
STATEMENT BY
LIEUTENANT GENERAL DUNCAN J. MCNABB
DEPUTY CHIEF OF STAFF FOR
AIR FORCE PLANS AND PROGRAMS
BEFORE THE
COMMITTEE ON ARMED SERVICES
SUBCOMMITTEE ON TERRORISM, UNCONVENTIONAL
THREATS AND CAPABILITIES
UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
REGARDING AIR FORCE TRANSFORMATION
26 FEBRUARY 2004
Mr. Chairman
and members of the committee, thank you for
the opportunity to discuss with you the
ongoing transformation of the United States
Air Force.
To support US national security, the
Services must
maintain broad and sustained advantages over
potential adversaries by providing joint
commanders with the most effective solutions
to conduct a broad spectrum of joint
operations. The capabilities
necessary to achieve this have, of course,
changed over time, requiring the military to
constantly adapt and "transform." The Air
Force, like all the Services, has
contributed significantly to the US
military's transformation through the
years. Examples of past transformational
technology breakthroughs in air and space
power include jet aircraft, supersonic
flight, missiles, nuclear weapons,
spacecraft, long-range airpower, and
precision-guided munitions. Throughout its
history, the Air Force has also gone through
numerous significant organizational and
conceptual changes to maximize the
effectiveness of these new capabilities.
This ongoing transformation of the US
military continues today.
Scoping
Transformation:
Secretary
Rumsfeld's Transformation Planning Guidance
defines transformation broadly as "a
process that shapes the changing nature of
military competition and cooperation through
new combinations of concepts, capabilities,
people, and organizations that exploit our
nation's advantages and protect against our
asymmetric vulnerabilities to sustain our
strategic position.." Perhaps more to
the point, it adds that: "shaping the
nature of military competition ultimately
means redefining standards for military
success by accomplishing military
missions that were previously unimaginable
or impossible except at prohibitive risk and
cost.Eventually such
efforts will render previous ways of
warfighting obsolete and change the measures
of success in military operations in our
favor."
It is important to
emphasize that not all change is
transformation. Transformational efforts,
whether they are technologies, concepts, or
organization adaptation, should result in
significant improvements in warfighting
capabilities or the ability to address new
threats. Not all efforts achieve that.
Ultimately, transformation must be
understood in a strategic context.
There
have been two separate, but related,
transformations of the US military over the
past decade that will continue for the
foreseeable future. The first is the
transformation from an industrial
age force to an information age force.
Vast leaps in information technology
dramatically reshaping warfare in the areas
of intelligence and surveillance, command
and control, and precision kinetic and
non-kinetic weapons. Before long, joint
force commanders will be able to see the
entire battlespace, identify key adversary
centers of gravity, and rapidly communicate
that information to friendly combat forces
to wield precise, desired effects.
Technology is also enabling us to produce
the effects of mass without having to mass
forces. This approach requires the
deployment of fewer forces (and thus enhance
rapid mobility), reduce the length of the
conflict, and limit collateral damage.
The second ongoing transformation is that
from a Cold War-posture to a Global War on
Terror-posture.
The military advantages America currently
enjoys are in danger of eroding in the face
of new, unique challenges in the 21st
century security environment. In a security
environment where traditional concepts of
deterrence may no longer apply, the United
States must prepare for new and
unpredictable forms of terrorism, attacks on
its space assets, information attacks on its
networks, psychological operations, cruise
and ballistic missile attacks on its forces
and territory, unpredictable threats,
reduced access to forward bases, advanced
dispersal and deception techniques, and
attacks by chemical, biological,
radiological, nuclear, or
high-explosive-armed adversaries. We must
be able to conduct operations effectively
across the entire spectrum of conflict ,
meeting the unique demands of peace
operations, homeland security, urban
operations, and low intensity conflicts
against a broad range of potential
adversaries, not just high intensity
operations against a conventional foe.
