[House Hearing, 113 Congress] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office] [H.A.S.C. No. 113-27] HEARING ON NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2014 AND OVERSIGHT OF PREVIOUSLY AUTHORIZED PROGRAMS BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON ARMED SERVICES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED THIRTEENTH CONGRESS FIRST SESSION __________ FULL COMMITTEE HEARING ON BUDGET REQUEST FROM THE DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE __________ HEARING HELD APRIL 12, 2013 [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] ---------- U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 80-756 PDF WASHINGTON : 2013 COMMITTEE ON ARMED SERVICES One Hundred Thirteenth Congress HOWARD P. ``BUCK'' McKEON, California, Chairman MAC THORNBERRY, Texas ADAM SMITH, Washington WALTER B. JONES, North Carolina LORETTA SANCHEZ, California J. RANDY FORBES, Virginia MIKE McINTYRE, North Carolina JEFF MILLER, Florida ROBERT A. BRADY, Pennsylvania JOE WILSON, South Carolina ROBERT E. ANDREWS, New Jersey FRANK A. LoBIONDO, New Jersey SUSAN A. DAVIS, California ROB BISHOP, Utah JAMES R. LANGEVIN, Rhode Island MICHAEL R. TURNER, Ohio RICK LARSEN, Washington JOHN KLINE, Minnesota JIM COOPER, Tennessee MIKE ROGERS, Alabama MADELEINE Z. BORDALLO, Guam TRENT FRANKS, Arizona JOE COURTNEY, Connecticut BILL SHUSTER, Pennsylvania DAVID LOEBSACK, Iowa K. MICHAEL CONAWAY, Texas NIKI TSONGAS, Massachusetts DOUG LAMBORN, Colorado JOHN GARAMENDI, California ROBERT J. WITTMAN, Virginia HENRY C. ``HANK'' JOHNSON, Jr., DUNCAN HUNTER, California Georgia JOHN FLEMING, Louisiana COLLEEN W. HANABUSA, Hawaii MIKE COFFMAN, Colorado JACKIE SPEIER, California E. SCOTT RIGELL, Virginia RON BARBER, Arizona CHRISTOPHER P. GIBSON, New York ANDRE CARSON, Indiana VICKY HARTZLER, Missouri CAROL SHEA-PORTER, New Hampshire JOSEPH J. HECK, Nevada DANIEL B. MAFFEI, New York JON RUNYAN, New Jersey DEREK KILMER, Washington AUSTIN SCOTT, Georgia JOAQUIN CASTRO, Texas STEVEN M. PALAZZO, Mississippi TAMMY DUCKWORTH, Illinois MARTHA ROBY, Alabama SCOTT H. PETERS, California MO BROOKS, Alabama WILLIAM L. ENYART, Illinois RICHARD B. NUGENT, Florida PETE P. GALLEGO, Texas KRISTI L. NOEM, South Dakota MARC A. VEASEY, Texas PAUL COOK, California JIM BRIDENSTINE, Oklahoma BRAD R. WENSTRUP, Ohio JACKIE WALORSKI, Indiana Robert L. Simmons II, Staff Director Michele Pearce, Counsel Michael Casey, Professional Staff Member Aaron Falk, Clerk C O N T E N T S ---------- CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF HEARINGS 2013 Page Hearing: Friday, April 12, 2013, Fiscal Year 2014 National Defense Authorization Budget Request from the Department of the Air Force.......................................................... 1 Appendix: Friday, April 12, 2013........................................... 35 ---------- FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 2013 FISCAL YEAR 2014 NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION BUDGET REQUEST FROM THE DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE STATEMENTS PRESENTED BY MEMBERS OF CONGRESS McKeon, Hon. Howard P. ``Buck,'' a Representative from California, Chairman, Committee on Armed Services.............. 1 Smith, Hon. Adam, a Representative from Washington, Ranking Member, Committee on Armed Services............................ 2 WITNESSES Donley, Hon. Michael B., Secretary of the Air Force.............. 3 Welsh, Gen Mark A., III, USAF, Chief of Staff, U.S. Air Force.... 8 APPENDIX Prepared Statements: Donley, Hon. Michael B., joint with Gen. Mark A. Welsh III... 42 McKeon, Hon. Howard P. ``Buck,''............................. 39 Smith, Hon. Adam............................................. 41 Documents Submitted for the Record: [There were no Documents submitted.] Witness Responses to Questions Asked During the Hearing: Mr. Enyart................................................... 79 Mr. Johnson.................................................. 79 Questions Submitted by Members Post Hearing: Mr. Barber................................................... 93 Mr. Bridenstine.............................................. 91 Mr. Brooks................................................... 90 Mr. Carson................................................... 88 Mr. Enyart................................................... 89 Mr. Franks................................................... 87 Mr. Langevin................................................. 83 Mr. LoBiondo................................................. 83 Mr. Miller................................................... 83 Mrs. Noem.................................................... 93 Mr. Nugent................................................... 91 Mr. Palazzo.................................................. 92 Mr. Scott.................................................... 89 Mr. Shuster.................................................. 88 Mr. Turner................................................... 86 FISCAL YEAR 2014 NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION BUDGET REQUEST FROM THE DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE ---------- House of Representatives, Committee on Armed Services, Washington, DC, Friday, April 12, 2013. The committee met, pursuant to call, at 10 a.m., in room 2118, Rayburn House Office Building, Hon. Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon (chairman of the committee) presiding. OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. HOWARD P. ``BUCK'' MCKEON, A REPRESENTATIVE FROM CALIFORNIA, CHAIRMAN, COMMITTEE ON ARMED SERVICES The Chairman. The committee will come to order. Good morning. The committee meets today to receive testimony on the President's fiscal year 2014 budget request for the Department of the Air Force. I am pleased to welcome Secretary Donley and General Welsh. It takes great leadership to guide people through the kind of uncertainty we have been experiencing, and our Nation is fortunate to have you as our Nation's flight leads. Thank you for your outstanding service as you tackle the incredible national security issues we face. After reading your budget materials, I was struck by the fact that in fiscal year 2013, your Active Duty end strength was 329,500 men and women, a number which makes the Air Force about the same size it was when it became a separate component in 1947, and yet the world is certainly a different place today. Your fiscal year 2014 request reduces end strength to 327,600. I worry about this, especially as we consider the strategic implications of recent events on the Korean Peninsula where airpower plays such a critical role in assuring our national security interests. As you say in the budget materials, you are attempting to trade size for quality, but quantity often has a quality all of its own, particularly in the vast expanse of the Pacific. You know, when Admiral Locklear was here a few weeks ago, he pointed out to us that if you take the size of the Pacific, you could put all the land mass in that space and still have room left over for, I believe he said, Africa and Australia. Pretty big area. At some point we almost recognize that the assumption of mission risk will be too great. I hope that you will highlight your concerns regarding this issue in your testimony and provide more detail about where you see this trend going into the future. I also hope you will discuss the recent announcement at unit standdowns across the Air Force and its implications for force readiness. You know, I think this committee is well aware of these problems, but I don't think the whole Congress is, and I am convinced that the Nation really doesn't understand the severity of the cuts that we have been imposing. It could take years to recover from this decision because your people won't be able to train. This complicates an already seemingly untenable situation after nearly two decades of procurement, reductions, or deferrals for the Air Force and the resulting risks of maintaining an aged fleet of aircraft. With pilots not training, depot maintenance not being done, and the continued reduction of new aircraft procurement, we must ask ourselves where is the breaking point, and what we need to do to prevent it, how much risk is too much. I am encouraged by the request for the Air Force's three most important modernization program, the KC-46A tanker, the F- 35A [Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter], and the Long-Range Strike Bomber, but those programs are budgeted to stay on track, but the effects of sequestration in fiscal year 2013 could result in a potential $1.6 billion bow wave in research, development tests and evaluation, and a $1.3 billion bow wave in procurement. The fiscal year 2014 budget request does not provide any margin to repay programs that will be sourced to pay for critical readiness in fiscal year 2013. Air Force modernization cannot wait for the next big uptick in defense spending. We are in a difficult time, and we must make hard choices. Your testimony today will go a long way to help this committee and others in Congress make the right choices. Again, thank you very much for being here. [The prepared statement of Mr. McKeon can be found in the Appendix on page 39.] The Chairman. Mr. Smith. STATEMENT OF HON. ADAM SMITH, A REPRESENTATIVE FROM WASHINGTON, RANKING MEMBER, COMMITTEE ON ARMED SERVICES Mr. Smith. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I think the chairman has summed up quite well the challenges that you face. And we are all familiar with the impacts of sequestration, or I should say we are familiar with the fact that it did make things very difficult. The particular impacts are still being sorted out, I mean, literally on a day- by-day, if not hour-by-hour basis by all of our Services, and, of course, outside of the Department of Defense all aspects of the Government that are impacted by sequestration, and that is the great challenge. Given the defense threat environment that we have out there, which is not shrinking, it may be shifting and changing, but it is certainly not shrinking, how do we meet those threats? How do we budget? How do we plan in this uncertain environment? We have heard some about some of the changes the Air Force had made, the air wings, bomber wings that you have had to stand down, and I think what we are going to be most interested in throughout this hearing is how you plan to manage through that process. Again, I will just take this opportunity to emphasize that as a Congress, we need to stop sequestration. However we put it together, whatever the agreement is, mindless across-the-board cuts is simply the wrong way to run a government, you know. We can find ways to save that money, gosh, even within the discretionary budget a lot smarter than we are doing so right now, and I think a sense of urgency is simply not where it should be with this Congress to fix that problem. But we look forward to your testimony, Secretary Donley and General Welsh. You have served this country very, very well. We appreciate your hard work, and please let us know how you are dealing with this challenge and what we might be able to do to help. With that, I yield back. