Brown: USAF Must Commit to Industry to Build Up Capacity for Munitions, Spare Parts

Brown: USAF Must Commit to Industry to Build Up Capacity for Munitions, Spare Parts

After a long period in which munitions were almost an afterthought and sacrificed to pay for other priorities, the Air Force needs to focus on them in order to have the right “package” of capabilities for future conflicts, Chief of Staff Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr. said June 7.

“I’ve watched this over probably the last seven or eight years,” Brown said at a Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies event. “It’s an area that we tend to not spend as much focus on and I think we need to. In some cases, because you don’t have a threat right on your doorstep, munitions aren’t high on your priority list. Well, that’s different now.“

The war in Ukraine has highlighted the urgent need to be able to surge production of munitions, Brown said, as has the National Security Strategy and reviews of U.S. military posture in places like the Korean Peninsula, where stockpiles of weapons in particular were scrutinized.

While fielding new platforms like the B-21 bomber is important, munitions are an area “we’ve got to pay attention to to ensure we bring those along,” Brown said.

The Mitchell Institute has published several studies of USAF munitions over the last few years and determined the service needs both longer-range weapons and far more of them if it is to have a chance of prevailing in a conflict in the Pacific, where there would be tens of thousands of potential targets.   

In its fiscal 2024 budget, the Air Force is seeking an increase in multiyear procurement of the AIM-120 AMRAAM air-to-air missile, the AGM-158 JASSM stealth ground-attack cruise missile, and its marine warfare variant, the Long-Range Anti-Ship Missile. All three are in production and have successors in the works.

“I believe that is just a start,” Brown said. “We’ve got to look at multi-year procurements, so that it helps give a predictable demand signal to industry.”

U.S. Air Force Airman 1st Class Jack Buckland, 36th Munitions Squadron munitions maintenance technician, and Senior Airman Mark Keith, 36th Munitions Squadron munitions maintenance crew chief, conduct a visual inspection on a Joint Air to Surface Standoff Missile on Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, April 24, 2023. U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Spencer Perkins

Indeed, Air Force officials have said in budget discussions there aren’t enough missiles on hand for a no-notice air campaign, and Pentagon acquisition and sustainment chief William LaPlante has warned that industry has been reluctant to invest in weapons manufacturing facilities and capacity because of uneven funding.

Companies need a clear business case—backed up by action—to convince their stockholders to underwrite more capacity, LaPlante has said.

“It’s not just the primes,” Brown said. “It’s all the [subcontractors] below them.” Without predictability, those companies can’t invest in capacity and workforce—sending a clear signal that weapons will be bought at a steady rate “helps us to be able to surge if we need to,” Brown added.

Likewise, Brown said partners and allies who have U.S.-type aircraft also have to have the munitions that go with them.

“We have to ensure that we have enough munitions on the shelf to support us and our allies and partners, and so that’s something that I think we need to continue to focus on and make sure we have a complete package of capability for our weapon systems,” he said.

New weapons like the B-21 won’t have the desired effect if they aren’t matched with munitions that take best advantage of their capabilities, Brown said.

“That’s an area that I do focus on, to ensure that we’re able to have the complete package,” he said. “And then on top of that, is how we use those bombers.” The Air Force needs to show it can put aircraft and munitions anywhere it needs but must also monitor adversaries like China to see if the message being sent is the one being received, Brown noted.

Similar to the munitions issue, Brown said industry also needs to see stability in spare parts funding so they can feel confident investing in new technologies and parts-making capacity.

Digital engineering, which is now becoming standard for all USAF programs, will help make parts easier and cheaper to make through 3-D printing, Brown said. The key is assessing the quality of printed parts and the confidence in that process to make flight-critical parts, he said.

At the same time, the Air Force aims to reduce the cost of weapon system sustainment through greater use of predictive maintenance, he said, wherein accumulated data on how a part performs in a fleet can save money and aircraft downtime by accurately predicting when it will need replacing.

“I think we have opportunity here,” Brown said. “Our Rapid Sustainment Office is taking a look at this as well, but to use the data to be a little more predictive in not only how we change the parts, but also work the supply chain.”

This Air Force Squadron Is Key to DOD’s Plan For Climate Change

This Air Force Squadron Is Key to DOD’s Plan For Climate Change

For military planners, a change in the weather can impact a host of factors and decisions.

