In the two years since
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the Air Forces Total Force concept
has been sternly tested by a series of worldwide demands. The force has not only
survived but prospered, and has proved invaluable. Officials say the integration
of active duty, Air National Guard, and Air Force Reserve Command forces made
possible Operations Noble Eagle, Enduring Freedom, and Iraqi Freedom.
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| The Total Force (and some friends) go into action
in April in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Pictured in the middle of the trio of aircraft
at the top is a South Carolina Air National Guard
F-16CJ, assigned to the 379th Air Expeditionary
Wing. It was part of a coalition package that included
not only active duty Air Force KC-135, F-15E, F-16,
and F-117 aircraft, but also British GR4 Tornado
and Australian F/A-18 fighters. |
With so much of the Air Forces
combat power placed in the reserve components, the
nation simply could not have gone to war the way it
didon short notice
and with unexpected demandswithout the Guard and Reserve contributions. The Total Force arrangement is not perfect, however.
USAF officials feel force structure, staffing, and
mission adjustments are needed, primarily at the
margins.
They do not expect to make a drastic overhaul of
a system generally regarded as the Defense Departments
best example of effective active-reserve integration.
Thomas F. Hall, assistant secretary of defense for
reserve affairs, noted in April that the Air
Force has always been a model and a leader with the
way it uses its Guard and Reserve.
The Air Forces Total Force concept of operations
has enabled the service to make the most of the Guard
and Reserve. Reserve component forces have a hand
in nearly every mission, and, when the requirements have surged, the part-timers have
also surged to meet the challenge.
We are no longer a force held in reserve solely for possible war or contingency
actions, Lt. Gen. James E. Sherrard III, commander of Air Force Reserve
Command, told a Senate panel in May. We are at the tip of the spear.
For Operation Iraqi Freedom, AFRC forces, said Sherrard,
flew about 45 percent of the C-17 missions, 50 percent
of the C-5, and 90 percent of the C-141.
They also flew one-fourth of the air refueling sorties and nearly half of
the aeromedical
evacuations. The Air Guard flew 43 percent of Air Force fighter sorties and
86 percent of the refueling sorties.
The Guard and Reserve provide 25 percent of the aviation
assets in each of USAFs
10 rotating air and space expeditionary forces (AEFs).
When necessary, these ratios go even higher. ANG and
AFRC have more than 65 percent of the Air Forces
tactical airlifters, 60 percent of its aerial refueling,
38 percent of its fighters, 35 percent of its strategic airlifters, and 20
percent of its combat search and rescue capability.
Part-timers add the equivalent of 10000 full-time
personnel to the Total Force in a normal yearand
even more when units are called up to meet wartime
demands. By June 25, well after the end of major
combat operations in
Afghanistan and Iraq, more than 34,000 Guard and Reserve airmen remained
on active duty.
This heavy load has created concern that the part-time
force is being overused. There is ample anecdotal
evidence that some reservists have had enough of
the call-ups and that some employers are asking Guardsmen to reconsider their
military service. These incidents have not yet developed into large-scale
problems, officials report. The Guard is holding up well under
the demands and expects to maintain its traditional retention level of about
90 percent,
Lt. Gen. Daniel James III, ANG director, told Air Force Magazine.
Air Force leaders are aware of the implied contract
that Guardsmen and Reservists have with their communities
and families. Reservists signed up for occasional
weekend service plus two weeks of duty a year, except in times of national
need. To keep segments of the part-time force from becoming de facto full-time
airmen,
USAF leaders are looking for ways to prevent the same individuals from being
repeatedly mobilized.
One obvious solution is to shift high-demand reserve
capabilities to the active force. That would reduce
the mobilizations, but there is a downside.
Air Force
reservists are very good at what they do, and they would be difficult and
expensive to replace.
Creating a seamless Total Force, in which part-timers
are considered interchangeable with full-timers,
takes a commitment to training, modernization, and
readiness.
The Air Force has made this commitment. Moving more capability to the active
force to minimize reserve call-ups creates a full-time cost and offers a
debatable benefit.
