As China extends the reach of its missiles and aircraft farther and farther beyond its shores, the Air Force must ensure two keys to effectively counter that threat: first, to build out the underlying capability to make USAF’s agile combat employment strategy, and second, to ensure the Air Force has the “inside force” to penetrate China’s defenses, a top Air Force leader said Dec. 6.
PACAF commander Gen. Kevin B. Schneider, speaking at an event with AFA’s Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies, said the People’s Republic of China is continuing to build out its anti-access/area denial strategy with its growing ballistic missile force. “And every day, that missile capability from the PLA grows in number, capability, and range,” Schneider said.
The PLA Navy and Air Force are growing bolder, more routinely operating far from China’s shores, he said. “In the air domain, we typically see them first and second island chain only. But as they continue to build out air refueling capability, I expect that we’ll see air operations farther and farther through the first and second island chain, and perhaps even farther.”
As recently as 2021, USAF academics derided China’s aerial refueling fleet as “another limitation in the quest for power projection.” Not anymore. The PLAAF has a new refueler, the YY-20, analysts say, and it is also flexing its muscles in new parts of the world, leveraging access to Russian bases to operate in the Arctic and Western Pacific. Earlier this year, the two conducted their first-ever joint bomber patrol near Alaska, and in late November, they conducted a joint patrol over the Sea of Japan.
That last mission was notable, Schneider said, because it “involved an H-6N,” explaining that the “N” designator means the aircraft is a “nuclear-capable bomber.”
“China is continuing to do more and more with [the H-6N] and using that to project power,” he added. By flying near both Japan and South Korea, the H-6N operation was “clearly an effort to get after the fabric of the alliances and partnerships that give us strength,” Schneider said.
Asked by dean of the Mitchell Institute retired Lt. Gen. David A. Deptula about the need for penetrating strike and air dominance aircraft, Schneider argued that the U.S. Air Force must “always be in a position where we can get into the hardest targets, that we can turn the vertical flank, and that we can deliver mass fires on a center of gravity.” This, he said, requires a so-called “inside force.”
Debate about whether the Air Force must field both “inside” and “outside” forces has increased in recent months as the service has wavered in its commitment to the Penetrating Combat Aircraft, the manned portion of the Next-Generation Air Dominance family of systems. USAF was scheduled to select a winning design for that program by September, but paused the program for an additional review. Now, with a coming change of presidential administration, the Air Force has delayed the determination so that the next Pentagon leadership can make the decision.
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David Allvin wants to cast aside the inside-outside force arguments as he works to press his case for a new “force design” intended to help reset future warfighting requirements. “The design is … more conceptual, but we’re designing the force to be able to account for the environment,” he said in a recent interview with Air & Space Forces Magazine. “That environment is one that has varying levels of and varying densities of threat.”
Schneider, for his part, said “we the Air Force have, I’ll call it a moral obligation, one to the joint force, because wherever they are, we are going to be with them. And it is our job to be an integral part of the joint force to deliver fires, and the other is a moral obligation to our allies and partners that Gen. Allvin alluded to.” To achieve that, he said, the Air Force must have air superiority and global precision strike capabilities.
Deptula has argued that delaying NGAD or diminishing the Air Force’s ability to fight inside enemy territory cedes U.S. combat advantages, and are driven not by strategic insight, but by a lack of will to fight for more funds to buy the combat forces necessary to deter China.
ACE and Logistics
In the face of China’s growing reach, PACAF is building out its agile combat employment strategy, in which forces would scatter from large “hubs” to remote bases as a means to counter China’s A2/AD strategy. ACE was developed in PACAF when Schneider was the command’s chief of staff, and he credited lower-level units and Airmen for their hard work fleshing out the concept.
“We have really advanced, and we have really evolved, and I am really pleased,” he said.
But Schneider also said some of that evolution has caused PACAF leaders to reconsider the underlying assumptions behind ACE.
“The one thing that … we’ve recognized we need to get after—and I give [Gen. Mike Minahan], the former AMC commander, tremendous credit—was there’s a large-scale logistics and sustainment piece of this that wasn’t necessarily connected,” Schneider said. “That’s because a lot of our agile combat employment evolutions have been done within wing training budgets, within wing training cycles.”
When Minihan staged AMC’s massive Mobility Guardian exercise in the Pacific in 2023, those issues came to light, and now the Air Force is planning an even larger exercise for 2025, dubbed “Resolute Force Pacific” with the specific objective of better understanding the implications of peer war on the full logistics chain.
REFORPAC, as the exercise has been nicknamed, will include some 300 aircraft spread across 25 locations, PACAF deputy Lt. Gen. Laura Lenderman previously said. But with Congress having punted so far in approving a 2025 budget, Schneider said the Air Force may have to scale back that plan.
“Through the course of our planning, we have options,” he said. “So we take a look at what we would like to do at the high end, if we get all the funding that we are asking for, through to a lower end of the funding, where we’ll still be able to make this happen at a pretty large size and scale.”
For ACE to work, Schneider said, USAF has to accept that it can’t depend on just-in-time delivery in the midst of combat. More gear must be prepositioned forward to limit the distances it must travel to the end user, Schneider said. Because “there’s never enough lift to go around” when it’s needed most, he said, the Air Force must look “at our ability to pre-position as much forward across the spectrum” as possible in order to “take some of that burden off of [U.S. Transportation Command] in time of crisis.”