel that a return to
sequester funding levels in fiscal 2016 would put the mobility fleet
back on the table.
"We looked at the KC-135 fleet, but we would have to cut many more
KC-135s than KC-10s to achieve the same savings," he said. "And with
that many KC-135s out of the fleet, we simply can't meet our worldwide
mission requirement."
In the strike mission area, Welsh said, cutting the A-10 fleet would
save $3.7 billion across the future-year defense program and another
$500 million in cost avoidance for upgrades that wouldn't be necessary.
"To get that same savings would require a much higher number of F-15E's
or F-16s [to be cut], but we also looked at those options," he added.
Air Force officials ran a detailed operational analysis, Welsh said,
comparing divestiture of the A-10 fleet to divestiture of the B-1 fleet,
reduction of the F-16 and F-15E fleet, and to deferring procurement of a
large number of F-35s, as well as to decreasing readiness by standing
down a number of fighter squadrons and just parking them on the ramp.
"We used the standard DOD planning scenarios," Welsh said. "The results
very clearly showed that cutting the A-10 fleet was the lowest-risk
option, from an operational perspective, of a bunch of bad options.
While no one is happy, from a military perspective, it's the right
decision, and it's representative of the extremely difficult choices
that we're facing in the budget today."
The U.S. military must modernize, Welsh said, but today's declining budgets place limits on modernization.
"And we must maintain the proper balance across all our mission areas,"
he added, "because that's what the combatant commanders expect from us."
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