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Secretary Gates Remarks at the Air Force Association's
Annual Conference, National Harbor, Md.
Sept. 16, 2009
Thank you, for that kind introduction.
It’s an honor to have the opportunity to speak to the Air
Force Association. For more than six decades this
organization has been a tenacious advocate for Airmen and
U.S. air supremacy – without which, as Hap Arnold once said,
“there can be no national security.
General Arnold was, of course, a formidable advocate for air
power long before there was a U.S. Air Force. His dealings
with President Roosevelt also showed, once more, that a
little civil-military tension is nothing new in the history
of our republic. Arnold recalled the time when he said some
things in congressional testimony that were none too
pleasing to FDR. At a White House meeting, soon there
after, the president looked pointedly at Arnold and observed
that military officers who were unable to “play ball” with
his administration might be found available for duty in
Guam.
But, later that year, General Arnold was invited to another
White House gathering – a small dinner and he arrived to
discover that Roosevelt awaited him with a tray of cocktail
mixings. “Good evening, Hap,” said the president, as if
nothing had happened. “How about my mixing you an Old
Fashioned?” Well, I’m afraid the early hour precludes our
breaking the ice – literally and figuratively – in a similar
manner this morning, but it is a pleasure to be here.
Today, I want to talk about Airmen and air power – about
what the men and women of the U.S. Air Force do every day to
serve our country, and about the range of things the service
must be able to do in the future to protect America against
an array of lethal and complex threats. I do so keenly aware
of what the Air Force has experienced, endured, and
accomplished in recent times – above all, waging two major
wars, protracted air campaigns that have accelerated the
wear and tear on the service’s people and aging inventory.
First, words of thanks to those men and women whose
achievements we cherish and whose interests you represent.
Since 9/11, hundreds of thousands of Airmen have gone about
their duties – usually unheralded, and unrecognized by the
usual metric of medals and media coverage. Often they are on
the ground, in the dirt, and sometimes under fire – doing
their jobs without fail and without complaint. More than 100
have made the supreme sacrifice in Iraq and Afghanistan.
As a result of Airmen’s efforts, dangerous men looking to
attack our troops and harm our country have met their just
end, usually without warning: a distant buzz followed by a
bolt from the sky. Some of those strikes may have come from
the 74th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron – the “flying
tigers” who trace their lineage back to Claire Chennault.
They deployed to Afghanistan from Moody Air Force base about
seven months ago. Since then, they have completed more than
2,800 combat missions spanning over 12,000 flight hours of
reconnaissance and close air support – a record for this
historic unit.
Our enemies have also been under the unblinking eye and
precision fire of the 214th Reconnaissance Group of the
Arizona National Guard, which recently received the Air
Force Outstanding Unit Award from Secretary Donley after its
Predators logged more than 17,000 hours over Afghanistan and
Iraq . Overall, the Air Force has increased the number of
Predator and Reaper combat air patrols in theater by more
than half from last year, and the numbers of CAPs will grow
to 50 by the end of FY 2010.
For America’s fighting men and women on the ground, the
efforts of Airmen have made a life or death difference.
Take the example of Tech Sergeant Benjamin Horton, from Hill
Air Force Base in Utah. Sergeant Horton destroyed more than
seven tons of enemy explosives while deployed to Iraq in the
hair-raising vocation of EOD technician. His expertise with
the tactics of enemy bombers led to the capture of six
bombmakers in the Kirkuk region. In one instance, he pulled
four injured soldiers from a vehicle after an IED attack,
and then cleared the extraction zone to medevac the wounded,
earning a bronze star for his efforts.
On a visit to Afghanistan earlier in May, I had a chance to
meet with some of the Search and Rescue Aircrews from the
34th Weapons Squadron and 38th Rescue Squadron supporting
the Marines in Helmand Province. Over a three month stretch
in the spring, “PJs” from the 34th recovered or treated more
than 320 casualties – both military and civilian.
Then, there was the crew of Shocker 21 of the 305th
Expeditionary Rescue squadron based in Kandahar. They were
called in after an American Special Forces team and Afghan
soldiers came under heavy attack. In four successive passes
over a hot landing zone, Shocker 21 picked up two groups of
wounded troops, laid down suppressive fire, and delivered
badly needed ammunition. All told, the expertise and courage
of Air Force search and rescue teams are making the goal of
the “golden hour” a reality in Afghanistan.
In the coming months, America’s Airmen will be tested even
more. The war in Afghanistan is entering a decisive phase.
