|
The Air Force is in
the throes of a force reduction, but its exact magnitude
is hard to pin down. In January, USAF officials pegged
troop lossesthrough 2005at 16,000. By April,
the figure had risen to 18,000. By the end of May,
it was closer to 24,000.
The Air Force has been over its authorized end strength
of about 360,000 airmen since the Global War on Terror
began. The expansion was acceptable as a temporary
measure under the Presidents declaration of a
national emergency, but the service now must divest
itself of the additional manpower. (See The New
Drawdown, March, p. 50.) In the process, it must
reshape its personnel structure to correct long-standing
skill imbalances.
 |
| USAF is making a concerted effort to steer personnel
toward understaffed career fields. Pictured is
Airman Basic Wendell Rush and other new airmen
as they graduate from basic training at Lackland
AFB, Tex.(USAF photo by Sr A. Chad Hackney) |
Now, Maj. Gen. Peter U. Sutton, USAFs director
of learning and force development, reports that the
number of troops that the service must cut has grown,
even in just a few months, because higher than expected
numbers of troops are electing to re-enlist in the
service.
Despite some predictions that the high pace of operations
since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks would start
to drive airmen out of the service and hamper recruiting,
the opposite appears to be true. Recruiting and retention
have improved recently, particularly since 9/11. We
see very strong recruiting and very strong retention, said
Sutton.
He noted that first-term, second-term, and career
enlisted airmen retention rates have matched or exceeded
Air
Force goals. Over the same period, a rise in officer
retention, measured by cumulative continuation rates
(CCRs), has been equally impressive.
As a result, the service has to scale back recruitment
and retain a smaller portion of eligible members in
an effort to get down to its authorized end strength.
The reduction comes after a decade-long drawdown that
already has cost the service 233,000 members, or almost
40 percent of the strength it had in the late 1980s.
In this smaller force, any adjustment has a significant
impact.
After struggling for a number of years to recruit
and retain members, the Air Force now finds itself
having
to turn away potential recruits and send some career
members home early. At the same time, the service remains
seriously short of officers and enlisted members in
some chronically undermanned career fields.
To some degree, the Air Forces current problems
stem from its own success. Having improved its recruiting
and retention rates, it now must refine its approach
and concentrate not just on getting and holding people
but on getting and holding people who can fill critical
shortages.
To do this, the service has embarked on an effort
called force
shaping.
We want to ensure that we draw down smartly, Lt.
Gen. Richard E. Brown III, deputy chief of staff for
personnel, told lawmakers earlier this year. He said
USAF is addressing force shaping in two ways: first,
by reducing personnel overages in most skills and,
second, by shaping the remaining force to meet mission
requirements.
No Draconian Measures
The goal in reducing the number of active duty members,
said Brown, is to avoid involuntary draconian
measures such as the reduction in force (RIF)
and selective early retirement board (SERB) methods
used during the drawdown of the early 1990s and earlier
during the post-Vietnam reductions. The Air Force resorted
to RIFs to throw people out before their time
and their desire and SERBs to tell people when they
would retire, said Brown.
We want to avoid SERBs and RIFs, he said,
but emphasized that the service has too many
people in some career fields, while it does not have
enough in others.
Reducing its number of new recruits is one of the
first steps USAF took in its force shaping effort.
In its
January announcement on the new cuts, the Air Force
said that enlisted recruiting quotas would be cut
from 37,000 this year to 35,600 in Fiscal 2005 and
34,500
in Fiscal 2006. By June 1, USAF officials had raised
next years cut by another 11,600, making the
new 2005 goal 24,000 recruits. A news release stated
that officials expect enlisted accessions rates
to return to normal levels in Fiscal 2006.
 |
| Second
Lt. Anthony Langley (right), an Air Force linguist,
explains the
combined
weapons effectiveness
assessment teams mission to Iraqis. Linguists
are among the USAF specialists in high demand.(USAF
photo by TSgt. Chris Stone) |
The decision not to make even larger reductions in
accessions was a calculated
one. We are not going to draw back our accession numbers dramatically, Sutton
explained. What happens when you do that is what we call the bathtub
effect, where all of a sudden we would have a very small entry year that
would stay with us all through those peoples careers.
There is no way to make up for that loss of personnel,
said Sutton. So,
we have to be very careful not to mess too much with the front end, he
added.
The Air Force also has restructured its officer accession
program. Because of higher numbers of individuals
participating in Air Force Reserve Officer
Training
Corps programs at colleges, the service reduced the number of officer candidates
it commissions through Officer Training School.
The service uses its OTS program as a flexible commissioning
program to offset such increases in the number of
commissions from AFROTC and the Air Force Academy.
OTS had been producing new officers beyond its peak capacity for several years.
