New Defense
Budget Unveiled
President Clinton's eighth and final DoD budget proposes spending
of $291.1 billion. If enacted as is, the Fiscal 2001 DoD plan would
bring a 1 percent real defense increase-the first ever requested
by this Administration. Congress appears likely to boost the amount,
however.
The 2001 plan, delivered to Congress Feb. 7, requests new budget
authority for the fiscal year that begins next Oct. 1.
Under the Administration's plan, the Air Force would receive $85.3
billion-1.1 percent more in real, inflation-adjusted terms than
it will spend this year.
The Air Force budget is 34.5 percent of the total amount allotted
to the three military departments. The Navy Department, which includes
the Navy and Marine Corps, receives $91.7 billion (37 percent) and
the Army receives $70.6 billion (28.5 percent).
The budget includes a planned 3.7 percent pay raise. It fully funds
production of 10 F-22 fighter aircraft and 12 new C-17 strategic
airlifters.
Expeditionary Aerospace Force on Track
The Air Force is doing well in its transition to the Expeditionary
Aerospace Force concept, according to the commander of Air Combat
Command.
The first two Aerospace Expeditionary Force rotations have gone
well, said ACC chief Gen. Ralph E. Eberhart on Jan. 12. AEFs No.
3 and 4 are on track, as well.
"There are no showstoppers as far as I can see," said
Eberhart. "We identified the players in AEFs 3 and 4 early,
which provided the advance notification of their deployment just
as planned."
So far, only aircrews and maintainers have deployed as scheduled
AEF teams. The next step involves sending support forces as scheduled
teams, as opposed to individual taskings.
AEFs 5 and 6 in April should be aligned as such total force packages.
"We train as a team, so we should fight as a team," said
Eberhart. "Being scheduled for your AEF in advance allows units
from different bases to coordinate with each other and to all train
to the same task, optimizing the team concept once in theater."
USAF Falls Short on Recruiting
The Air Force has traditionally not had much trouble in drawing
recruits. The continued strong economy has changed that-as shown
by the fact that the service missed its last quarterly recruiting
goal by nearly 15 percent.
Fiscal 2000's first quarter, which ended Dec. 31, saw the Air Force
taking in 6,466 new people--1,097 personnel short of its 7,563 goal.
Meanwhile, the other services made or exceeded their first-quarter
2000 goals.
In Fiscal 1999, Air Force recruiters brought in 32,068 new airmen.
Though it was the highest one-year number since 1992, the result
fell short of the goal by 1,732 troops. It marked only the ninth
time in 44 years of record keeping that the Air Force had not met
its annual recruiting target.
Cohen Approves Gay-Related Training
Plans
Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen announced Feb. 1 that he
had received and approved each of the military services' training
plans updated to highlight the department's policies on homosexual
conduct.
The updated plans incorporate the guidelines for investigating
threats against or harassment of service members based on perceived
or alleged homosexuality.
"I am very pleased with the effort that went into updating
the services' training materials," said Cohen. "These
plans make it very clear to recruits, service members, and to law
enforcement personnel, commanders, judge advocates, and investigators
that are charged with implementing the policy, that there is no
room for harassment or threats in the military."
Missile Defense Test Fails
The Pentagon's effort to develop a National Missile Defense system
suffered a setback Jan. 18 when a prototype interceptor warhead
failed to hit a simulated incoming missile in a crucial, long-awaited
test.
The system seemed to be working as designed until the final six
seconds of the demonstration, said Pentagon officials. The 55-inch-long
interceptor, fired from Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands,
appeared on target until an infrared sensor failed to steer it in
for the kill.
The dummy warhead--launched from Vandenberg AFB, Calif.--fell harmlessly
into the ocean.
Using a postal analogy, a senior military official said that satellite
sensors provided the state of the target, the early warning radar
provided the ZIP code, while the X band radar got the interceptor
to the street address.
"What we failed to do is ring the doorbell," said the
official in a briefing for reporters.
The failure could further complicate National Missile Defense politics.
Later this year President Clinton is scheduled to decide whether
to go ahead and deploy an NMD system. NMD proponents are now urging
a delay in this decision-making process, saying it is a decision
best left to the next presidential administration.
All candidates for the Republican Presidential nomination are in
favor of NMD deployment.
On the Democratic side, Vice President Al Gore has conditioned
his support of such a shield on a favorable outcome of talks with
Russia to amend the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. Bill Bradley
is the most skeptical major candidate, saying that the technology
remains unproven and that NMD deployment could have adverse diplomatic
consequences.
Another interceptor test is scheduled for late spring. The Pentagon
will present its determination of NMD feasibility shortly thereafter.