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| Active and Reserve C-5 airlifters wait at Stewart
ANGB, N.Y., for their loads during Operation Iraqi
Freedom. Guard and Reserve air mobility units provided
a major portion of the forces for the air bridge
to Southwest Asia. |
Michael L. Dominguez, assistant Air Force secretary
for manpower and reserve affairs, identifies the
key problem. If you think we are going to be
in a big fight and not bring the part-time force
along, then you are talking about
a much more expensive Department of Defense, he said.
Staffing a Total Force
Some of the existing reserve component arrangements
have come under question by DODs leadership.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has questioned
whether the correct missions have been assigned to the active duty and reserve
components and whether it is appropriate to draw upon part-time forces every
time a conflict erupts. He wants to re-evaluate the mission areas, stating
in a July 9 memo that the balance of capabilities
... is not the best for the future.
Rumsfeld called for rebalancing the active and reserve
forces to more efficiently meet demands. In the memo,
he called for the Pentagons senior leadership
to devise plans to reduce the need for involuntary mobilizations, especially
during the first 15 days of combat operations. Rumsfelds guidance calls
for mobilized forces to be given meaningful work and work for which
alternative manpower is not readily available. Mobilized forces should
also be sent home as quickly as possible, he said. (See Washington
Watch, p.
11.)
Explaining the concern earlier this year, Air Force
Gen. Richard B. Myers, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, said DOD cant even do
some of the things ... day to day without calling up the reserves.
While the Army needs to mobilize large numbers of
Guardsmen and Reservists just to deploy an active duty
division
overseas, the Air Force does not have
that
same kind of problem, Dominguez said.
For the Air Force, said Dominguez, the question is, On
the margin, ... what size of an initial response do
you want? How quickly? And are you
prepared
to pay for it?
Moving missions to the active force makes them more expensive because they
become full-time capability. Leaving capabilities in the reserve components,
however,
means more mobilizations are required.
Rumsfelds memo directs the rebalancing effort
to specifically
address capabilities that reside exclusively or predominantly in the RC and
are in high
demand.
USAF officials have been looking at manpower priorities
since 9/11, attempting to find ways to meet increased
demands through more efficient use of human
capital. The ANGs James said that volunteers have helped ease
the repetitive
use burdenthe problem of some airmen being kept disproportionately
busy.
Large numbers of Guardsmen signing up for mobilization
mean fewer have to be called involuntarily.
At one point after 9/11, more than 6,000 Guardsmen
were voluntarily serving on active duty. By the middle
of this summer, more than 1,200 remained
in this status.
The Guard and Reserve are composed of volunteers,
as is the active forcea
fact that many people fail to recognize. While it is universally accepted
that DOD needs to be careful not to mobilize reservists unnecessarily,
mobilizations can in no reasonable way be called involuntary
conscription. Meeting with defense reporters in June, Pentagon
personnel chief David S.C. Chu pointed out that reservists
choose military service. Calling the
all-volunteer
force a triumph, Chu said, I am not sure I understand the distinction
between sending an active unit to do the nations business and sending
a reserve unit. ... They are all part of a volunteer force. It is all one
force.
Chu added, however, that DOD has tried to spread the
burden of deployments to Iraq. Some reserve units
had not been used in a long time. We deliberately,
in this mobilization, tried to share that burden better, Chu said.
The Air Force and DOD both have been studying possible
changes to maximize reserve component effectiveness.
Chu said the conclusions from these reviews
will be
reflected in the Fiscal 2005 budget request, due early next year.
Officials are keeping an eye on reserve recruitment
of prior-service personnel. The preferred harvest for
the ANG and AFRC, said Dominguez, is people
who are already skilled in the actives, as opposed to kids off the street
whom you have to train. Relying on this pool
of personnel is challenging because
we have a smaller active force, and it has been under Stop-Loss for a long
time, he
explained.
The Stop-Loss instituted for Operation Iraqi Freedom
ended in July, and officials said they saw no reason
to expect a mass exodus. Also encouraging
is the
fact that retention was solid when the Stop-Loss for Enduring Freedom was
lifted
in 2002.
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| TSgt. Wendell Witt, an
AFRC pararescueman from Oregon, waits at Baghdad
Airport for his
next mission.
Currently, the Guard and Reserve provide 20 percent
of USAFs combat search and rescue forces. |
Fear of Repetitive Overuse
Evaluating morale and job satisfaction across the
Total Force, however, can mask pressure points in specific
career fields that have indeed been
overused.
