Pacific Air Forces likely will continue rotating Global Hawks to Japan after remotely piloted aircraft’s initial deployment to Misawa Air Base wraps up, said PACAF Commander Gen. Hawk Carlisle. “We are looking at the (deployment data) and by all accounts we had a positive increase in sorties,” Carlisle told reporters during an Oct. 9 teleconference. He said the weather at Misawa allowed more frequent and longer duration sorties from the base than operations at Andersen AB, Guam, the RPA’s home base. “We are looking at doing it again, because it supports the ability to fly more missions,” said Carlisle, adding that deployments would likely coincide with seasonal weather patterns at Misawa to maximize sortie generation. Asked if USAF was close to deciding on Yokota AB, Japan, as a location to rotate Air Force Special Operations Command’s CV-22s, Carlisle said the US and Japanese government are still debating the final location. However, he said the US does wants to get the Osprey deployed forward in the Pacific. There has been local resistance to putting the Osprey at Kadena Air Base, on the island of Okinawa, and the US has negotiated with the Japanese government for several years on a final location. “It is a great and capable and safe platform, and what we do and how we operate it brings a great capability,” he added.
The Government Accountability Office wants the Air Force to explain who will run bases when wings deploy under the service’s new force generation model along with several other unanswered questions, saying the concept is long on vision but short on details.