In a landlocked nation with mountainous terrain and few
usable roads, we and our allies are far more dependent on
air power to protect troops and move supplies. This year,
the Air Force is on track to deliver over 22 million pounds
of cargo within Afghanistan, more than double the amount
from two years ago. A C-130 touching down on a dusty,
improvised landing strip is a welcome sight at many remote
outposts that may be running low on food, fuel, and
ammunition.
Then, of course, there are the C-17 and C-5 crews flying
thousands of tons a day in and out of theater. And the
tanker aircrews and maintenance personnel keeping planes in
the air that are often older than their parents. Without
these efforts and the exertions of tens of thousands of
Airmen – including engineers, security forces, medical
personnel, explosive ordnance disposal experts, and those
protecting our lines of communication in space and
cyberspace – the entire U.S. war effort would simply grind
to a halt.
Many of these tasks in high demand today have been core
service competencies for decades. Others are no doubt making
Curtis LeMay spin in his grave. All told, the full measure
and potential of air power – kinetic and non-kinetic – in
counterinsurgency, stability operations, and irregular
warfare is getting the focus and attention it deserves –
both within the service and in the wider public. For
example, the number of air strikes in Iraq in 2007 was
nearly five times the total from the previous year – playing
a key role in the security gains of the Surge.
Within the Air Force, these combat lessons learned have
become the seeds of future acquisition decisions and
institutional change. A couple of weeks ago, I visited the
Texas factory where MC-12 Liberty aircraft are being
outfitted with reconnaissance and intelligence gear before
shipping off to the battlefield. The Air Force is
considering bringing online a fleet of light fighters and
cargo aircraft – inexpensive, rugged platforms that can be
used to build local capacity in lift, reconnaissance, and
close air support missions, and are also usable and
affordable by partner nations.
With regard to ISR: the production of the most advanced UAVs
across the military will increase to 48 annually, and I’m
told we are currently training more pilots for unmanned
systems than for fighters and bombers; and
An air advisor school house is now open whose graduates are
helping our partners overseas confront the threats within
their borders.
As you know, institutionalizing these kinds of capabilities
was what drove many of my budget recommendations earlier
this year. The goal was to give these critical capabilities
a seat at the table when priorities are set and budget
decisions were being made. But, contrary to what some have
alleged, the purpose was not to reorganize and rearm the
entire U.S. military to hunt insurgents and do
nation-building or to fight wars just like Iraq and
Afghanistan. Programs specific to these kinds of missions
will continue to make up a small fraction of overall defense
spending. For example, over the next few years, the Air
Force is planning to devote an extra $175 million annually
on programs dedicated exclusively to irregular warfare – a
significant commitment at a time of tight budgets, but not
exactly an existential threat to overall modernization
accounts, which, in the case of the Air Force, will total
some $64 billion for the next fiscal year.
With hundreds of thousands of troops deployed in two major
combat theatres, fielding these capabilities and putting
them into the hands of the warfighter as soon as possible
are the most important thing to do.
It is not, however, the only thing we must do. It would be
unwise to assume that conflicts of the future will be like
those of today or the past – the fatal conceit of military
planners since antiquity. The crumbling remains of the
Maginot Line and the cemeteries in Flanders Fields are
monuments to that tragic folly. And with regard to air
power, it would be irresponsible to assume that a future
adversary – given enough time, money, and technological
acumen – will not one day be able to directly threaten U.S.
command of the skies. As an allied commander from World War
II said, “Air power is like poker. [The] second-best hand is
like none at all – it will cost you dough and win you
nothing.”
With this admonition in mind, consider the capabilities the
United States has or will have over the next 20 to 30 years.
At the high-end of the spectrum of course is the F-22, which
provides a critical hedge against the possibility that
another country could some day field enough advanced
fighters to directly challenge the United States. It is far
and away the best air-to-air fighter ever produced, and will
ensure U.S. command of the skies for the next generation.
Our commitment to this aircraft is underscored by the nearly
six-and-a-half billion dollars provided over the next few
years to upgrade the existing F-22 fleet to be fully
mission-capable.
The largest piece of the U.S. air-dominance portfolio,
designed to span a wide range of the conflict spectrum, is
the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. It lacks some of the high-end
air-to-air attributes of the F-22, but this fifth-generation
stealth aircraft has cutting edge capabilities in electronic
warfare and in suppressing enemy air defenses.
Without question, the F-35 program represents an ambitious
effort. More than 3,000 aircraft, counting all military
services and foreign partners. Twenty-two million lines of
code. Over $46 billion for development plus an estimated
$300 billion in total acquisition costs. A truly massive
investment in the future of U.S. air power.