For instance, rising air temperature on Guam, a central hub of military operations in the Pacific, impacts the density of the air, which affects how much runway length a military aircraft needs to take off and how much gas, weapons, and cargo it might be able to carry.

“All of those calculations tie into larger strategies of how long our runways need to be, how many cargo aircraft we need, how much armament can fit on our planes, how powerful our helicopters need to be,” Lt. Col. Bill Danyluk, commander of the 14th Weather Squadron, told Air & Space Forces Magazine.

There are several weather squadrons in the Air Force, many of which provide forecasts so that units can safely operate. Danyluk’s squadron, however, has a mission performed by no other unit in the military: predicting what the climate might be like more than 10 years from now, with calculations that include the effect of human emissions, rather than simply relying on historical climate data.

“The average environment is going to change, and we need to start thinking about that now so we can adapt to those changes without losing combat power,” said Danyluk.

The goal is for the 14th Weather Squadron to be able to answer nuts-and-bolts questions that military planners have about how climate change will impact operations.

“What we’ve seen over the last couple of years is a significant increase in specific questions about climate change,” Danyluk said.

For example, if unit commanders want to plan for operations in northern Alaska in 2035, they would need to start planning years in advance to know what equipment and training regimens to develop so that troops are prepared for that environment. Part of the planning process involves knowing projected temperatures, snowfall amounts, wind, and other data that no current tools in the U.S. military can provide. 

“It takes a long time to develop and field equipment to work in that new environment,” Danyluk said. “That’s why they need to ask for it now and understand how the future climate might be different from what it is today.”

U.S. Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Jeremiah Wickenhauser cuts snow blocks to be used in igloo constriction in Crystal City, Canada. Wickenhasuer attended a five-day field training exercise during the Canadian Air Operations Survival training course. Courtesy photo submitted by Chief Master Sgt. Jeremiah Wickenhauser

The 14th Weather Squadron’s new mission is one of several efforts the Department of Defense and the Air Force is pursuing to be ready for a changing climate. In October, the Air Force released its Climate Action Plan, where it established goals such as cutting emissions, pursuing alternative energy sources, and tying the “security implications of climate change” into its planning, training, operations, acquisition, logistics, and other areas of decision-making.

Though climate projection is a new mission for the 14th, the squadron has experience studying climatology. In fact, Danyluk said the name “Weather Squadron” is a bit misleading because the unit works on climatology, which involves longer-term analysis than weather studies.

“Weather is generally up to 10 days in the future, and then beyond that you are using some form of climatology,” he explained. 

Climatologists often use historical data to predict what might happen in the future, but climate change throws a wrench in the works, potentially making those assessments less reliable. Instead, a new field called climate projection has emerged where climatologists use data such as future emissions concentrations, together with climate models, to project the future state of the climate.

The military has two preexisting methods for making climate assessments—the DOD Climate Assessment Tool (DCAT) is used to assess climate risk specifically for military installations and infrastructure, and the Department of Defense Regional Sea Level (DRSL) database projects sea levels. The 14th Weather Squadron will aim to answer climate questions beyond the scope of those tools.

The squadron, which falls under the 557th Weather Wing based in Offutt Air Force Base, Neb., is located in Asheville, N.C., amid some of America’s leading institutions for climate study. There is the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Climatic Data Center and the North Carolina Institute for Climate Studies, which helps the squadron stay abreast of the latest tools and techniques of the trade. 

About half of the squadron’s 64 members are civilians. On the military side, Airmen who join the squadron have typically served at least one operational assignment providing weather expertise for an operational unit commander. That experience shows weather Airmen how operational commanders use climate data.

“The installation commander says ‘I want to know what the normal snowfall amount is here at my base in Utah so I can plan to buy enough salt and enough snowplows,’” Danyluk said. “He’ll ask his weather flight, who will then send the [request for information] over to the 14th Weather Squadron. It is really helpful to have that perspective from the field on how decision makers actually use the data.”

pentagon climate change
Hurricane Michael made landfall as a catastrophic Category 4 close to Tyndall Air Force Base, Florida, in the afternoon of Oct. 10. The storm created significant structural damage to the majority of the base and surrounding areas. U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Ryan Conroy

The squadron provides data to all the services, the intelligence community, and NATO, Danyluk said. Several of the squadron’s civilian members are experts with over a decade of work in climatology. But climate projection requires a new skill set—and involves some uncertainty.

