Despite the increase in operations by US Africa Command—including forthcoming relief flights to support African Union and UN peacekeepers in Sudan—US European Command’s top general said these activities have not yet placed an excessive drain on his assets. “We haven’t had the capacity issues yet,” Army Gen. Bantz Craddock, said during a Jan. 9 meeting with reporters in Washington, D.C. He added, however, that they “may well develop” since AFRICOM draws upon EUCOM facilities, personnel, and hardware. For example, US Air Forces in Europe is the supporting authority to AFRICOM’s air component, 17th Air Force, with the latter leaning on USAFE to help provide the aircraft that it uses to execute its missions on the African continent. Craddock said there is some concern about these demands since EUCOM forces are already “too small” to accomplish their own assigned tasks with the continuing drawdown of US levels in Europe as the US military reorients itself more toward Asia and the Pacific. As a result, he said he has already recommended that the Pentagon leadership halt the drawdown of Army forces in Europe, make no changes to US Air Forces in Europe’s current air assets, and add some naval capacity to help meet requirements. If AFRICOM has additional needs, then the DOD will have to provide men and materiel either on a rotational basis or by permanently assigning forces to the new command, Craddock said. One area where Craddock isn’t concerned about shortages is ramp space. “We’ve got plenty of places to put the [air]frames,” he said. Both USAFE and 17th AF are headquartered at Ramstein, AB, Germany. Craddock mentioned Naval Station Rota, Spain, as another location in Europe with available infrastructure.
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.