As with every advanced military and commercial aircraft, the
F-35 has seen its share of rising costs, delays, and other
development issues – and no doubt will see more challenges
in the future. Three weeks ago I had a chance to tour the
F-35 plant in Fort Worth. I made clear to the manufacturers
our expectations with regard to costs and schedule, and they
assured me that earlier problems are being aggressively
confronted and addressed.
Next year’s budget reflects a major commitment to accelerate
the development and production of the F-35 – with nearly
half a billion dollars added to the FY 10 budget to support
the flight-test program. Our objective continues to be to
equip the first training squadron at Eglin Air Force Base in
2011, and achieve initial operating capability for the
Marines and Air Force in 2012 and 2013 respectively. I
consider the F-35 program a major leadership priority – with
all that entails with regard to funding, oversight, and
accountability.
As you know, the Air Force’s modernization program includes
accelerating the retirement of more than 230 of its oldest
fighters – just under 13 percent of the total fighter
inventory – leading some to allege a looming “fighter gap.”
In my view, such a conclusion is based on dated assumptions
about requirements and risk – assumptions that also pervade
thinking about some of our land, sea, and amphibious forces
as well. The definition of the requirement should be
un-tethered from the current force structure and instead be
defined by what is needed to defeat potential adversaries in
plausible scenarios. What we then find is that the more
compelling gap is the deep chasm between the air
capabilities of the United States and those of other
nations. For example, the United States is projected to have
more than 1,000 F-22s and F-35s before China fields its
first fully operational fifth-generation fighter – a gap
that will grow well into the 2020s.
The disparity with other countries is even greater when it
comes to pilot quality and logistics. Last year the United
States Air Force devoted one-and-a-half million hours to
flight training – not counting ongoing operations – and
conducted roughly 35,000 aerial refueling missions. The
Russian Air Force, by comparison, conducted about 30
refueling sorties.
All told, the combination of F-22s, F-35s, and legacy
aircraft will preserve American tactical air supremacy far
into the future. Moreover, a key additional – and yet
untapped – part of this mix of capabilities is unmanned
aerial vehicles. Today, because of their effectiveness in
Iraq and Afghanistan, these systems are mostly thought of as
counterinsurgency platforms. But they have enormous
game-changing implications for conventional conflict as
well.
In future years, these remotely piloted aircraft will get
more numerous and more advanced, with greater range and the
ability to fight as well as survive. The director of the Air
Force’s unmanned task force has compared judging UAV
potential based on today’s systems to judging manned
aircraft based on the Wright Brothers Flyer. Large numbers
of increasingly capable UAVs – when integrated with our
fifth-generation fighters – potentially give the United
States the ability to disrupt and overwhelm an adversary
using mass and swarming tactics, adding a new dimension to
the American way of war.
At this point it is not clear what the full strategic impact
could be – whether, for example, it could be comparable to
the impact of carrier aviation on naval warfare. We
certainly do not want to engage in the kind of
techno-optimism that has muddled strategic thinking in the
past. But we cannot ignore the wider implications of this
profound shift in battlefield technology, especially since
their low cost and high utility make UAVs very attractive to
other nations.
In fact, when considering the
military-modernization programs of countries like China, we
should be concerned less with their potential ability to
challenge the U.S. symmetrically – fighter to fighter or
ship to ship – and more with their ability to disrupt our
freedom of movement and narrow our strategic options. Their
investments in cyber and anti-satellite warfare, anti-air
and anti-ship weaponry, and ballistic missiles could
threaten America’s primary way to project power and help
allies in the Pacific – in particular our forward air bases
and carrier strike groups. This would degrade the
effectiveness of short-range fighters and put more of a
premium on being able to strike from over the horizon –
whatever form that capability might take.
I am committed to seeing that the United States has an
airborne long-range strike capability – one of several areas
being examined in the ongoing Quadrennial Defense Review.
What we must not do is repeat what happened with our last
manned bomber. By the time the research, development, and
requirements processes ran their course, the aircraft,
despite its great capability, turned out to be so expensive
– $2 billion each in the case of the B-2 – that less than
one-sixth of the planned fleet of 132 was ever built.
Looking ahead, it makes little sense to pursue a future
bomber – a prospective B-3, if you will – in a way that
repeats this history. We must avoid a situation in which the
loss of even one aircraft – by accident, or in combat –
results in a loss of a significant portion of the fleet, a
national disaster akin to the sinking of a capital ship.
This scenario raises our costs of action and shrinks our
strategic options, when we should be looking to the kind of
weapons systems that limit the costs of action and expand
our options.
