By Lisa Ferdinando, DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON -- The Air
Force’s fiscal year 2019 budget request builds on momentum to restore the force
after years of funding uncertainty and addresses the challenges from a great
power competition, Air Force leaders said today.
The budget request is well-aligned with the National Defense
Strategy and recognizes the international security environment is more
competitive and dangerous than it has been in decades, Air Force Secretary
Heather A. Wilson said.
“We’ve returned to an era of great power competition, and
that great power competition is the central challenge to U.S. security and
prosperity,” she said.
Wilson and Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David L. Goldfein
testified on the Air Force’s fiscal year 2019 funding request and budget
justification at a Senate Appropriations Committee defense subcommittee
hearing.
Air Force Focuses on ‘Bold Moves’
Key areas addressed in the budget request include readiness,
people, nuclear deterrence, modernization, space superiority, multidomain
command and control, air superiority, light attack, and science and technology,
Wilson and Goldfein pointed out.
In addition, it prioritizes long-term competition with China
and Russia, they noted.
The request focuses on continuing the efforts to restore the
readiness of the force to allow the U.S. to “win any fight, any time,” and
includes “bold moves” to address evolving global security challenges, Wilson
said.
The first of the bold moves is accelerating defendable space
to “deter and defend and prevail against anyone who seeks to deny our free use
of space in crisis conflict,” the Air Force secretary said. The second bold
move focuses on multidomain operations, she told the panel.
“Future wars will be won by those who observe, orient,
decide, and act faster than adversaries in an integrated way across domains --
land, sea, air, space and cyberspace,” Wilson and Goldfein explained in their
joint written statement.
Importance of Predictable Funding
Goldfein highlighted the need for predictable funding and
warned against returning to sequestration and its arbitrary cuts. The Air
Force, he explained, is still recovering from the damage from the 2013
sequestration.
The budget request of $156.3 billion for fiscal year 2019 –
a 6.6 percent overall increase from the fiscal year 2018 request -- builds on
the progress made in 2018 to restore the readiness of the force, increase
lethality and cost-effectively modernize, Wilson and Goldfein explained.
They thanked lawmakers for their support and for providing
predictable funding. President Donald J. Trump signed a $1.3 trillion spending
bill in March that includes a $160 billion boost in defense spending over two
years, reversing years of decline and uncertain funding.
Defending the Homeland
The Air Force, with its 670,000 military and civilian
members, understands it must defend the homeland and allies with a safe, secure
and effective nuclear deterrent, Goldfein noted.
“We also understand that we are expected to own the high
ground with air and space superiority, freedom to maneuver and freedom from
attack,” he said. “We’re expected to project America’s military power forward
with our allies and partners as we bring global vigilance, global reach and
global power for the joint team.”
In their joint statement, Wilson and Goldfein said in light
of global trends and intensifying pressure from major challengers, the Air
Force’s relative advantage in air and space is eroding in a number of critical
areas.
“The projected mismatch between demand and available
resources has widened,” they said, underscoring the importance of funding for
Air Force priorities.
“Any American weakness emboldens competitors to subvert the
rules-based international order and challenge the alliance and partnership network
that underpins it,” they said.
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