Now that the Fiscal 2009 defense spending request is in to Congress, the Air Force is gearing up to build its Fiscal 2010 program objective memorandum. It will be a truly significant document, a senior USAF official said last week, because it will be the first opportunity to marry USAF’s newly articulated strategy with the funding programming for the Required Force, the 86 modern combat wings deemed necessary to defend the nation and prevail in future conflict. “We have articulated what the Air Force needs for the required force and how much it will cost,” Gen. Michael Moseley, Chief of Staff, said in a USAF release on Feb. 8. “Now, we need to build our Fiscal 2010 program objective memorandum based upon tomorrow’s challenges.” Toward that end, Moseley hosted a senior-level meeting to discuss the issue on Feb. 3, the eve of the Fiscal 2009 budget rollout, at Bolling AFB, D.C., according to the release. “We must have a collective understanding of our current and future needs as the Air Force builds the Fiscal 2010 budget,” he said. “The focus of effort should be recapitalization, the Air Force priorities, my initiatives and reaching the 330,000 end strength.” Gen. Duncan McNabb, Vice Chief of Staff, added: “Now it is our task to connect the strategy to the required force.”
A provision in the fiscal 2025 defense policy bill will require the Defense Department to include the military occupational specialty of service members who die by suicide in its annual report on suicide deaths, though it remains to be seen how much data the department will actually disclose.