Air Force Transformation Strategy:
With these considerations in mind, the Air
Force is pursuing a six-part strategy. To
play its part in these transformations in
support of the Joint Force Commander, the
Air Force is pursuing the following
strategy:
-
Work with the other Services, Joint Staff, and other Department of Defense (DoD) Agencies to enhance joint warfighting
-
Continue to aggressively pursue innovation to lay the groundwork for transformation and ensure that new transformational capabilities are developed and fielded as rapidly as possible
-
Create flexible, agile organizations that continually collaborate to facilitate transformation and institutionalize cultural change
-
Shift from threat- and platform-centric planning and programming to capabilities and effects-based planning and programming
-
Develop "transformational" capabilities we cannot achieve today or must be significantly improved to address the new security environment
-
Break out of industrial age business processes and embrace information age thinking
Allow me to highlight key Air
Force initiatives in each of these areas.
Enhancing Joint Warfighting
A critical part of transformation is the
bring to bear the most effective force for a
given situation, regardless of what Service
or combination of Services contributes that
force. The Services already strongly
support each other in many areas and
continue to enhance that cooperation.
Almost half of the Air Force budget is
invested in joint enablers (airlift,
refueling, and air/space C4ISR) in FY 05 and
that continues to increase. For example,
the Air Force has recently plusssed
up funding for joint enablers such as the
C-17, Predator and Global Hawk.
The Air Force has also been working closely
with the other Services to further improve
joint warfighting in various areas. Some
examples:
-
During Operation Iraqi Freedom, an Air Component Coordination Element team was located within each component's force headquarters to allow the air component to better integrate air and space power with the operations of the other components to more fully achieve the Joint Force Commander's objectives.
-
The Air Force and Army are working to improve air support of ground forces in a number of forums: Air Force Task Force Enduring Look, Air Force Doctrine Symposium III, Center for Army Lessons Learned and Air War College Lessons Learned, Joint Combat Air Support Executive Steering Committee, the Combat Air Support Summit, and Army-Air Force Warfighter Talks. In addition, the two Services recently held an Army-Air Force Transformation Symposium to jointly address this issue as well as enhancing cooperation in conducting future urban operations and forcible entry over strategic distances.
-
During Operation Iraqi Freedom, two-thirds of Tactical Air Control Parties (the airmen embedded in Army ground units for close air support) were outfitted with standardized special operations equipment. This significantly improved their ability to enable time-critical targeting and timely close air support of ground forces.
-
A Joint UCAV Program Office was stood up on 1 October 2003 to address Air Force and Navy UCAV issues. Its goal is to create standards that will allow UCAVs to be built along common lines in hopes of decreasing costs while retaining interoperability.
-
All the Services are collaborating to synchronize development of a joint C4ISR network
-
Air Force participation in OSD, Joint Staff, and other joint wargames explores the potential synergy of emerging joint concepts.
-
The Air Force also holds regular Warfighter Talks with the Army, Navy and Marines to better coordinate our efforts to support the joint commander.
-
The Air Force has established an 11-person on-site liaison office with Joint Forces Command to better coordinate joint concept development and experimentation.
Maximizing the advantages of
joint operations requires a common framework
that enables DoD to identify both Service
interdependencies and gaps. To accomplish
this, the DoD is creating new Joint
Operating Concepts (JOCs), which will
depict how the joint force of the future
will fight across the spectrum of military
operations. The JOCs are also intended to
be specific enough to permit identification
and prioritization of transformation
requirements inside the defense program.
The JOCs strive to build a force with
specific characteristics: fully integrated,
expeditionary, networked, decentralized,
adaptable, decisive, and lethal.
The process of developing the JOCs and their
supporting operations and integrating
architectures is presently under way. Once
they are completed, future Service
transformation roadmaps will describe
comprehensively how the Services are
developing the capabilities necessary to
execute them. The Air Force is developing
Service operating concepts and a Master
Capability List that support the new JOCs.
Working with other joint force elements, Air
Force capabilities enable and accelerate
joint force power projection operations in
the new security environment. The mobility
and swiftness, stealth, precision, and range
of the Air Force, working with the
dramatically enhanced capabilities of the
Army, Navy, and Marines, have already paid
huge dividends in recent operations.
Operation Iraqi Freedom was the first war
that executed a campaign as designed by the
Goldwater-Nichols Act of 1986: a truly joint
warfighting effort from planning to
execution. Air, ground, maritime, and space
forces worked together at the same time for
the same objective -- not just because they
occupy the same battlespace. For example,
Air Force, Navy, Marines, Army Tactical
Missile System and Patriot units, coalition
air forces, and space assets were all
included in a combined Air Tasking Order.