“When you look 10 to 30 years into the future, there is some variability in the projections, because those projections are based on future emissions concentrations,” Danyluk said. “Those come from humans, so it depends on what humans do, and that cannot always be easily projected.”

The 14th will need new resources to take on its new mission. While the unit has an initial “pathfinder” capability to pursue its new climate projection mission, the Air Force is still working out how many and what kinds of new tools or staff the 14th will need to pursue it at a larger scale, Danyluk said.

“The timelines for how soon we can be fully capable depend on when we get the resources, and it also depends on what is defined as fully capable,” he said. 

In the meantime, Airmen are improvising—as they so often do.

“We have tech sergeants and Airmen who are actually writing and manipulating computer code to extract data from our database and provide answers to questions that essentially have never been asked before,” Danyluk said. “As those new questions come in, they have to figure out how to answer them on a regular basis. It is pretty impressive what the individual Airmen are doing.”

Though planners can use the analysis provided by the 14th Weather Squadron to make decisions, Danyluk emphasized that it’s not the squadron’s job to make recommendations. Weather or climate Airmen provide data and analysis, but it is up to the policy-maker to decide how to act on that analysis.

“It’s an exciting time for the 14th and the whole military, because it is providing a new capability,” he said. “The end goal is to make better decisions, make better use of taxpayer money and, at the end of the day, to maintain the core mission of the Department of Defense.”

SECAF’s New Reading List: It’s All About China

SECAF’s New Reading List: It’s All About China

Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall is fond of saying his top three priorities are “China, China, and China.” When it comes to what he wants Airmen and Guardians to read about, his answer is no different.

The new SECAF Reading List, subtitled “Understanding Our Pacing Challenge,” consists of 19 selections—every one of them focused on China. 

Referencing his own Cold War experience, in which “I learned firsthand the importance of deepening one’s understanding of potential competitors,” Kendall explained the value of knowing one’s adversary. “By closely studying the Soviet Union, we were able to better appreciate motivations, strategic intent, operational methods, and tactics,” Kendall said. “This, in turn, helped us better prepare for and prevent conflict. Our ability to anticipate and counter Soviet actions helped us to deter effectively and ultimately led to the collapse of the Soviet Union.” 

The Soviet Union is a distant memory, but the People’s Republic of China is America’s new pacing threat. “The PRC’s rapid modernization of its military and increasingly assertive behavior in the Indo-Pacific region poses a significant challenge to U.S. national interests, the security of the homeland, and regional stability,” Kendall wrote. “There is no time to lose in responding to this challenge. Studying and better understanding China is a prerequisite to making sound decisions about how to best deter, and, if necessary, defeat our pacing challenge.” 

Shortly after taking the job as Air Force Secretary, Kendall made that very point in an interview with Air & Space Forces Magazine. “I spent the first 20 years of my career in the Cold War working on some of the types of issues that we’re actually confronted with now: a peer competitor who is acting very aggressively to try to defeat us, and responding to that.” 

Kendall’s reading list breaks China down into five categories: history; the contemporary state; military modernization; geopolitical competition; and regional relationships. Authors range from Cold War icon Henry Kissinger, a former National Security Advisor and Secretary of State, to renowned China expert David Shambaugh and Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Barbara W. Tuchman. 

The full list includes: 

Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr. and Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force JoAnne S. Bass have previously published their own “Leadership Libraries.” These selections, featuring books, films, and podcasts, cover a wider range of topics for Airmen to consider. Kendall’s list is the first to focus exclusively on a single competitor. 

PHOTOS: Osan ‘Mammoth Walk’ Mobilizes More than 50 Aircraft

PHOTOS: Osan ‘Mammoth Walk’ Mobilizes More than 50 Aircraft

The Air Force’s surge of “elephant walks” in recent moves has showcased airpower and Airmen’s ability to rapidly generate airpower. 

But at Osan Air Base, South Korea, in early May, Airman took the concept to another level: more than 50 aircraft from two bases on the Korean peninsula.

Two U-2 Dragon Ladys, three C-12 Hurons, 12 A-10 Thunderbolt IIs, and 36 F-16 Fighting Falcons all gathered at Osan for a large-scale training event on May 5. In images released May 31, the 51st Fighter Wing referred to the event as a “mammoth walk,” typically used to describe an elephant walk that features all of the available aircraft at a base.