White House Offers Cyberspace Battle
Plan
On Jan. 7 the Clinton Administration proposed a comprehensive plan
to protect America's vital computer systems from hackers, viruses,
and other attacks.
The plan asks Congress to increase federal spending for computer
security and research by $280 million, to $2.3 billion, next year.
Among the plan's highlights:
- An ROTC-like program that will pay for advanced computer study
for students in exchange for federal service afterward.
- Design of a Federal Intrusion Detection Network as a sort of
cyberspace burglar alarm for the whole government.
- A 35 percent increase in computer security research and development
for the Fiscal 2001 budget.
"It's really important ... that we produce, in partnership
with the private sector ... new technologies that can be rapidly
put into the information infrastructure to begin to provide the
kinds of protections that we're here to talk about," said White
House Chief of Staff John D. Podesta in a Jan. 7 briefing.
World Ready, or Not?
USAF
wants to update its image in an effort to spur recruiting
and retention and more accurately reflect its new role as
an Expeditionary Aerospace Force.
That may mean coming up with a new slogan
and new logo to replace the old "Hap" Arnold wings
and star, among other things.
The Air Force in the early 1990s had a distinctive
expression of purpose-"Global Reach, Global Power."
It came from a white paper of the same title published in
1990. It is sometimes stated that USAF's slogan is "Aim
High," but that was actually a promotional phrase used
in recruiting advertising.
Similar confusion attends the Air Force symbol.
"Many people believe the Hap Arnold emblem
(see below) is the official Air Force symbol, but it isn't,"
said Col. Ron Rand, Air Force director of public affairs.
"We don't have an official symbol and never have had
one. With the transition to the EAF and a new millennium,
our leadership decided the timing is right to modernize our
identity and give us an official symbol which will preserve
the heritage of the Arnold wings."
Visual representations of the force vary even
from base to base, unit to unit, and command to command. Basic
symbols such as base welcome signs have little consistency.
"Unless you have really good eyes and
can read the US Air Force tape on someone's battle dress uniform,
you may not know what service he or she represents,"
said Rand. "As for our aircraft, which are seen by millions
of people, the tail markings tend to represent the wing and
the command."
Air Force leaders committed about $800,000
to survey the general public and their own personnel about
attitudes toward the service and have those results interpreted
by a private corporate identity firm, Siegel & Gale.
Siegel & Gale has never worked with the
military, but its list of clients is long and impressive,
said officials. It includes HarleyDavidson, Kodak, ESPN,
Xerox, and the Girl Scouts of America.
Survey input came from 10,000 people. About
three-quarters of them had some connection to the service.
The others were from the general public.
Four positive themes emerged from the research:
individual achievement, intelligence and technology, core
values, and mission.
Siegel & Gale recommended making a core
theme out of the service's vital mission, about which enlisted
person and officer alike felt the most passionate. The other
themes would support that focus.
"We want to ensure our core identity
is part of our culture and is understood by our own people
and the citizens we serve," said Gen. Michael E. Ryan,
Chief of Staff.
The research found that Air Force personnel
felt allegiance to their unit and their job, more so than
being part of one big organization.
Based on its research, Siegel & Gale "concluded
the Air Force is a world-class, mission-ready organization,"
according to USAF, thus the firm proposed the slogan of "World
Ready."
It also proposed a logo (see above)-a more
streamlined version of the Arnold emblem. Both were presented
to USAF leaders in November. The verdict: More work on the
theme is needed; the logo might pass.
"There are no final decisions on any
of this yet," stated Rand. "When we reach a final
decision on our identity, we're going to try it on for awhile
as we develop a plan to roll it out with minimal disruption
and cost," he added.
It would take months, if not years, before
aircraft markings and entrance signs all resemble each other.
"We're trying to encapsulate the essence
of what it means to be in the Air Force," said Air Force
Secretary F. Whitten Peters. "The Air Force is a wonderful
organization. It offers extraordinary opportunities beyond
the monetary and the educational benefits that we have been
using in recruiting." |
Faster Than a Speeding Falcon
Gen. Michael E. Ryan, Air Force Chief of Staff, tried to catch
an F-22 on Jan. 11. Flying chase in an F-16 during a Raptor test
mission at Edwards AFB, Calif., Ryan had a good chance to see the
nation's newest air superiority fighter-from behind.
The F-16 was "flat out at Mach 1.6," said Ryan, but the
F-22 "walked away from us."
"I'm really impressed with the airplane," said Ryan following
a two-day visit to Edwards for updates on 21st century weapons systems.
Whether the F-22 receives all the testing it needs is another question.
A reduction in flight test hours caused by the cost cap for the
airplane's engineering and manufacturing development phase has been
criticized by the Pentagon's testing chief, Philip E. Coyle III.