In addition, ground forces were able to
bypass major enemy formations because,
according to General Peter Pace, the Vice
Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff, of the
"trust our ground forces had in precise and
timely airpower." To avoid repeating the
mistakes made in Operation Anaconda in
Afghanistan, the Air Force enjoyed
unprecedented coordination with the land
component commander to ensure air and space
forces were fully integrated with the Army
and Marines, as well as British troops. For
instance, during the Race to Baghdad, the
Marines, Army and special operations forces
bet on air and space power in ways beyond
any they had done in the past. These
included not only indirect fires, but also
persistent ISR, rapid resupply and a robust
Space umbrella that provided an
unprecedented level of situational awareness
previously unavailable to battlefield
commanders anywhere in history. The
resulting trust and confidence in truly
joint operations this engendered has
inspired all the services to continue
working to close the seams that have
developed over the years.
Reducing the Acquisition Cycle:
Developing and fielding weapon systems in
today's dynamic threat environment requires
a new approach to Air Force acquisition.
Agile Acquisition is changing the way
the Air Force delivers capability to the
warfighter through two basic improvements:
it decreases acquisition cycle time and
increases credibility in executing
programs. The goal is to achieve effects on
the battlefield with today's technology
today rather than yesterday's technology
tomorrow. Achieving this aim requires
collaboration among all the stakeholders in
the acquisition process to include the
warfighter, funding, engineering, test, S&T,
program management, industry, contracting,
sustainment, and others.
The Air Force and DoD began this
transformation with complete revisions to
the directives governing acquisition. The
governing principles include encouraging
innovation and flexibility, permitting
greater judgment in the employment of
acquisition principles, focusing on outcomes
vice process, and empowering program
managers to use the system versus being
hampered by over-regulation. Development
and delivery of integrated capabilities
requires the flexibility to use innovative
approaches such as evolutionary acquisition
where capability is delivered to the field
incrementally. The warfighter gets products
delivered quickly, and the acquisition team
has the opportunity to infuse emerging
technology into the system and deliver full
capability.
Transforming to a Capabilities-Based Force:
In the past,
we improved our capabilities program by
program and platform by platform, focusing
development efforts on making each
individual system go higher, faster,
farther, etc. with little consideration of
how it would integrate with other
capabilities in the Air Force, in other
Services, or in allied militaries. We had
to turn this around. Now we look at our
National Strategy and determine the effects
the Air Force must create. We next determine
what capabilities we need. Only then do we
talk about what platforms, or combination of
platforms/systems, we need to provide these
capabilities. It was also critical that the
operators took the lead in determining
capabilities and that we pursued a
capabilities-based planning process wherein
warfighting effects and the capabilities
needed to achieve them became the drivers
for everything we do.
Accordingly, the Air Force recently
developed Air Force Concepts of Operations
(or CONOPS). These new CONOPS focus on the
effects we need to produce and the
capabilities we need to maintain or develop,
before we consider the platforms we need.
Through these Air Force CONOPS, we:
1. Analyze problems we'll be asked to solve for the Joint Force Commander
2. Define the operational effects we expect to produce; and
3. Identify the capabilities that Air Force expeditionary forces need
The Air Force has developed six initial
CONOPS: Global Mobility, Global Persistent
Response, Global Strike, Homeland Security,
Nuclear Response, and Space&C4ISR.
In order to precisely assess each CONOPS,
our Capabilities Review and Risk
Assessment (or CRRA) identifies
and analyzes current and future
capabilities, capabilities' shortfalls,
health, risks, and opportunities. The CRRA
is a twofold process: each CONOPS executes a
CRRA within its effects and capability
purview. Then, an Integrated CRRA assesses
capabilities and capability shortfalls
across all CONOPS. The CONOPS first
identify desired warfighting effects and
then develop top-level capabilities required
to generate those effects. The CRRAs then
identify capability gaps, overlaps, and
robustness within each top-level
capability. Finally, the Integrated CRRA
identifies an acceptable level of risk and
risk mitigation measures within each
capability. This assessment helps the
CONOPS Champions articulate any disconnects
between required capabilities and programs.