The 51st Fighter Wing at Osan contributed A-10s and F-16s to the exercise, while the 8th Fighter Wing at Kunsan Air Base added F-16s. The U-2s belong to the 5th Reconnaissance Squadron stationed at Osan. 

“The large aircraft generation training event demonstrated the wings’ rapid generation capabilities and response readiness,” the 51st FW said in a press release. “The combined ability of 7th Air Force and our partner units at Osan Air Base to generate combat airpower at a moment’s notice affirm that our commitment to the Republic of Korea remains ironclad and ensure regional stability throughout the Indo-Pacific.” 

The presence of the 8th Fighter Wing at Osan comes amidst runway repair work at Kunsan, which is expected to be completed by August.  

Exercise Beverly Midnight 23-1 in South Korea stretched from May 4-12, on the heals of the Korea Flying Training exercise that took place April 17-28. B-1 and B-52 bombers have flown repeated sorties over or near the Peninsula throughout the year, in shows of force intended to reassure South Korea and remind North Korea of U.S. reach.  

Also in May, a U.S. F-16 from the 8th Fighter Wing crashed near Osan, bursting into a fiery wreck after the pilot safely ejected. 

The “mammoth walk” in South Korea was at least the seventh elephant walk or mass generation exercise at a USAF base in the past four months: 

  • Seven E-3 Sentry airborne warning and control, or AWACS, aircraft participated in a “weather flush” on March 21 at Tinker Air Force Base, Okla.  
  • 20 mobility aircraft—seven KC-135 Stratotankers, eight C-17 Globemaster IIIs, and five KC-46 Pegasus—also participated in a severe weather exercise March 24 at Altus Air Force Base, Okla.  
  • 21 tankers—16 KC-46s and five KC-135s—lined up as part of an Agile Combat Employment exercise at McConnell Air Force Base, Kan., also on March 24.  
  • 4,000 Airmen and 80 trainer aircraft gathered on the runway at Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas, on April 7, to showcase the power of its people as well as its planes.  
  • 49 aircraft—40 F-16 fighters and nine MQ-9 drones—showed off the airpower at Holloman Air Force Base, N.M. on April 21.  
  • 18 KC-135 Stratotankers lined up on the runway at MacDill Air Force Base, Fla., on April 26. 

Going back a few months further, Airmen at Kadena Air Base, Japan, executed a 36-airframe elephant walk featuring six aircraft types in November 2022. 

C-17 Tests Magnetic Navigation System That Works When GPS Doesn’t

C-17 Tests Magnetic Navigation System That Works When GPS Doesn’t

An Air Force C-17 transport jet recently tested a new technology that could help aviators stay on course even if the satellite-based Global Positioning System (GPS) that much of modern-day aviation relies on is compromised.

The successful demonstration held last month is a promising development at a time when many national security experts worry that GPS navigation could be disrupted by signal jamming, cyberattacks, or even kinetic anti-satellite weapons.

Currently, many military and civilian aviators rely on a combination of GPS and inertial navigation, Air Force C-17 pilot Maj. Kyle McAlpin told Air & Space Forces Magazine. McAlpin is the Air Force liaison for the Magnetic Navigation (MagNav) project being pursued by the Artificial Intelligence Accelerator, a research pipeline managed by the Air Force and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Inertial navigation systems take an aircraft’s initial position and uses velocity, acceleration, and the laws of physics to determine where the aircraft is at any point in time, McAlpin explained. The advantage of such systems is that they do not depend on external signals, so they cannot be jammed. But the disadvantage is that the system grows less accurate over time, which can be a problem over long flights.

Many aviators today use GPS to update the inertial navigation system and stay on course. Without GPS, aviators must rely on other ways to update the inertial navigation system, and some of those methods go back centuries.

One of those methods is the magnetic compass, but anomalies in the Earth’s crust could tell aviators more than just the general direction of north. When mapped, the different levels of magnetization generated by each anomaly can help navigators figure out where they are. The trouble is that performing magnetic navigation in real-time is very difficult, especially when modern aircraft are filled with lights, transmitters, computers, and other devices that generate electromagnetic noise and disrupt calculations. One of the central challenges of magnetic navigation is sorting a clean signal through that noise to get an accurate read of the Earth’s magnetic field.