"I'm not concerned about that [the level of testing],"
Defense Secretary William S. Cohen told the Defense Writers Group
Jan. 28. "I talked to General Ryan about this, and he is still
pretty excited about the tests to date."
The F-22 surpassed the 500-hour flight test milestone in late December
during the test program's 225th sortie. As of that date, the F-22
had completed more than 11 percent of its flight-test requirement.
Pentagon Raises Housing Allowances
Defense Secretary Cohen announced Jan. 6 that his new defense budget
contained a $160 million increase in housing allowances for troops
living off base.
Within five years, said the Pentagon chief, the armed services
will provide cost-free off-base housing, at a charge to the Pentagon
of $3 billion more.
To do that, the Pentagon plans to press for a change to the current
Congressional statute that limits monthly housing allowance payments
to no more than 85 percent of the average local cost for housing.
Service members pay the shortfall--about 15 percent-out of their
own pocket.
The move is intended to encourage troops to re-enlist rather than
flee the services for civilian jobs and to help attract new recruits.
"There's no reason in the world why you should have a mandated
15 percent out of your pocket if you happen to be living off base
because you don't have adequate housing on base," said Cohen
when he announced the increases in an address to troops at Camp
Pendleton, Calif.
The Pentagon said that, last year, service members living off base
were stuck with paying an average of 18.8 percent of their rent.
With the increase in allowances, that will be reduced to 15 percent
or less.
"Good housing is a top priority for the department and a crucial
component of quality of life," Cohen said.
More than half of the military live off base, a senior official
said.
The military is also trying to improve the housing on military
installations across the country. Some 200,000 of the 300,000 housing
units on those bases are substandard and in need of repair or replacement.
Pentagon Approves More C-130Js
The Department of Defense has decided to buy 24 C-130J cargo airplanes
through the year 2005, reported the Wall Street Journal Jan. 10.
The move comes after the Pentagon comptroller recommended killing
the program and came as a bit of good news for the C-130J's manufacturer,
Lockheed Martin.
Deputy Defense Secretary John J. Hamre said DoD is trying to avoid
having to pay for the reopening of the C-130 production line in
future years. Restarting the C-130 line would cost about $600 million,
according to Pentagon estimates.
Under the new plan, the Pentagon will buy four C-130Js a year in
2001, 2002, and 2003. Twelve more will be penciled into the 2004
and 2005 budgets.
The decision will provide Lockheed an extra $300 million infusion
in 2001 and ensure the future of a production line in which the
company has sunk some $1 billion.
CSIS Study Finds Disgruntled
Troops
The most sweeping examination of the military's
self-image in years finds that many soldiers, sailors, airmen,
and Marines feel they do not have a reasonable lifestyle.
Service personnel feel overworked, underpaid,
unconfident about their leaders, and unsure they have the
resources to do their job. They deploy too often, for too
long. Peacekeeping operations are eroding a focus on warfighting.
"America's military is facing potentially
serious rifts in the fabric of its culture, with attending
damage to future operational effectiveness," concludes
the Center for Strategic and International Studies report
"American Military Culture in the 21st Century."
On the positive side, US military personnel
are still far better off than they were during the dark days
of the Vietnam War. Men and women in uniform continue to share
a strong bond of commitment to duty.
The services have tried to come to grips with
the mismatch between their resources and their missions for
years. That is why the Air Force established the Expeditionary
Aerospace Force and why the Navy tries to keep sailors at
sea for no more than six months at one time.
But the survey's findings about trust in senior
leaders may come as a shock to the military's top levels.
Only slightly more than one-third of respondents agreed with
the statement "when my service's senior leaders say something,
you can believe it is true."
Survey leaders said that their work, plus
anecdotal evidence, revealed striking differences in the quality
of military organizational climates.
"Although one unit or ship had a strong
sense of mission, teamwork, mutual trust, and open communication,
another at the same location, with virtually identical missions
and resources, had a far different climate.
"The quality of local leadership almost
certainly explains those measurable differences," said
the report. |
Major Faces Charges Over Anthrax
Shots
On Jan. 14, Maj. Sonnie G. Bates of the 436th Airlift Wing, Dover
AFB, Del., was charged with disobeying a lawful order for refusing
to take the Defense Department's anthrax vaccinations.
Bates, who had offered to resign last fall, waived his right to
an Article 32 hearing, which is similar to a civilian grand jury,
on Feb. 2. His case could be dismissed or referred to special or
general court-martial. He is among the highest-ranking officers
to come in conflict with the Air Force over the anthrax vaccination
program.