Whatever system is chosen to meet this requirement – be it
manned, unmanned, or some combination of the two – it should
be one that can realistically be produced and deployed in
the numbers originally envisioned. That is why it is so
important that with aircraft – as with all of our major
weapons systems – schedules are met, costs are controlled,
and requirements are brought into line with reality.
Now, before closing, I’d like to turn to some areas that
underpin America’s strategic strength and global reach –
areas of ongoing and future importance to the Air Force and
the United States.
First, just about all of our military forces – land, sea,
and air – now depend on digital communications and the
satellites and data networks that support them. With cheap
technology and minimal investment, adversaries operating in
cyberspace can inflict serious damage on our command and
control, ISR, and precision strike capabilities. The
recently activated 24th Air Force under the service’s Space
Command – working with other military and non-military
partners – will make an important contribution to protecting
this key domain.
Second, the role of space and satellites has never been more
crucial to military operations – from GPS-guided munitions
and navigation to missile defense and communications. The
Air Force has extended its streak of successful
national-security space launches to 65. Our forces around
the globe could not succeed without the satellite-based
capabilities provided by the Air Force 24 hours a day, 365
days a year.
Third, the Air Force’s nuclear stewardship. The stand-up of
the Global Strike Command – and the future consolidation of
the 20th and 8th Air Forces in this command – is a historic
marker that will add clear lines of authority and
accountability to the service’s nuclear mission. These
institutional reforms will also help keep this critical
expertise alive and valued within the service and its
officer corps. The activation of another B-52 squadron
further illustrates our commitment to America’s strategic
deterrent. All told, more than a year of introspection and
hard work is starting to show some results – steps on the
path to institutional excellence in a mission where there is
no room for error.
And finally, I am pleased to announce that source selection
authority is returning to the Air Force for the KC-X
refueling tanker, with a draft Request for Proposals to
follow. I don’t need to belabor the importance of getting
this done soon and done right, and my office will continue
to have a robust oversight role. We are committed to the
integrity of the selection process, and cannot afford the
kind of letdowns, parochial squabbles, and corporate
food-fights that have bedeviled this effort over the
last number of years.
I have confidence that the KC-X selection authority is in
good hands with the service’s leadership team of Secretary
Donley and General Schwartz. Indeed, the Air Force is
fortunate to have a deep bench of senior flag officers,
including four Combatant Commanders – as many as any other
service, including the first Air Force officer to lead
Southern Command. I depend greatly on their expert advice
and strategic vision.
All told, the foundation of America’s air power in the 21st
century rests, first, a broad and versatile mix of
capabilities – tactical and strategic, manned and unmanned,
from cyberspace to outer space. And second, on the quality
and commitment of our Airmen, without which all of the most
advanced hardware in the world would be of little use.
Which brings me to a final thought. This organization
properly reveres the memory of leaders like Billy Mitchell,
who advocated for air power between the world wars in the
face of cherished traditions and conventional wisdom.
Cavalry, for example, was against aircraft because they
might scare the horses. One of my predecessors, the
Secretary of War at the time, told a friend that General
Pershing managed to win a war without even looking at a
plane, much less riding in one. Another U.S. war secretary,
Newton Baker, thought that Mitchell’s idea of using
airplanes to sink a ship was “so damned nonsensical and
impossible that I’m willing to stand on the bridge … while
that nitwit tries to hit [it].” That must have been a
helluva temptation!
It strikes me that the significance of Mitchell and his
travails was not that he was always right. It’s that he had
the vision and insight to see that the world and technology
had changed, understood the implications of that change, and
then pressed ahead in the face of fierce institutional
resistance.
The transformative figures of American air power – from
Mitchell to Arnold, LeMay to Boyd – had this quality in
varying degrees. It is one I look for in the next generation
of Air Force leaders, junior and mid-level officers, and
NCOs who have experienced the grim reality of war and the
demands of persistent conflict. These are men and women we
need to retain and empower to shape the service to which
they have given so much.
In this dangerous new century, our country faces a fiendish
and complex array of threats, and our military confronts a
bewildering array of tasks. To overcome these challenges
will call on all of the elements that make up America’s
defense establishment – military and civilian, Congress,
industry, retired flag officers, veterans’ groups and
military service organizations – to step up and be part of
the solution. To be willing to stretch their comfort zones
and re-think long-standing assumptions for the wider and
greater purpose of doing what is necessary to protect our
country. I believe this is happening in the United States
Air Force. The American people are grateful to Airmen for
having protected us for many decades and we are counting on
you to do what it takes in the years ahead.
My thanks again to AFA for the opportunity to speak with you
today, and for everything you do on behalf of our country
and our Air Force. Thank you. (Archives) |