Artificial intelligence may have finally made that possible. The MagNav project created an open-source Magnetic Navigation Open Challenge to build a machine learning model for removing aircraft electromagnetic noise from the total magnetic field. Developing algorithms to sort out that noise was challenging, McAlpin said—and so was figuring out a way to run those algorithms not on a supercomputer in a lab, but on a laptop aboard a moving aircraft. 

magnetic
MagNav equipment is loaded on the back of a C-17A Globemaster III, ready for the first real-time demonstration on a Defense Department aircraft, during exercise Golden Phoenix, May 11-15, 2023. Courtesy photo.

The MagNav team worked with MIT’s Lincoln Laboratory, the Air Force Research Laboratory Sensors Directorate, the Air Force Institute of Technology Autonomy and Navigation Center, and the Software-as-a-service company SandboxAQ to develop a quantum magnetic sensor that could be flown aboard a C-17. The chance to demonstrate the system came along with Exercise Golden Phoenix, a nearly two-week exercise where Airmen, Marines, and Sailors practiced moving people and cargo to locations in California and Nevada to hone the mobility operations that might be required in a war against China or Russia. 

McAlpin flew aboard the C-17 during the test sorties from Travis Air Force Base in northern California to Edwards Air Force Base farther south. The flights, held from May 11 to May 15, marked the first time a Department of Defense aircraft flew with that kind of navigation technology on board. The system worked thanks to previous flights that had been used to collect data for training its artificial intelligence.

Though the test was successful, it could be a long way to go before military aviators fly with MagNav systems in their cockpits. The current process for creating the magnetic maps that MagNav depends on is often time- and resource-intensive, said McAlpin, so there could be an opportunity to crowdsource future efforts at magnetic mapping.

Besides mapping, another challenge is integrating the MagNav system onto an aircraft, especially since magnetic navigation may not be the only alternative PNT system coming to aviators. McAlpin envisioned a system where MagNav complements other methods such as celestial navigation, signals of opportunity, or terrain-relative navigation.

Integrating these methods together may result in a diversified navigation system that has no single point of failure. And aircraft could be just the beginning, as an Air Force press release noted future MagNav experiments could take place aboard submarines, hypersonic glide vehicles, and drones.

“The next fight demands unassailable positioning and navigation,” McAlpin said in the release. “We can achieve that by augmenting GPS with alternatives. … This week, we took an important step towards making one of those modalities a reality by transitioning MagNav from the minds of MIT and MIT Lincoln Laboratory onto an operational aircraft, blazing the trail for our sister services and expansion to new platforms.”

Air Force Reconsidering Whether Some Staff Jobs Need Pilots Amid Shortage

Air Force Reconsidering Whether Some Staff Jobs Need Pilots Amid Shortage

As the Air Force struggles to ease its pilot shortage, it can still fill all its cockpits, Chief of Staff Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr. said June 7. But that has come at the expense of staff jobs normally assigned to pilots, leading the service to reconsider whether those staff jobs actually need to be filled by rated officers, he said.

Speaking at a Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies event, Brown said the Air Force is looking “across the entire ecosystem” of recruiting, training, and retaining pilots to find ways to close the gap in flyers, which has hovered around 1,800-2,000 for the past eight years.

“What I’ll tell you is that we are 100 percent manned in the cockpit,” Brown said. “Where we take our cuts are on the staff. So, we’re probably 70 percent manned on the staff.”

Brown said deputy chief of staff for operations Lt. Gen. James C. Slife is leading a review of staff positions, looking at those that have become designated as pilot billets to see if they actually have to be filled by rated officers.

In some cases, the position may simply require “someone who has operational experience,” Brown said.

This scrub “won’t knock this shortage to zero,” but in the Air Force, “we probably always have more requirement than we have capacity to field,” and fixing the requirement can help fix the pilot shortage, he added.

Tied to that approach, Brown said he has tried over the last two years to “ensure that all of our Airmen, to the best of our ability, have a little operational acumen.” That will make it easier to fill staff jobs with non-rated officers, he said.

In the same vein, Brown said when a staff job does require a pilot, the service is reassessing whether that pilot needs to consume flying hours while working a desk job. Normally, “you still get to fly” to retain proficiency, but “some of those you need to do, and some of those have been nice to do,” Brown noted.

More broadly, the Air Force is taking a “diverse” approach to addressing the pilot shortfall, Brown said, and is emphasizing data-driven efforts.