In an appearance before a Congressional committee last October,
Bates said the vaccine has "the appearance of being experimental"
and feared for his health if forced to take the shots. He became
concerned, he said, after seeing that a dozen people in his squadron
have "unusual or disabling illnesses that did not exist prior
to the anthrax vaccine."
In addition, Bates is the father of an autistic child.
"[He] cannot, in all good conscience, risk being debilitated
by a risky vaccine and be left unable to function as a caregiver
for his son and provider for his family," wrote House Government
Reform Committee Chairman Rep. Dan Burton (RInd.) in a letter
sent to Defense Secretary William Cohen in mid-January.
At least 200 military personnel have refused to take the anthrax
vaccination shots, according to military officials.
Furthermore, claims are being made that the services are inconsistent
in handling personnel who refuse to take the anthrax shots. Some
reserve officer and enlisted personnel have quit. Some active enlisted
personnel have received prison sentences, had to forfeit pay, or
been given dishonorable discharges. Reportedly, at least one Navy
officer was allowed to resign honorably.
The Defense Department maintains that the vaccine is safe and effective.
It is licensed by the Food and Drug Administration and is used in
private industry, officials note.
Military Procurement To Hit $60
Billion
The Clinton Administration's proposed Fiscal 2001 defense budget
contains about $60 billion for procurement, according to department
spokesman Kenneth H. Bacon.
The Joint Chiefs had set the $60 billion figure as a hoped-for
goal several years ago.
"I believe, we will hit it this year or at least be within
a whisper," Bacon said Jan. 11.
The Fiscal 2000 procurement spending request was $53 billion. Lawmakers
subsequently tacked on items totaling a further $1.4 billion.
However, Congress also imposed an across-the-board 0.38 percent
cut in Fiscal 2000 federal spending. Pentagon personnel programs
were exempt, but other programs were cut. Bacon called them "surgical
cuts." And, in fact, important programs such as the F-22 generally
fared well in this year's procurement budget, according to officials.
"Our top-priority programs got no or very small cuts,"
said Bacon. Some lower-priority programs took cuts of a higher percentage,
some 5 percent or even up to 10 percent.
UN Prosecutor: No Need for Kosovo
Probe
Chief United Nations war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte said
Feb. 1 that she has seen no evidence to warrant an investigation
of whether NATO's Kosovo bombing campaign violated international
treaties on the conduct of war.
"Our work is not done but what we can say is that up until
now we have no indications that we should open an inquiry,"
she said after meeting with British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook
in London.
A tribunal investigation was prompted by Yugoslavia, some Western
law professors, and Russian lawmakers who said the NATO bombing
killed scores of civilians. Its preliminary report surfaced in late
December when Del Ponte told a British newspaper she was prepared
to seek indictments, if warranted.
The United States rejected the notion out of hand, pointing out
that NATO went to great lengths to spare civilians. (See "Aerospace
World: UN Tribunal Drops Investigations of NATO for War Crimes,"
February, p. 12.)
Cost of NMD System on the Rise
Cost estimates for an initial National Missile Defense system are
about to go up-estimates range from 20 to 50 percent-according to
Pentagon officials.
The Defense Department now figures that the first installment of
NMD would cost more than its previous estimate of $10.5 billion,
projected just last year.
Cost overruns are not the reason. Instead, DoD has quietly decided
that NMD, if deployed, needs to feature 100 interceptor rockets
instead of 20. This more robust system should theoretically be able
to handle 20 incoming warheads by 2005 or 2006.
These interceptors would all be based in Alaska, DoD Undersecretary
of Defense for Policy Walter B. Slocombe said in Congressional testimony,
and would form an initial NMD architecture "optimized"
to defeat "the most immediate threat, that from North Korea."
Slocombe noted that the Pentagon has also begun planning for a
longer-term goal that would field even more interceptors to handle
more "complex penetration" systems.
A potential deployment site in North Dakota is also still under
review.
Chief of Staff Annual Survey
The 1999 Air Force Chief of Staff survey revealed
that the overwhelming majority of service members are satisfied
with their jobs and unit performance but remain dissatisfied
with pay, operations tempo, and health care.
The survey measures the Air Force's organizational
climate and quality of life. Results were presented to Gen.
Michael E. Ryan, the Air Force Chief of Staff, on Jan. 21.
"I'm satisfied with the process and the
initial review of the data," said Ryan. "It appears
we've made progress in many areas, but we still have work
to do."
The poll reported high measures of general
satisfaction. Ninety percent of respondents said they were
satisfied with their jobs, for instance. Other key measures
such as satisfaction with the service's core values and with
training and development, all came in between 80 to 84 percent
positive levels.
Quality-of-life issues did not always show
such high ratings. Only 42 percent of enlisted families and
45 percent of officer families were happy with the health
care they receive.
