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By Robert S. Dudney, Editor in Chief
It will come as a shock to stressed out US troops to learn theres no shortage of manpower in the armed forces. According to defense officials, we have enough people in uniform; the problem is that many are in the wrong jobs. What we really need, they say, is personnel reform, outsourcing, and a reshuffling of forces.
That view has been pressed for years by Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld, who recently claimed anew he is not convinced of a need for more troops to meet growing commitments. He said it would be the easy way out to just say, Fine, lets increase end strength. He told Time, We do have adequate forces.
This message is not convincing to the Air Force Association, which twice addressed the issue at its recent National Convention in Washington, D.C. AFAs 2004 Statement of Policy says, Force structure should be sized to match the requirements. Its companion Top Issues paper flatly declared, It is time to increase Air Force end strength to meet actual requirements.
(AFAs Statement of Policy begins on p. 64. That document and the Top Issues paper can also be found on our Web site, www.afa.org.)
This association is sympathetic to Rumsfelds drive for more efficient use of todays 1.4 million US service members. We applaud his call to respect public funds.
To us, however, it does not seem plausible that the force can do everything it now needs to do, indefinitely, without more people. It seems (to us, anyway) that DOD, by postponing the inevitable, risks digging the armed forces deeper and deeper into a hole.
All services have been pushed hard, and the one we know best, USAF, has a clear need for personnel. Consider this single fact, cited by USAFs Human Capital Task Force: Todays end strength359,000 airmenis at least 10 percent below validated need.
This problem dates to the huge force and budget cuts of the 1990s. By late 2000, the consensus was that the armed forces, now busier than ever, were in trouble. At that time, Gen. Michael E. Ryan, Chief of Staff, said the Air Force needed 10,000 more airmen.
Soon, concerns about end strength shot up again. The Sept. 11 attacks brought a Global War on Terrorism, new homeland security tasks, and a looming mission in Iraq, on top of existing obligations.
The Air Force sought 7,000 more troops as a down payment on a larger steady state force. This was viewed as a minimum needed to relieve shortages in the most stressed fields.
Surprisingly, Rumsfeld slammed the door on this and other requests. He told the services to cover needs with internal force shifts.
He targeted military support jobs that could be eliminated or given to civilians. This category, it is said, may comprise some 320,000 military spaces. Outsourcing would not, by itself, produce more operational forces, however. The services would have to keep the active duty spaces and shift them to core military tasksall at high cost. For example, USAF identified 22,000 troops whose jobs could go to civilians. However, it would have to hire 14,000 new civilian employees at a cost of $5 billion through 2009, while still paying for the 22,000 military spaces.
As officials have studied reforms for two years, the shorthanded armed forces continued to suffer from a range of maladies.
Gulf War II added weight to the view that the military lacks not just end strength but also sufficient force structure overall.
Gen. John P. Jumper, Chief of Staff, described USAFs wartime experience in this way: Eight out of 10 Air Expeditionary Force packages were used. ... Our global mobility was stretched to the limit. ... Our parts and logistics distribution were certainly stretched. ... Our tanker bridge was located both east and west. ... Our space assets were constantly in demand. ... We had every aspect of our Air Force employed.
Jumper summed up, There is a lot of stress out there. USAF wont be able to reconstitute and resume 90-day rotations before March 2004.
Rumsfelds efficiency measures look good on paper. In proper context, they make sense. However, they promise little short-term relief.
Some lawmakers are restive. Rep. Heather A. Wilson (R-N.M.), a former Air Force officer and member of the House Armed Services Committee, has called for 150,000 more active duty troops.
Unfortunately, prospects for force expansion arent good. The Pentagon chief asserts that, while he has an open mind, no one has been able to make a case he could accept. He cited the work of a panel headed by Marine Corps Gen. Peter Pace, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, examining whether the military is large enough. The analysis thats been done ... indicates that were fine, Rumsfeld said.
One can only assume that Rumsfeld plans to keep doing what he has been doing. Someone should remind him of what has often been referred to as The First Law of Holes: When you find yourself in one, stop digging.