One such effort is the aviation bonus, which just recently was increased to $50,000 per year. Another element is streamlining and quickening the pilot training process and ensuring those accepted for pilot training don’t have to wait years to report for duty.  

Other approaches focus on offering more stability and support for pilots’ families, Brown said. As an example, he cited several first-tour instructor pilots at Laughlin Air Force Base, Texas. By the usual career playbook, they would progress to another base and a major weapons platform, but they asked to stay at Laughlin because their spouses had local jobs. Brown said making those kinds of accommodations should help.

In recent years, the Air Force has also pushed to attract a more diverse swath of pilots—broadening the population from which it can draw.

“We’ve got to look at how we break some of these paradigms that we’ve had in the past, and don’t don’t do a ‘one-size-fits-all’” approach anymore, Brown said. “Each one of those helps. You’re not going to get it to zero, but it will help.”

Brown also pointed out the whole of the military is struggling with a pilot shortage, as is the commercial airline and cargo industry, and noted he has been in talks with other flying organizations to best address what he called “a national problem.”

Recruiting overall is also a struggle, as Brown acknowledged the service is likely to not achieve its goals this year. And while retention rates are high, that can lead to an unbalanced force down the road.

Brown said he has urged his commanders to open up their bases, get people out in their communities, and increase the exposure of Airmen to the general public, because the people USAF wants to attract may not know there are careers available to them in the Air Force. They cannot aspire “to something they’ve never seen,” he said.

The competition for eligible youth is “keen,” Brown noted. “They get bombarded with information.”

To stand out, the Air Force has to make personal connections, he said—digital and social media contacts are fine, but there “has to be a person on the other end” ready to answer questions and talk to recruits.

Brown also said the Air Force will experiment with different career paths, particularly in the cyber area, wherein people could be recruited to do a job and not compelled to take a leadership path after a certain period of time. As with pilots, he also said USAF has to accelerate the timeline between getting someone to agree to serve and actually getting them into uniform. A prolonged wait increases the chances of that recruit taking up another opportunity, he said.

“We have to eliminate those ‘barriers to entry,’” Brown said. “People get tired of waiting.”

What Does Brown Offer Biden as Chairman? ‘Holistic’ View on Deterrence, Deployments

What Does Brown Offer Biden as Chairman? ‘Holistic’ View on Deterrence, Deployments

When President Joe Biden announced his selection of Gen. Charles Q. Brown, Jr. to be Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the commander-in-chief said the Air Force Chief of Staff was “unafraid to speak his mind as someone who will deliver an honest message that needs to be heard.” In his first public appearance since appearing with Biden at the White House two weeks ago, Brown provided an overview of what the president and the American people should expect.

“I am who I am,” Brown said June 7 during a Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies event. “I think about joint operations. I think about combat capability—how we will continue to push ourselves to ensure we have the capabilities to provide the nation what it asks us to do.”

Brown cautioned that the U.S. must align its strategic goals with how it deploys military assets and prevent unnecessary strain on America’s hardware and personnel.

“You can make a decision in a moment not realizing what the impact is going to be further down that line,” Brown said.

There is tension between the finite resources military services can provide and what combatant commanders want, Brown noted. The Air Force, as a service that can deploy assets across the world in hours, is at the forefront of that balancing act, as commanders weigh day-to-day demands against the practicalities of limited budgets and aging platforms.

“I’ve seen both sides of the coin,” Brown said, referring to his time as a “consumer” of resources.

Brown has experience being asked to provide airpower as the Air Force’s top general, as well asking for it, particularly during his time as the deputy commander of U.S. Central Command from 2016-2018 at a time America was engaged in an air campaign against ISIS, and as the leader of the air component for U.S. Indo-Pacific Command during his time as boss of Pacific Air Forces.

“I’ve also been thoughtful and pragmatic, particularly now that I’ve come in as the Chief,” Brown said.

Under Brown’s leadership, the Air Force has put together a new force generation concept. Brown and other Air Force leaders have said the service was particularly strained during America’s wars in the Middle East. Over two decades of nearly non-stop combat operations, aircraft and Airmen were worn down.

Brown said the force generation model has been able to “help us better articulate internally and externally” the Air Force’s capabilities and limits.

For the U.S., recognizing and balancing those capabilities and limits could prevent the military from overtasking itself. But Brown suggested it is also important for ensuring the Pentagon does not unnecessarily “ramp up and decrease deterrence” under the premise that any deployment is beneficial.