Housing came in for a better review than health
care, gaining a 71 percent satisfaction rating from married
enlisted personnel and 83 percent positive rating from married
officers.
The sense of community at Air Force bases
was important to 82 percent of officers and 70 percent of
enlisted personnel. Sixty-three percent of enlisted and 77
percent of officers judged the quality of life at duty stations
to be good.
As for career intentions, 61 percent of officers
and 68 percent of enlisted personnel said they plan to make
a career in the service. Between 63 percent and 76 percent
of first- and second-term airmen and company grade officers
said a retirement plan where everyone received 50 percent
of their base pay would increase the likelihood of their serving
for 20 years.
Unsurprisingly, the number of hours worked
and number of days on Temporary Duty continues its slow upward
climb. Officers who reported TDYs spend an average of 62 days
per year at such temporary work and work a 55-hour week. In
1996, the comparable numbers were 50 days TDY and a 51-hour
week. Enlisted personnel who had TDYs reported 68 TDY days,
up from 46 in 1996, and a 51-hour work week, up from 46 four
years ago. |
Cohen Seeks New Round of Base
Closings
Defense Secretary William Cohen disclosed that the Clinton Administration
will try to close more military bases, even in an election year.
"Yes, I do have a proposal for two more rounds [of base closings],
roughly in 2003, 2005," Cohen said Jan. 28, only days before
the public unveiling of the new defense budget. "I've allocated
money in the [Fiscal 2001] budget for that. ... This is an issue
that [members of Congress] will have to wrestle with in the coming
year."
Cohen said he has talked with Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.), the Senate
majority leader, about working with Congress to find a way to close
more military sites. "He and I are going to try to get together
and see if we can come up with some kind of a formulation that might
enjoy some support," Cohen said.
Cohen and his predecessor, William J. Perry, have tried without
success many times to close more bases.
"Those members on the [Congressional defense] committees that
have jurisdiction over this will have choice," said Cohen.
"They can say they can continue to carry the excess infrastructure
and see either readiness accounts, or [operations and maintenance]
accounts, or procurement accounts suffer, or be forced to raise
the topline even further to carry the excess infrastructure.
"But I will continue to point out, these are the choices.
There's a big wave coming in terms of what we have to procure, and
the way to help pay for that is to eliminate excess overhead."
2000 To See New Focus on Recruiting,
Retention
Undersecretary of the Air Force Carol A. DiBattiste
swore in the first two Air Force recruits of 2000 on Jan.
3 at the Baltimore Military Entrance Processing Station.
The trainees were the first of what service
leaders hope will be a flood of new personnel this year to
help the Air Force pull out of its continuing retention tailspin.
(See "USAF Falls Short on Recruiting," p. 10.)
"Today was a very special day,"
said DiBattiste. "We not only put the first two people
into the United States Air Force for the new millennium but
also initiated the Air Force's new focus on recruiting and
retention for the year 2000."
Ryan Watson, 22, of Stevensville, Md., chose
an Air Force career in the security forces as a step toward
his ultimate goal: a career in federal law enforcement.
Jason Kaun, 22, of White Hall, Md., left college
after two and one-half years to pursue a career in F-15 avionics.
"I really wasn't going anywhere--dead-end
jobs and partying--and wanted to do something different,"
he said. "My brother is in the Air Force, and after talking
to him about the benefits and opportunities I made up my mind."
One of the most visible efforts to boost Air
Force recruiting is a new television ad campaign that began
this month.
"Up until this year, never in its history
has the Air Force paid for television advertising," said
Maj. Gen. Susan L. Pamerleau, director of personnel force
management. "But senior leadership made the decision
that we need to have a greater impact across the nation."
In addition, a new interactive road show,
"The Air Force Experience," will tour 30 major cities
by September. The road show, contained in two customized 18-wheel
trucks, features videos, computer kiosks, a fleet of customized
simulators, and an F-16 jet.
Other initiatives developed at a recent recruiting
summit include more incentives for recruiters, increased recruiter
training, and bigger bonuses in hard-to-fill job areas.
Undersecretary DiBattiste has long urged all
Air Force members to promote their jobs and way of life.
"I challenge everyone to recruit at least
one person for our Air Force this year," she said.
The Air Force remains something of a novice
in the recruitment field, compared to the other services.
That is because the Army and Navy have always had to fight
harder to get the number of new people they need.
The Navy, for instance, has five times as
many recruiters as the Air Force does. The Army's top signing
bonus is $20,000, as opposed to $12,000 in the Air Force.
|
Missile Help for North Korea?
China is still providing North Korea with materials for its long-range
missile program, according to reports in The Washington Times.
