By Claudette Roulo, American Forces Press Service /
Published May 06, 2014
WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- After 23 years of high-tempo
operations, the Air Force is in a precarious position, Air Force Chief of Staff
Gen. Mark A. Welsh III told the Senate Armed Services Committee May 6.
The general was joined in his testimony by his fellow
members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, including the Joint Chiefs chairman, Army
Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, and the vice chairman, Navy Adm. James A. “Sandy”
Winnefeld Jr.
Airmen have performed spectacularly well over a period that
included numerous routine deployments and contingency responses, Welsh said.
“I believe they've earned every penny they've made,” the
general added. But per-capita costs for Airmen have grown more than 40 percent
since 2000, he noted.
“Last year, our readiness levels reached an all-time low,”
Welsh said. “As we struggle to recover, we don't have enough units ready to
respond immediately to a major contingency, and we're not always able to
provide fully mission-ready units to meet our combatant commanders' routine
rotational requirements.”
The Air Force’s modernization forecasts also are bleak, the
general said. About 20 percent of its aircraft flying today were built in the
1950s and 1960s, he noted, and more than half of the rest are 25 years old or
older.
“And now, due to sequestration, we've cut about 50 percent
of our currently planned modernization programs,” Welsh said.
The fiscal situation has forced the Air Force into some very
difficult decisions, the general said, particularly in the area of pay and
compensation reform.
“No one takes this lightly,” he said, “but we feel it's
necessary to at least try and create some savings.”
Without these tough calls, the Air Force “will be neither
ready to fight today, nor viable against the threats of tomorrow,” Welsh said.
Slowing the rate of pay increases, gradually reducing
housing pay, reforming the TRICARE health care plan and reducing commissary
subsidies will certainly hurt, the general said. But, he added, “what my
secretary and I owe the nation, the joint team and our Airmen, more than
anything else, are the training and tools necessary to fight and win and
survive.”
If Congress fails to pass the proposed compensation reforms,
the Air Force will be forced to cut $8.1 billion from readiness, modernization
and infrastructure accounts over the next five years, Welsh said.
“We'll take significant cuts to flying hours and weapons
system sustainment accounts, reduce precision munitions buys, and lower funding
for training ranges, digging our readiness hole even deeper,” the general said.
“We'll likely have to cancel or delay several critical
recapitalization programs,” he continued. “Among those probably impacted would
be the combat rescue helicopter and the TX trainer. Abandoning the TX program
would mean that future pilots will then continue to train in the 50-year-old
T-38. We'll also be forced to cut spending on infrastructure beyond the $5
billion we've already recommended to cut over (the next five years).”
These cuts would come in addition to the recommendations the
Air Force already made, Welsh emphasized, including decreasing its force
strength by nearly 17,000 Airmen next year, divesting the entire A-10
Thunderbolt II and U-2 reconnaissance aircraft fleets and possibly divesting
the KC-10 Extender fleet.
“None of these options are good ones, but we are simply out
of good options,” he said. “It's time for courageous leadership. We simply
can't continue to defer every tough decision in the near term, at the expense
of military readiness and capability over time.”
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