These
low-density, high-demand specialties cause concern because they are in
short supply, and, if their airmen get burned out and want
to leave military service, the problem would rapidly grow worse.
Our challenge is really the one of repetitive use, which is a different challenge
[from those] the other services face, Dominguez said. If we have
to keep pulling in part-timers on a repeated basis and dribble into a full-time
employment, well, that is going to be a problem.
For some specialties such as intelligence, combat
search and rescue, and pararescue, USAF is finding we
are a little thin, and the repetitive use or the extended
use is a challenge, Dominguez said. Well have to fix
that ... a number of different ways. You can shift capabilities between
Guard
and Reserve
and active.
You can expand the capabilities that you have, [or]
you can substitute capital for labor.
The Air Force is attempting to do all of these things.
Some CSAR units have transferred to the active force,
the number of Total Force security
personnel
is being increased,
and the service is looking hard at new technologies to reduce the number
of people needed for force protection.
Easing the strain on part-time units by transferring
missions to the active force is not always a good
solution. As you move things between active
and reserve status, you are going to create a set
of expenditure needs, Chu noted. You
are going to have to train people differently. Units are going to need
to change the equipment. And some of that will cost
money. So there is a resource
aspect
to this that has to be dealt with.
The Pennsylvania Air National Guards EC-130
Commando Solo wing is one place the Air Force must
solve both resource and repetitive use problems.
The six EC-130s used to jam enemy communications
and broadcast US messages are unique; they are the
only
assets of their kind. The Commando Solo
Guard unit
has been mobilized repeatedly since Operation Desert Storm.
Commando Solo is a troubling [case] because it is a really unique capability,
really important capability, Dominguez said.
The Air Force will probably need to expand
the capability at that unit, he said, but whether
it is grown in the active or reserve, ... a lot of
factors will go into that.
James said, You start looking at that tempo,
and you make a decision as a Total Force. The
question is whether the Commando Solo unit should be
different, not if it needs to be on active duty, he said. Does
it need to be an associate unit, a reverse associate unit, a blended
unit? These
are the ways we will approach our force structure rather than rushing
to put everything
on active duty.
USAF has also been at the forefront of organizing
unique basing and command arrangements. Through blended
and associate units that combine
active
and reserve forces, the
Air Force has always been out on edge in creative force structure
arrangements, Hall said.
Nontraditional arrangements, such as colocating active
and reserve airlift components, have been very
successful for the Air Force, Hall
added.
Officials tout the success of the 116th Air Control
Wing at Robins Air Force Base in Georgia as an example
of how scarce assets can
be maximized.
This
wing, which contains active duty and ANG personnel, maximizes the
availability of
high-demand E-8 Joint STARS aircraft by increasing the number of
people assigned to the system.
However, Dominguez said, Youve got to
have the right mission, the right systems, and the
right opportunity with [a] local population that can
support a
part-time workforce supporting the active duty. Blended and associate
wings are not one-size-fits-all cures for situations
like that of the Commando
Solo unit
in Pennsylvania.
It doesnt do you any good to increase the crew ratio on, say, a C-5, because
you cant keep it flying to use that [additional] crew, he added.
Officials say USAF will continue to look for innovative
ideas. Some bases, such as Fairchild AFB, Wash.,
have reserve and active units
colocated
and flying the
same types of aircraft. The service will look at locations like that
as possible candidates for new Total Force arrangements.
James suggested using reverse associate units,
ones in which active duty personnel are assigned to
ANG units. This will take advantage of the
operational infrastructure savings ... while broadening assignment
opportunities for
the active duty, he testified before the Senate appropriations defense
subcommittee.
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| A South Carolina ANG crew
chief on a flight line in Southwest Asia stands
ready
to taxi an F-16CJ.
USAFs reserve components provide 25 percent
of the airpower in each of the services 10
air and space expeditionary forces. |
Noble Eagle: A Guard Domain
More active duty participation could strengthen the
homeland air defense mission, which has been dominated
by the Guard. ANG leaders
told Congress
in May that
Guard forces are the backbone of Operation Noble Eagle,
for which Guard units fly about 75 percent of the combat air patrol
missions and 62
percent of the refueling sorties. By May, the Guard had executed
more than 29,000 ONE
sorties since Sept. 11, 2001.