During each CONOPS CRRA, the CONOPS Champion
and Risk Assessment Teams: (1) identify
their CONOPS desired effect(s) and top-level
capabilities; (2) review existing and
planned programs, S&T, and special access
programs; (3) determine strengths,
weaknesses, and opportunities; and (4)
assess the impact of not having
specific capabilities across a range of
contingencies. This analysis will: (1)
provide senior Air Force leaders an
operational, capabilities- and risk-based
focus for investment decision-making and (2)
achieve the goal of using operational
warfighting effects as the drivers for
resource allocation for the Air Force.
Metrics to measure the Air Force's progress
toward force transformation will be derived
primarily from this analysis once the CONOPS
and CRRA processes have been finalized and
specific required capabilities determined.
Transforming
Air Force Culture and Organization:
The process of transformation begins and
ends with people. Only through the
effective development of airmen and the
seamless integration of their capabilities
into Air Force operations can the Service
optimize air and space power.
Allow me to quickly summarize a just a few
of the Air Force's key efforts in these
areas:
-
The Air and Space Expeditionary Force construct has been critical in transforming the Air Force from a threat-based, forward-deployed force designed to fight the Cold War to a capabilities-based force based primarily in the United States that is sufficiently flexible to conduct a wide range of operations throughout the world while accommodating the high operational tempo of today's contingency environment.
-
Through the new Force Development construct, the Air Force has a transformed vision for how it trains, educates, promotes, and assigns the Total Force in a more deliberate, coordinated, and connected approach. Transforming the Air Force is not possible without a process such as this to ensure Airmen understand the nature of the changing security environment. Recognizing this, we are restructuring our officer Professional Military Education programs. For instance, we are expanding the opportunities for in-residence attendance and specifically tailoring the education experience to the officer's development path. This will include more opportunities for select individuals to pursue relevant advanced technical degrees at civilian institutions. We've also begun providing the opportunity for our enlisted force to obtain advanced degrees from our highly acclaimed Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT). We're also revamping our personnel assignment system to better develop our future leaders through a purposeful pairing of primary and complementary assignments and experiences. Future plans will expand the Force Development construct to include our reserve components, enlisted corps and civilian workforces.
-
Through the Future Total Force (or FTF) effort, the Air Force is continuing its transformation in the way it integrates the Air National Guard, Air Force Reserve, and civilian force to produce greater combat capability more efficiently. As the Service relies more on Guard and Reserve components to provide critical peacetime and wartime capabilities, it makes sense to allow some units the opportunity to live, work, and train together. FTF would allow each component to contribute its unique strengths to provide the capability, experience, stability, and continuity required to operate today's information- and technology-driven forces. It would also enable the Air Force to make better use of basing infrastructure and maximize the utilization of expensive weapon systems.
One way to implement this is to expand the integration of Active and Reserve component units. Moving Guard and Reserve units with like assets to active bases or vice-versa could facilitate leaner, more efficient operations, maintenance, and infrastructure. The Air Force has already established units using this concept. Examples are the merger of the Air National Guard's 116th Bomb Wing and Air Combat Command's 93rd Air Control Wing to form the 116th Air Control Wing (a Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System Blended Wing) at Robins Air Force Base, Georgia; and the integration of Air Force Reserve Command's 8th Space Warning Squadron associated with Air Force Space Command's 2nd Space Warning Squadron at Buckley Air Force Base, Colorado. Reserve Associate and Active Associate units have proven that this concept works and benefits the Active and Reserve Units. Indeed, they have been used for the last 35 years. There are currently a total of 11,000 Air Force reservists assigned to associate units, including 32 Reserve Associate flying units. The movement of the 126th Air Refueling Wing from Chicago to Scott Air Force Base, Illinois represents another example of the efficient use of available infrastructure by different components.
Developing
Transformational Capabilities:
The Air Force is also pursuing new
"transformational" capabilities it cannot
achieve today or must be significantly
improved to enable DoD's transformation
goals and the new AF concepts of
operation. These capabilities and
associated unclassified Air Force efforts
are described in detail in the Air Force
Transformation Flight Plan. However, I
will briefly provide a short overview here.