Missile-related goods were shipped via a Hong Kong company as recently
as late December, stated the Times.
Such aid would be in direct contravention to assurances made by
Chinese officials that they would tighten exports of missile technology
covered by the 29-nation Missile Technology Control Regime.
Recent US intelligence reports claim that China has provided Pyongyang
with fiber-optic gyroscopes, specialty steel, and accelerometers,
among other items.
Last year, Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright said that the
Administration takes such reports "seriously" and that
"we have raised our concerns with China, and we will continue
to do so."
Pentagon Plays Down Spy Satellite
Problem
Y2Krelated problems in some of the nation's most sensitive
spy satellites did not leave the United States blind at crucial
times during the New Year's Eve weekend, claim Pentagon officials.
Some news reports have said that the flow of data from as many
as five imagery satellites was disrupted on Dec. 31. After a total
outage of a few hours, the amount of incoming imagery was sharply
curtailed until Monday, Jan. 3, according to some reports.
"It was a significant event, but fortunately it had insignificant
consequences. ... It was judged to have no operational significance,
even though it was not a failure we wanted to have," said Deputy
Secretary of Defense John J. Hamre on Jan. 4.
Other news reports hold that non-Y2K related computer problems
caused a halt in transmission of satellite imagery to two key commands--US
Pacific Command in Honolulu and US Central Command in Tampa, Fla.--for
12 hours in late December.
ANG Pilot Dies in Crash
An Idaho Air National Guard pilot, Maj. Mark Moynihan, 33, of Boise,
was killed Jan. 20 when his A-10 Thunderbolt II attack aircraft
crashed northwest of Boise, Idaho, on a training mission.
His aircraft crashed in a field near Star, Idaho, and broke into
pieces. No one else was injured.
Moynihan, a full-time pilot for the 190th Fighter Squadron, had
been serving recently as a flight scheduler and instructor pilot
for the 124th Wing, located at Boise Air Terminal, Idaho. He served
on active duty as an A-10 pilot for nearly 10 years before joining
the Guard in 1999.
Moynihan was an A-10 demonstration pilot for the northwest region
and had more than 2,000 hours of flight time in the aircraft. He
was also one of 14 Idaho ANG pilots who flew combat missions over
Kosovo last year.
A search and rescue team, along with a safety team comprising members
from the 124th Wing and 366th Wing at Mountain Home AFB, Idaho,
scoured the accident site.
USAF opened an investigation into the cause of the crash.
For Tricare, High-Level
Criticism
"Health care has been a consistent complaint
that we are now trying to address in a fairly comprehensive
way. Tricare has been plagued with problems in terms of the
contracting. We need to streamline it to make it as universal
in application as possible in the sense that as you go from
one area, [then] you go into a new area, you have to start
the process all over again, which is very complicated. We're
trying to make it as seamless as possible so when you sign
up you can pretty much expect the same kind of benefits wherever
you go, as opposed to having different area arrangements in
terms of a contract. So we're going to try to streamline that
to make it more seamless. ...
"Then we're also looking into how we
can make the Tricare Prime more equitable. Here we propose,
one of the benefits, we have proposed to eliminate co-pay
for those who are in the Tricare Prime program so that when
they have to go off base for treatment they don't have to
come up with the co-pay out of their pocket. That will also
be a major improvement."
-Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen, remarks
to the Defense Writers Group in Washington, Jan. 28.
"This year, we've got to address health
care. The bottom line is that our service members and their
families must be able to count on their health care system.
Our fighting men and women on the front lines of freedom need
to know that their families are being taken care of."
"While they are doing their job taking
care of the nation's defense, they expect us to provide an
effective, user-friendly health care system." ...
"Every time I talk to them [a beneficiary],
one of their most frequent complaints is ... with the process
it takes to finally get the care they need." ...
"As many of you know, Tricare requires
that members re-enroll every time they change regions, something
that occurs frequently as our service members and their families
must pick up and move every two to three years. This adds
to their stress and frustration, and oftentimes, their workload."
...
"We ask our service members to be ready
to serve any time, anywhere. They expect no less from their
health care system. If a service member can't count on Tricare
when it's needed, then when the time comes to re-enlist, the
answer might just be no. In short, Tricare can't be just an
insurance agency; it must be much more." ...
"For those [in the audience] who are
military health care members, try not wearing your uniform
one day-you've got my permission--and walk into the Tricare
offices you're responsible for to see how you're treated.
If you find things not to your liking, fix them. Remember,
if it's hard for you, imagine what it's like for the young,
inexperienced mother of two whose husband is deployed to Bosnia
or Kosovo or any of the other garden spots our troops are
deployed to."
-Gen. Henry H. Shelton, JCS Chairman, in Jan.