Further, the Guard has maintained almost 100
percent of the alert sites, James
said. Officials note that, for the air defense mission, the Guard
has largely shifted from surge mode to sustaining mode.
The around-the-clock CAPs flown
after 9/11 have given way to greater reliance upon aircraft and bases
on alert.
At the current alert levels, Dominguez said Noble Eagle is a
sustainable mission, so long as Guard units continue to be supplemented
by active duty forces.
The Guard is ideally suited for the Noble Eagle mission
because of its geographic
dispersion, Dominguez said. A Guard pilot flying a CAP over
Salt Lake City, for example, can take two days off from an airline
job, fly the mission, and go
back to the airline job.
Therefore, officials feel there is no need to hand
the homeland air defense mission to the active force,
so long as the Guard has
the
resources to
perform the mission.
James would like to see actual combat air patrols
become the responsibility of active duty forces and
their
larger pool of fighter aircraft,
leaving the Guard
to concentrate on maintaining the alert bases and forces. He noted
that active duty Navy and Marine Corps units can also contribute
aircraft and pilots
to the CAP mission.
Homeland air defense is a Total Force challenge, Dominguez
said, and the Air Force must approach it that way.
While the flying operations are largely under control, the
struggle is [in] combat service support, Dominguez
said. Alert bases now are operating 24/7 when they
used to be bases we powered up on the weekend, he
noted. Since round-the-clock air defense was an unexpected mission
at most of the alert sites, the command posts, maintenance
facilities, and ammunition
storage
sites are not up to requirements at many of these locations and
need modernization.
For the Total Force, this is an ongoing challenge:
Keeping the reserve forces engaged in the face of
evolving requirements. As
long as they
are expected
to remain on par with the active duty, Guard and Reserve forces
must continue to
receive the modernization and upgrade funding that accompanies
that requirement.
James called funding a continuous and serious
challenge because it
is increasingly difficult to keep [ANG] legacy systems relevant,
given the transformation of the Air Force to better,
more effective technologies.
Dominguez said a change in perception is in order.
For the Air Force, he said, it
is probably best that people lose the term reserve because
it carries with it a lot of the baggage from the Cold War. Reserve
forces are no longer backups, he explained, they are full-time
forces manned with part-time airmen.
Creating a Total Security Force
After 9/11, the Defense
Departments security
requirements skyrocketed. Suddenly, force protection
at every military installation became critical,
and many Air Force sites that primarily had been
part-time Guard bases found themselves operating
around the clock flying combat air patrols. There
werent enough security personnel to go around,
especially when USAF began opening up new expeditionary
bases overseas to support operations in Afghanistan.
After USAF Guardsmen and
Reservists had shouldered this unexpected burden
for a year, the Air Force had
to ask the Army for help, because we couldnt
get fixes in place soon enough, said Michael
L. Dominguez, assistant Air Force secretary for
manpower and reserve affairs. The Army very
graciously joined in protecting US Air Force installations
across the globe, he said.
The Army in September 2002
agreed to contribute Guardsmen for up to two
years, while USAF worked
on a long-term solution to its security problems.
The commitment runs through September 2004. While
local Army reservists provide security at Air Force
bases nationwide, many of USAFs trained security
forces have been freed to provide protection overseas.
At the peak of [Operation Iraqi Freedom], we were
operating in the neighborhood of 36 expeditionary
air bases, Dominguez said. We are
talking about expeditionary in pretty unpleasant
and unsafe
parts of the world, so every one of those had
to be secured.
USAFs reserve security forces are expected
to head home by fall, Dominguez said, because
USAF has used them up since 9/11.
The Air Force plans to shift
additional personnel into security and has received
Congressional
approval to contract out some security functions.
Dominguez
said that USAF also plans an aggressive
program to
develop or procure new security technology to
offset manpower demands, rather than just
throwing more bodies at the problem.
The Air Force goal is to reduce security manpower
requirements by 25 percent. Sensors, scanners,
and commonsense modifications to roads and
barriers can all reduce manpower demands, said
Dominguez.
The goal is to prevent reserve security personnel
from becoming trapped in a never-ending mobilization. |
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