The Air Force of today is facing numerous
challenges to achieve the necessary
capabilities to prevail in the future.
Networking of air, space, and ground systems
is limited. The amount and type of ISR
assets needed for time-critical and
simultaneous targeting in most cases are
limited. Legacy air capabilities are
vulnerable to the next generation of
advanced air defense systems. Rapidly striking
anywhere on the globe and conducting
persistent operations is very difficult.
Often, the only effect we can produce on a
target is to destroy it with kinetic
weapons, which is not appropriate in all
situations. Critical information and space
systems are vulnerable to attack. The
United States has a limited capability to
affect adversary command and control and
intelligence-gathering abilities and deny
space to adversaries if necessary. In most
cases, forces cannot be deployed abroad in a
timely manner. American territory and
forces are also highly vulnerable to
ballistic and cruise missile attacks. The
threat from the continued proliferation of
chemical, biological, radiological, and
nuclear weapons creates a continuous need to
ensure that US forces can survive, fight,
and win in a contaminated environment.
We have already made great strides in
reducing the kill chain and putting the
cross hairs over the target in minutes,
rather than hours, and much more precisely.
For instance, we beamed coordinates to a B-1
and 12 minutes later, it put four JDAMs on a
restaurant when we though Saddam Hussein was
inside. However, it took 45 minutes from
the time we thought we saw him go in to when
we got authorization from our chain of
command to strike. If we could make the
entire process take only 30 minutes, rather
than 57, the effect might have been
completely different.
To overcome these shortcomings, the Air
Force is pursuing the following sixteen
"transformational" capabilities -
capabilities that must be significantly
improved to enable the new CONOPs and DoD's
transformation goals. The first five
combined would help enable the United States
to achieve information superiority:
-
Seamless joint machine-to-machine integration of all manned, unmanned, and space systems.
-
Real-time picture of the battlespace
· Predictive Battlespace Awareness, which is a commander-driven process to predict and preempt adversary actions when and where we choose
· Ensured use of the information domain via effective information assurance and information operations
-
Denial of effective C4ISR to adversaries via effective information operations
There are numerous ongoing efforts that will combine to achieve these capabilities. The larger ongoing Air Force programs include Advanced Extremely High Frequency, Automated ISR, the Combat Information Transport System, the Distributed Common Ground System, Global Positioning System Blocks IIF and III, Joint Tactical Radio System, Link 16, and the Transformational Satellite.
Additional transformational capabilities the Air Force are pursuing include:
-
Penetration of new, advanced enemy air defenses to clear the path for follow-on joint forces (with stealthy platforms such as the F/A-22, UCAVs, and information operations)
· Effective and persistent air, space, and information operations beyond the range of enemy air defenses under adverse weather conditions (with advanced standoff weapons)
· Protection of vital space assets
· Denial of an adversary's access to space services
-
Detection of ballistic and cruise missile launches and destruction of those missiles in flight (with new missile defense systems)
· Rapid establishment of air operations, an air-bridge, and movement of military capability in support of operations anywhere in the world under any conditions with advanced rapid global mobility assets.
· Responsive launch and operation of new space vehicles and refueling/repair/relocation of existing vehicles
-
Significantly lighter, leaner, and faster combat support to enable responsive, persistent, and effective combat operations under any conditions
-
Order of magnitude increase in number of targets we can hit per sortie (with the new Small Diameter Bomb)
-
Achievement of specific, tailored effects on a target short of total destruction (with non-lethal and directed energy weapons and information operations)
· Rapid and precise attack of any target on the globe with persistent effects with both information operations as well as the Common Aero Vehicle and future long-range strike assets.
These capabilities will not only revolutionize traditional high intensity combat operations, but will also enable the United States to face new non-conventional threats and the future security environment. For example these capabilities will help the United States:
-
Counter various anti-access strategies by adversaries.
-
Protect critical C4ISR systems and networks against adversary attacks and counter adversary PSYOP campaigns.
-
Protect critical space assets against growing adversary threats to them.
-
Counter advanced dispersal and deception techniques and enable tracking of targets under the cover of night and in adverse weather.
