The Air Force has begun a sweeping overhaul of its education and training programs with the standup of new centers that will be part of the future Airman Development Command that is scheduled to come online next year, service officials said.
Airman Development Command will be established in 2025 as part of the Air Force’s re-optimization plan to prepare for “great power competition.” The new command will take the place of Air Education and Training Command.
“It’s not one of those that will have the biggest splash or headlines, but the functions that it is going to do that is going to centralize force development is going to help us really streamline and accelerate getting our Airmen ready for the environment,” Chief of Staff Gen. David W. Allvin said in a recent interview with Air & Space Forces Magazine “Airman Development Command will be the force development for cradle to grave for Airmen across the entire institution of the Air Force.”
The Air Force is already moving to activate the centers that will fill out the new command. On Dec. 2, the Air Force Accessions Center (AFAC), which merged officer accessions and the Air Force Recruiting Service, achieved initial operating capability.
AETC is also opening so-called centers of excellence—designed to focus and foster expertise—as it prepares to become Airman Development Command.
The Enterprise Learning Engineering (ELE) Center of Excellence (CoE) began operating at the start of the month. A Flying Center of Excellence stood up earlier this fall. Five more centers of excellence—Institutional, Information Warfare, Logistics, Command and Control, and Combat Power—are projected to achieve initial operating capability this winter.
“We’re already putting together the pieces of it … and all those processes are going through the bureaucratic piece, where we go through the department and up through Congress,” Allvin said. “You’ll be able to recognize it when we say, ‘Well, how did we get better?’ Well, it’s because some of those foundational things are being put into Airman Development Command right now.”
In addition to Airman Development Command, the service is taking other steps to develop more effective Airmen. The service has devised a new deployment model, is expanding sites across the U.S. for unit-level training, and is holding more large-scale exercises.
It has also established new Air Task Forces, units which are designed to be cohensive and train together before deploying. Those task forces are now practicing at sites across the U.S. known as Combat Support Training Ranges. As part of this initiative, the 11th Air Task Force, currently training at Tyndall Air Force Base, has been focusing on sustainment and base recovery after an enemy attack. The 12th Air Task Force training at Fort Bliss has been practicing on force protection. The task forces will swap locations early next year to flesh out their training.
“I think that the most impactful thing … will be seen maybe a couple years down the road when we have a single commander accountable for a common force development,” Allvin said. “Building those units of action and having a force development that has Mission Ready Airmen that understand the same set of competencies that are grounded in the same threat. All of those things are going to manifest themselves in a force that is more synchronized and aligned.”