Applications for both AFROTC, traditionally the largest
source of new officers, and the academy have been
up since 2000. Sutton said that AFROTC had about
7,800 applications in 2000, while this year it has received 16,258. At the
academy,
applications rose from 9,500 in 2000 to 12,300 for 2004.
Sutton called those pretty significant increases
and said they enable the Air Force to have better
selectivity in its officer candidates.
Channeling Retention
Another force shaping measure aims to limit retention
of airmen in overpopulated career fields.
During the lean years in recruiting and retention,
the Air Force had given a
career job reservation to virtually every enlisted person who wanted to re-enlist, said
Sutton. Now the service plans to be more selective, specifically targeting
those Air Force Specialty Codes (AFSCs) that have shortages.
If airmen are not in the 30 or so AFSCs that remain
under the career job reservation program, said Sutton,
they will have to retrain to remain in the service. This
means finding a place where they can qualify and then retrain, or they wont
be allowed to re-enlist, he explained.
The service still will offer sizeable bonuses to people
who stay longer in critical skills, but Sutton said
there will be cutbacks in some programs. In
the latest revision of the bonuses, he said, we
have actually reduced the number of selective re-enlistment
bonuses [SRBs] that are going to various
enlisted career fields.
Sutton emphasized, Were still offering
a lot of money to people to re-enlist, but the numbers
of [eligible] AFSCs are on the downswing.
Certain career fields have seen their SRB amounts
increase. Some of our
greatest needs are for linguists, said Sutton. We are looking for
air and ground linguists to stay with us, and, certainly, we try to recruit
them as well. Other shortage fields include pararescue, combat control,
and air traffic control.
Because of shortages in these and other critical
career fields, the service is continuing to accept
some
prior-service personnel for return to duty. However,
the relatively open-door policy of a few years ago is no more. When the service
faced recruiting and retention challenges several years ago, it expanded its
accession of prior-enlisted members to about 1,000 per year, said Sutton. The
Air Force can no longer welcome back as many as previously, he said.
We dont have the need to reach out and
get as many prior-service people, explained
Sutton, adding that the number for next year probably will be in the 150
to 200 range.
Among those prior-service personnel the Air Force
still wants are those from the special tactics field,
whether
they had served in USAF or one of the
other services. Sutton said that former military personnel with special forces-type
experience who would like to come into the Air Force and be a combat
controller or be in a tactical control party are in demand.
Overall retention is very solid in an aggregate
sense across the force, but we still have specific
specialties that we have concerns about, said
Sutton. Just as the service is refocusing its SRBs
for specific enlisted specialties,
it has used targeted bonuses for certain officer categories, primarily
its rated force.
The Air Force, for years, has experienced difficulty
in retaining pilots and navigators. Even there, things
are changing. Were doing much better
in rated retention than we have in the past, said Sutton. We
judge that by the numbers of people who take or elect to take aviation
career bonuses.
We anticipate that we will continue to do well in the short term.
Sutton predicted that there would be a little
bit of a dip a few years out, and then, over the longer
haul, we will do well again. He attributed
part of that upswing, though, to the 10-year commitment the service now
levies on pilot trainees. Previously, the commitment
was eight years.
Even the traditional problem of losing pilots to the
airlines seems to have eased.
My understanding is that airline hiring has
slowed down pretty dramatically post 9/11, said
Sutton. The airlines had a lot of pilots who
were furloughed, so if they were hiring, they would
be taking those furloughed pilots first, he
said, adding, That certainly helps us, I think.
However, Sutton also credited the upsurge in patriotism,
pay raises, and other benefits.
A Non-Draconian Measure
In announcing the troop cuts, Air Force leaders emphasized
that they wanted to try to give every airman who wants
to stay in the service the
opportunity
to
do so. One way they intend to honor that commitment is to offer airmen
the chance to cross-train into shortage career fields.
The goal is to adjust skill mixes to better meet todays
operations. To remain on active duty, some members
will have to retrain to more needed skills.
Theoretically, the program will be voluntary. It
depends on whether or not we get enough volunteers,
but, historically, we have not gotten enough, said
Sutton, adding that there is a certain reluctance to leave
a known type of work and start over. That is understandable, he
said. If
I came into a career field, and Ive been trained in that and I
feel comfortable with it, generally I want to stay in it.
The Air Force is prepared to implement an involuntary
or mandatory program if necessary. If we dont
get enough volunteers, we would tap people on the
shoulder and say, Were going to have
to ask you to move, said
Sutton.
Currently, the mandatory retraining program focuses
on the three mid-noncommissioned officer ranks: staff,
technical, and master sergeant. The Air Force has
targeted about 1,300 of these midlevel NCOs. USAF said that many NCOs
had elected
to volunteer for retraining or to separate from the service. However,
on May 7,
the service
announced it had notified 88 of the most vulnerable airmen
to select a new career field or it would select one for them.
 |
| Pararescue is among the strained career fields.