-
Greatly enhance the conduct of future urban operations and the ongoing global war on terrorism.
-
Protect US forces from new technologies available to adversaries and defend the US homeland.
-
Enable US forces to conduct responsive, persistent, and effective combat operations under any conditions, to include CBRNE environments.
· Significantly mitigate the unpredictability of threats in the new security environment and the greatly reduced access to forward bases.
Transforming How the Air Force Does Business:
In addition to force transformation, the Air Force is also beginning to engage in business transformation. Air Force business processes stem from an industrial age when America faced a security environment that was vastly different in character from the one the Air Force faces today. Although they have been incrementally reformed and modernized over the last 30 years, the underlying philosophy and basic architecture of these processes has not changed-they are labor intensive, they lack agility, flexibility, and speed. Accountability is fragmented and diluted throughout large bureaucracies that must render their collective assent to enable the accomplishment of the most mundane tasks.
The Air Force seeks-relative to the status quo:
-
A significant shift in business operations resources (dollars and people) to combat operations and new/modern combat systems
-
Work processes and a work load enabling its people to accomplish routine (non-crisis, non-exercise) organizational missions within a 40 to 50 hour work week
-
A compression of average process cycle time by a factor of four (relative to current established process baselines)
-
An improvement in the effectiveness of operations resulting in higher customer satisfaction ratings
-
Empowerment of personnel and enrichment of job functions
The Air Force has recently created several organizations, processes, and programs to begin the task of achieving these goals. They include the Business Management Modernization Program, Air Force Business Modernization and Systems Integration Office, Air Force Business Management Modernization Program, Business Transformation Investment Process, and the Balanced Scorecard.
Conclusion:
In
conclusion, I would simply like to highlight
that this is an exciting time for the Air
Force. It is engaged in developing new
strategies and new concepts of operation to
meet an entirely different set of challenges
and vulnerabilities. Technology is creating
dynamic advances in information systems,
communications, and weapon systems, enabling
the joint commander to understand the enemy,
deploy forces, and deliver more precise
effects faster than ever before. Airmen are
more educated, more motivated, and better
trained and equipped than any time in the
past.
The Air Force is fully committed to the
transformation process and to maximizing
joint combat capabilities.
It is
using the Secretary of Defense's construct,
primarily described in the Transformation
Planning Guidance, to guide its
transformation efforts. The U.S.
Air Force Transformation Flight Plan
lays out the Service's ongoing
transformation efforts in detail, which, in
concert with the other Services, will help
achieve the effects required by the Joint
Force Commander in the changing security
environment.
In addition to developing transformational
capabilities, the Air Force has robust
strategic planning, innovation, and
long-term S&T processes in place to support
the development of these capabilities. It
is creating flexible, agile organizations to
facilitate transformation and
institutionalize cultural change. The Air
Force is transforming the way it educates,
trains, and offers experience to its airmen
so they understand the nature of the
changing security environment and are
encouraged to think "outside the box." It
is continuing the transformation of how it
integrates the Air National Guard, Air Force
Reserve, and civilian force with its Active
Duty force. The Air Force is continuing to
transform into a capabilities-based force
through the new CONOPS and the CRRA. It is
working with the Joint Staff, OSD, and the
other Services and Agencies to improve joint
warfighting and develop the new Joint
Operating Concepts.
Transformation, however,
should not be achieved at the expense of
conducting current vital operations in
support of the DoD Defense Strategy,
maintaining adequate readiness and
infrastructure, conducting critical
recapitalization, and attracting and
retaining quality personnel. There must be
a careful balance between these requirements
and our investment in transformation. We
must fight the war today and prepare for the
one tomorrow. We believe our program
achieves the proper balance.
The Air Force will always excel at providing
air and space focused capabilities to the
joint warfighter, while enhancing the
capabilities of soldiers, sailors, and
marines. The diversity and flexibility of
Air Force efforts and capabilities through
concepts of operation, technology, and
organizational structure provide
unparalleled value to the Nation and make
the whole team better.
The Air Force will continue
to work with the rest of DoD to keep
transformation focused to provide the
capabilities required for the Nation in the
21st Century.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
2120 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20515
NEWSLETTER
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