Routine American deployments have come under an increased spotlight lately, especially in the South China Sea, and led to close calls between American and Chinese assets, both at sea and in the air. While Brown did not directly address those interactions, recriminations over previously unremarkable movements have highlighted that countries may have pointed reactions U.S. military planners must consider.

“That is something that we’ve got to continue to work on and be strategic in how we execute,” Brown said. “As we look at deterrence, I do think about all our operations, activity, and investments, and how we do those a bit more holistically. To be able to say, just do more bomber missions into the Indo-Pacific, and that’s going to send the right message. Do we really understand that?”

Common sense can go a long way in forming military strategy, Brown noted.

“If you’re going to deter, you need to understand who you are deterring and what message you’re sending,” Brown said.

New Leader Takes Over Air Force Recruiting as Challenges Persist

New Leader Takes Over Air Force Recruiting as Challenges Persist

Brig. Gen. Christopher R. Amrhein, an experienced tanker and trainer pilot who helped oversee the Air Force’s flying training enterprise, took command of the Air Force Recruiting Service on June 2, taking on the service’s persistent problems in finding qualified candidates interested in joining the military. 

Amrhein succeeds Maj. Gen. Ed Thomas, who led AFRS from June 2020 through May 2023. That tenure encompassed the COVID-19 pandemic, low unemployment, and declining eligibility and propensity to serve among American youth, the Air Force and the military writ large struggled to meet their recruiting goals in fiscal 2022 and are faring no better in 2023. 

Indeed, Amrhein takes command of AFRS just four months before the end of the fiscal year, fully expecting all three Air Force components—Active-Duty, Guard, and Reserve—to miss their recruiting goals. 

Things are improving. Early this year, Air Force leaders predicted the Active Duty recruiting would miss goal by 10 percent, while the Guard and Reserve would miss by even larger margins. But on June 7, Chief of Staff Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr. said at a Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies event that it might not be that bad after all. 

“We’ll probably be something less than 10 percent short, particularly on the Active-Duty,” Brown said. “It’s a little higher on the Guard and Reserve. Part of that is based on retention. Our retention rates are really high right now.” 

While some recruiting roadblocks have eased—recruiters are now more able to conduct in-person visits to high schools with the end of the pandemic—others will be more difficult to overcome.  

According to Pentagon data, just 23 percent of Americans 17 to 24 years old are eligible to join without being granted a waiver, and only 9 percent express an interest in doing so. Both figures have been trending downward for years, and lack of familiarity with the military may be the greatest cause.  

“This has been a slow-moving train that’s been coming at us for decades, frankly,” Thomas said in March at the AFA Warfare Symposium. “There are less veterans, less service members, less bases, less opportunity to be exposed to what it means to serve in uniform today.… The longer-term challenge of lack of familiarity is one that we’re going to have to come to grips with as a nation.” 

To combat that problem, Thomas and Brown advocated for “reintroducing” the Air Force to America by increasing community engagement and opening up military bases in a way not seen since before 9/11. 

“After 9/11, all of our bases became fortresses because we made it very difficult to get on base,” Brown said June 7. “And so I sent out a letter to all our Wing Commanders back in January and basically instructed them to ‘Open your base and get into the community.’ People only aspire to be what they see.” 

In the change-of-command ceremony at Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph, Texas, both Amrhein and Air Education and Training Command boss Lt. Gen. Brian S. Robinson acknowledged the difficult task Amrhein now faces. 

“We are eager to join this team of professionals in a challenging time,” Amrhein said of himself and his new command chief, Chief Master Sgt. Rebecca Arbona. “With challenges come opportunities and I look forward to rolling up my sleeves and working with all as we continue the great work being done daily, while exploring those new opportunities.” 

Amrhein can look forward to high-level help confronting his recruiting challenges. Vice Chief of Staff Gen. David W. Allvin—widely presumed to be nominated to replace Brown as CSAF once he becomes Chairman of the Joint Chiefs—recently championed a Barriers to Service Cross-Functional Team focused on cutting through red tape and changing Air Force policies seen as barriers to recruiters. 

Prior to taking command of AFRS, Amrhein was the 19th Air Force’s vice commander and briefly its interim commander after Maj. Gen. Phillip A. Stewart was relieved May 10 for loss of confidence in his ability to command. 