31 remarks to the annual Tricare Conference in Washington.
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The
Showdown at Military Pay Gap
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| From
"Our GIs Earn Enough," by Cindy Williams, in the
Jan. 12 Washington Post. Williams, a senior research fellow
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was assistant
director for national security in the Congressional Budget
Office, 1994-97.
"This month [January], every member of
the US military is getting a 4.8 percent pay raise. ... Proponents
of additional hefty raises argue that, even after this month's
raise, the military suffers a 13 percent 'pay gap' relative
to the private sector. But in fact there is no pay gap worthy
of the name. ... "Wage data show that our troops typically
earn more money than 75 percent of civilians with similar
levels of education and experience.
"[A]fter four months in the Army, an
18-year-old private earns about $21,000 a year in pay and
allowances. In addition, he or she gets a tax advantage worth
about $800, because some of the allowances are not taxed.
That's not bad for a person entering the work force with a
high school diploma. By way of comparison, an automotive mechanic
starting out with a diploma from a strong vocational high
school might earn $14,000 a year. ... At the higher end of
enlisted service, a master sergeant with 20 years in the Marine
Corps typically earns more than $50,000 a year-better than
a senior municipal firefighter or a police officer in a supervisory
position and comparable to a chief engineer in a medium-sized
broadcast market.
"Among the officers, a 22-year-old fresh
out of college earns about $34,000 a year as an ensign in
the Navy-about the same as the average starting pay of an
accountant, mathematician, or a geologist with a bachelor's
degree. A colonel with 26 years makes more than $108,000.
"In addition to these basic salaries,
there are cash bonuses for officers and enlisted personnel
with special skills. There are also fringe benefits: four
weeks of paid vacation, comprehensive health care, discount
groceries, tuition assistance during military service, and
as much as $50,000 for college afterward. Enlistment and re-enlistment
bonuses can run to $20,000 and more. ...
"Proponents of higher pay also note that
military people put up with hardships such as long hours and
family separations. Yet many civilian occupations make similar
demands, and firefighters, police, and emergency medical personnel,
like many in the military, risk their lives on the job.
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XX |
Lt.
Gen. Michael A. Nelson, USAF (Ret.), president of The Retired
Officers Association, Jan. 21 statement.
"After years of pay caps and cuts in
other benefits caused a retention crisis in the late 1970s,
'reasonable comparability' was restored with two double-digit
raises in 1981 and 1982 that made up the cumulative military
pay raise gap since the start of the all-volunteer force [in
1973].
"But the lesson of the 70s wasn't learned
very well. Over the next 17 years, military raises matched
private sector pay growth in three years, were capped below
the [Employment Cost Index] in 12 [years], and fractionally
exceeded the ECI in two years. With the cumulative gap having
grown to 13.5 percent in 1999 and masses of service members
voting with their feet, Congress approved a series of annual
raises that will be one-half of a percentage point per year
above the ECI through 2006. Not overly generous, but a very
welcome change for the troops after years of short shrift.
...
"Her [Williams's] comparisons of pay
levels also ignore other key factors. ... She fails to acknowledge
how service members are asked to assume responsibility for
vastly expensive resources and team leadership--sometimes
with staggering life-or-death decision-making responsibilities--at
an early age.
"Most important, Ms. Williams's discussion
inadequately addresses the fundamental issue the military
pay and benefits package must seek to offset--the extraordinary
demands and sacrifices inherent in a career of uniformed service.
She dismisses this by citing other civilian occupations that
may entail relocation or danger. But such comparisons are
superficial at best; there is no legitimate comparison with
the working conditions of any private sector job.
"Service members work long hours ...
without any overtime. Their business trips are to places like
Bosnia and Iraq and Somalia where they live in tents and people
shoot at them. They are subject to extended family separations,
forced relocations every few years that disrupt spousal careers
and children's education, and sacrifice personal freedoms
(such as saying "no" to your boss without going
to jail or being able to quit whenever you want) that other
Americans take for granted. ...
"Roughly 95 percent are forced out of
service in their 40s and must start second careers in midlife-often
at the bottom, competing with youngsters who don't have children
in college and are willing to work for less. ...
"Pay raise comparability isn't some esoteric
analytical concept; it's a simple matter of fairness."
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News Notes
- On Jan. 10, Secretary of Defense William Cohen announced that
his second-in-command, Deputy Secretary of Defense John J. Hamre,
will step down March 31 to become president and chief executive
officer of the Center for Strategic and International Studies
in Washington, D.C. Rudy de Leon, undersecretary of defense for
personnel and readiness, has been nominated to be Hamre's replacement.