Here, TSgt. Daniel Murray prepares for a jump while
deployed to Tallil AB, Iraq. The 332nd Expeditionary
Rescue Squadron at Tallil trained to rescue downed
aircrews.(USAF photo by SrA. Karolina Gmyrek) |
What happens is that people might not volunteer
under a purely volunteer program, said
Sutton, but, when you have a mandatory program staring you in
the face, all of a sudden you become a volunteer, because if you dont
volunteer, you might get forced to a place that you dont want
to go.
There are certain shortage career fields that take
nothing but volunteers.
Included in that category are enlisted aircrew skills. We
dont put
a nonvolunteer into the air, stated Sutton. He added, It
wouldnt
serve us very well to force people to go. The same can be said
for special tactics skills. Can you imagine forcing a person
to be a pararescueman, where you have to swim and jump out of airplanes
and all that? he asked.
Sutton conceded that getting volunteers to cross-train
can be difficult, but,
he said, all in all, I would say we are meeting the numbers we
need pretty much in our retraining program.
As part of its force shaping effort, the Air Force
also has opened the door wider for both officer and
enlisted airmen to voluntarily
transfer
into one
of its
two air reserve componentsthe Air National Guard or Air Force
Reserve Command. Weve
opened up the opportunities to really almost anybody to apply, said
Sutton.
The Air Force is controlling this migration, though,
based on the health of
individual career fields, explained Sutton. If an airman wants to transfer,
but the service turns down the request because of
active duty needs, the transfer
request will be held. Well keep those applications on file, said
Sutton, so if we cant let a person go right now, depending
on how well we are doing as ... we look at our end strength situation,
we can go back
... and say, Well, we couldnt let you out six months ago,
but now things have changed slightly and would you still be interested
in going?
The reserve option also will be offered to some future
officers before they come on active duty. Some officer
candidates can ask to be commissioned
directly
into
the reserves. Again, said Sutton, this option will be limited
to certain career fields or career types. For instance, he said,
because the Air Force needs scientists and engineers, the program probably
would not be open to them.
Stress Not a Deterrent
As the Air Force readjusts its end strength, Brown
said, the service is working
deliberately to measure stress and make informed reallocation decisions
within the existing force.
Many lawmakers have expressed concern that the seeming
steady state of high operations would lead to recruiting
and retention problems.
They
question whether the current
end strength is enough to meet future needs.
 |
| Wanted:
Air Traffic Controllers. Pictured is SSgt.
Eugenia Lopez, as she monitors
the equipment
at Kirkuk AB, Iraq. Kirkuks air traffic controllers
oversee the flight patterns of all the aircraft
traversing northern Iraq.(USAF photo by A1C Alicia
Sarkkinen) |
Air Force leaders acknowledge that the force is stressed,
but they say it is stressed unevenly. The force shaping
measures they have introduced
will relieve
the stress and transform that force so that it can more
effectively meet the demands of the Global War on Terror, Michael
L. Dominguez, USAFs
assistant secretary for manpower and reserve affairs, told Senators
in March.
The Air Force is under stress, but it is not
in crisis, asserted Dominguez.
He added, We have a plan, and we are executing to our plan.
Air Force officials point to the services current
recruiting and retention record to bolster their position
that the ongoing demands of overseas deployments
and the tempo of operations has not led to a wholesale flight from
active duty.
The effects of the strain would show up to
some degree in retention rates, and we havent
seen a downturn in retention, said Sutton, adding, In
the last couple of years, we have had almost unbelievable retention.
So, you have to look at that by peeling back the onion
and saying, There must be
a lot of different factors involved.
One of those factors could be activation of Stop-Loss,
which the service imposed twice since 9/11. The first
one initially was servicewide
for
almost a year,
while the second, during Operation Iraqi Freedom, was more limited
and of much shorter duration. Service leaders agree that, during
Stop-Loss, they
could
not accurately measure retention.
Now, Brown told lawmakers, the numbers are pretty
accurate and were
feeling pretty solid about retention.
Other largely unmeasurable factors could play a role.
Sutton said, I think
a certain number of people re-evaluated what was important to them. They
concluded, he said, that they are serving in a time when
the nation really had a need.
Having said that, he did not discount the effect a jolt to
the economy can have on career intentions. He emphasized, But,
I do believe that some people who were in Stop-Loss
who intended to leave changed their minds and decided
it was worth staying.
Bruce D. Callander is a contributing editor of Air Force Magazine. He served tours of active duty during World War II and the Korean War and was editor of Air Force Times from 1972 to 1986. His most recent article for Air Force Magazine, “Big Fella,” appeared in the February issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
|