Amrhein also previously served as inspector general for Air Mobility Command and commander of the 100th Air Refueling Wing at RAF Mildenhall, U.K. A KC-135 pilot out of training, he also spent time as an instructor pilot on the T-37 and T-6. 

With New Responsibilities, TRANSCOM Wargames How to Support Air Force in Pacific

With New Responsibilities, TRANSCOM Wargames How to Support Air Force in Pacific

Gas is king in the vast expanse of the Pacific. And as the Pentagon has sought to build up its capability to deter China, the Department of Defense has undergone a major rethink about how to get fuel to the region. 

At the heart of the effort is U.S. Transportation Command (TRANSCOM), which recently assumed responsibility for the global management of the U.S. military’s bulk fuel. 

“We need to make sure we can assuredly move that fuel and get it to where it needs to go,” Air Force Gen. Jacqueline Van Ovost, the commander of TRANSCOM, said June 6 during a Brookings Institution event

Under the previous arrangement, the responsibility rested with the Defense Logistics Agency’s Energy office, which traces its history back to the Army-Navy Petroleum Board set up in World War II. The decision to transfer the mission to TRANSCOM was directed by the 2022 National Defense Authorization Act and officially authorized by President Joe Biden in April.

TRANSCOM’s new responsibility, Van Ovost explained, “allows us to put our TRANSCOM expertise of command and control and planning and posture to ensure that we can actually deliver that fuel wherever and whenever we need it.”

Van Ovost said her command has already conducted wargames with the Air Force and other services to make sure the U.S. military can be properly supplied.

“We also need to relook where our fuel posture is to meet the requirements,” she added.

The Air Force is seeking to dramatically expand its overseas infrastructure spending in its fiscal 2024 budget, including for fuel. The service’s doctrine of Agile Combat Employment, or ACE, is based on a “hub and spoke” presence of logistics, and fuel for aircraft will have to come from somewhere.

“The whole big picture purpose of ACE is to disperse your forces, so that’s exactly what we’re going to do during a conflict, which is we’re going to have jets spread out,” Gen. Kenneth S. Wilsbach, the commander of Pacific Air Forces, said in March. “To sustain that force for periods of time does take additional logistics.”

Much of the fuel will need to be sent by sea. Van Ovost noted the Pentagon has stood up a maritime tanker security program under which the U.S. military will be able to access medium-range Merchant Mariner vessels during a conflict. Arrangements to use 10 of those ships have already been nailed down, she said. 

But that’s just part of the puzzle. To get to the far-flung islands the Air Force and other services may be operating out of, the U.S. military will also need access to different types of ships.

“We’re working on the next 10 as well to be able to assuredly move fuel inside the first and second island chain—more shallow draft vessels that we didn’t have before,” Van Ovost said.

TRANSCOM, which normally operates behind the scenes, has been thrust into prominence as it has moved massive amounts of military materiel to Europe as part of America’s aid to Ukraine and the repositioning of the U.S. personnel and equipment on the continent to reinforce NATO.

However, TRANSCOM’s longer-term focus remains to modernize to deter China and support service efforts such as new Air Force concepts developed under Chief of Staff Gen. Charles Q. Brown, Jr.

“Our competitors are on a trajectory that will provide really persistent threats across all domains, and that’s why the services are changing their service concepts and you’re seeing more maneuver in their concepts,” Van Ovost said. “As I think about the maneuver concepts, I have to be able to integrate into Gen. Brown’s Agile Combat Employment.”

Across other services, the Marines want to refashion themselves as an island-hopping force with advanced anti-ship weapons. The Army, meanwhile, is planning to deliver a punch with long-range fires. But it is TRANSCOM that will coordinate the massive logistical undertaking to sustain America’s military, whether by sea, land, or air—military or civilian-owned.

Prior the assumption of her current role, Van Ovost led Air Mobility Command. That force, which comprises around 500 tankers and 500 airlifters, will be called upon to help build out bases and move American forces around in the Pacific.

Van Ovost highlighted the age of America’s roll-on, roll-off transport ships and Air Force tanker fleet, based largely around KC-135s that date back to the 1950s, as requirements that will require a continued overhaul.

“We need to recapitalize out into the future with things that are going to be able to withstand contested environments,” Van Ovost said. “Those are just some areas that I’m concerned about, but we’re getting after it or we’re mitigating the risks, and we’re doing a lot of exercises and making sure that our people are ready.”