- China has agreed to resume high-level military contacts with
the United States. Beijing suspended such meetings last May in
anger after the US accidentally bombed the Chinese Embassy in
Belgrade during Operation Allied Force. Lt. Gen. Xiong Guangkai,
deputy chief of staff of the People's Liberation Army, arrived
in Washington in late January for two days of talks.
- Lockheed announced Jan. 4 that it has built the 10th midfuselage
for the F-22 in record time. The midfuselage was completed in
4 percent fewer manufacturing days than its immediate predecessor
on the Lockheed Martin Tactical Aircraft Systems assembly line
in Fort Worth, Texas.
- Russia and China are jointly developing an air-to-air missile
fast enough to catch any jet fighter in the world, claims British
Aerospace, a defense contractor in competition against Raytheon
to provide advanced air-to-air missiles for the Eurofighter. The
London Daily Telegraph reported the BAe claim, which further said
that the new weapon, based on the Russian AA-12 Adder, has a ramjet
propulsion system that provides thrust for up to a minute, as
opposed to the six seconds of thrust featured on more conventional
missiles.
- On Christmas Eve an Air Force Special Operations Command MC-130P
from Andersen AFB, Guam, helped in the rescue of a 24-foot skiff
that had been adrift in the waters southeast of Guam for a week.
The boat, which had run out of fuel, carried 10 people.
- The June 19 midair collision of two F-15s near Nellis AFB, Nev.,
was caused when one of the pilots lost track of the other's position
during a training exercise, according to a newly released accident
report. The pilots-both from Nellis's 422nd Test and Evaluation
Squadron-ejected and sustained minor injuries in the accident.
- Mechanical and human factors caused the crash of a Predator
Unmanned Aerial Vehicle near Tuzla AB, Bosnia, on April 18, according
to an accident report. The aircraft's two ground-based pilots
"became too focused on flying the Predator in icing and weather
conditions they had rarely encountered," said the report.
The UAV subsequently lost engine power on its descent into Tuzla.
- The Fisher House Foundation, Inc., has won Air Force approval
to build its 27th Fisher House, which will be located at Lackland
AFB, Texas. Fisher Houses have provided a home away from home
for families of patients receiving care at major military and
VA medical centers since 1990.
- One of the most far-flung US military sites has been shutdown
because it is outmoded. The joint AustralianUS Nurrungar
missile detection facility had monitored missile launches for
29 years, but its job is now done better by satellites.
- Maj. Tod Fingal, 62nd Fighter Squadron, Luke AFB, Ariz., was
recently awarded the Lt. Col. Anthony C. Shine Award for fighter
pilot proficiency and professionalism. The award is in memory
of Shine, who was killed while flying an A-7D Corsair II in the
Vietnam War 27 years ago.
- The July 1 fatal crash of an F-16C from the 482nd Fighter Wing
(AFRC), Homestead ARB, Fla., was likely caused by a bird strike
on the canopy, according to a new accident report. Evidence indicates
that the bird strike crushed the canopy inward into Maj. Samuel
D'Angelo III, rendering him incapable of controlling the aircraft.
(See "Aerospace World: Helo, Fighter Crashes Claim Lives,"
August 1999, p. 15.)
- The Navy restored its ties with the Tailhook Association on
Jan. 19, according to The New York Times, some eight years after
sexual assaults and drunken debauchery at its annual convention
tarnished the reputation of naval aviation. In announcing the
resumption of a relationship, Navy Secretary Richard Danzig said
the association's officers had assured him that the group had
changed and would never repeat its infamous behavior.
- Maj. Barry Mines has been named Air Force engineer of the year
by the National Society of Professional Engineers. Mines is chief
of the pavements evaluation section for the Air Force Civil Engineer
Support Agency, Tyndall AFB, Fla.
- The National Guard has an official song. "I Guard America,"
written by country singer and songwriter James Rogers, was recently
endorsed by Guard leaders. Rogers, now a featured performer at
the Dollywood entertainment park in Pigeon Forge, Tenn., was a
Tennessee Army National Guardsman in the 1970s.
- Four sections of the Berlin Wall went on display at the US Air
Force Museum, WrightPatterson AFB, Ohio, on Jan. 12. The
museum also placed a small Trabant German car on exhibit. The
Trabant was the primary-indeed, virtually the only-vehicle available
to most citizens of the former East Germany.
- On Jan. 12, Northrop Grumman announced that the vertical-takeoff-and-landing
UAV it is developing for the Navy has completed its first fully
autonomous flight. Program requirements call for a craft that
can carry a 200-pound payload while taking off vertically, flying
110 nautical miles, loitering for three hours at up to 20,000
feet, and returning-all while withstanding a 25-knot wind from
any direction.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
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