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. The Chairman. Thank you. [The prepared statement of Mr. Smith can be found in the Appendix on page 41.] The Chairman. Mr. Secretary. STATEMENT OF HON. MICHAEL B. DONLEY, SECRETARY OF THE AIR FORCE Secretary Donley. Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member Smith, members of the committee, it is a pleasure to be here again representing our Active Duty, Guard, Reserve, and civilian airmen. I am also honored to be here with my teammate, the 20th Chief of Staff of the Air Force, General Mark Welsh. For fiscal year 2014, United States Air Force requests $114.1 billion in our baseline budget. As with all budgets, our fiscal year 2014 request represents a snapshot in time, our best analysis of Air Force needs based on available information, and especially given the budget turmoil over the past year, this morning's discussion on the fiscal year 2014 budget needs to begin with where we stand this year in fiscal year 2013. First, I would like to highlight that throughout the current budget turmoil, our Air Force priorities remain aligned with the January 2012 defense strategic guidance. This includes supporting combatant commanders in the current fight in Afghanistan, maintaining a strong and stable presence in the Pacific and Korea, supporting nuclear and regional deterrents, counterterror, and other operations. There is demand for airpower, and your airmen are busy around the world. Today more than 35,000 airmen are deployed, more than 57,000 are stationed overseas, and more than 132,000 are providing support to combatant commanders. And as the fiscal constraints get tighter, we must tighten our alignment with a new strategy and strengthen our commitment to joint interdependent solutions to the Nation's military challenges. You have heard many times that the implications of sequestration reductions are dire. They are. That is why the President has put forth a balanced deficit reduction proposal that would allow Congress to repeal sequestration in fiscal year 2013 and beyond. While the Department is working full out to adapt to the new fiscal realities, it was not possible, given the necessary timelines, to turn around a new fiscal year 2014 budget based upon new assumptions derived from the March 1st sequestration and from the final Defense Appropriations Act, also approved last month, nearly 6 months into fiscal year 2013. We need to stipulate up front that the fiscal year 2014 budget does not provide funding to recover from the damage done by even a partial year of fiscal year 2013 sequestration, much less the full impacts that would hit the Air Force if the President's proposal to replace sequestration for fiscal year 2013 and beyond is not enacted. This morning I will summarize the state of the Air Force in three broad areas: force structure, that is, the size and composition of our Air Force; readiness, that is the training, preparedness of our airmen and their equipment; and modernization, the replacement of aging aircraft and infrastructure, and our investment in future capabilities. First, force structure. Last year in our efforts to meet the requirements of the first half of the Budget Control Act involving reductions of 487 billion over the--over 10 years, the Air Force's fiscal year 2013 budget proposed a number of force structure changes, including aircraft transfers, retirements, and changes in unit missions that were the subject of much controversy in our Reserve Components with the State Adjutants General and congressional delegations. Thanks to the work of this committee and others, we were able to fashion a compromise, which you approved in the National Defense Authorization Act. This year I can report that the fiscal year 2014 budget proposes no major changes in force structure. As compared to the levels enacted in the fiscal year 2013 NDAA [National Defense Authorization Act], the fiscal year 2014 proposal would reduce Active Duty end strength by about 1,800 Active Duty airmen, reduce Air Force Reserve end strength by just under 500, and reduce National Guard end strength by 300. We retain C-130 [Hercules tactical airlifter] and Global Hawk Block 30 [RQ-4 surveillance unmanned aerial vehicle] force structure, as you directed, through fiscal year 2014. Our nuclear forces remain at current levels, pending future decisions on implementation of the New START [Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty] agreement, and we are on track to achieve 65 medium-altitude combat air patrols with our remotely piloted aircraft fleet. We will focus in fiscal year 2014 on implementing the retirements, transfers, and mission changes that you approved in the NDAA, and then we have provided two reports to Congress outlining implementation plans for each affected unit and location. Looking ahead, it has never been more important for the Air Force to maximize the strength of our Total Force. Our Active, Reserve, and Air Guard Components are increasingly integrated, training, deploying, and conducting a full range of missions together as a Total Force. We must continue to ensure that our Active/Reserve Component mix correctly balances the strengths of each Component and meets our strategic requirements and fiscal demands. We have made progress over the last year in our governmental relationships, working with DOD [Department of Defense] and the Council of Governors to formalize the consultative process between DOD and the States to provide more transparency in planning and programming. Within the Air Force, working with our Guard and Reserve Air Force leaders, General Welsh and I have established a Total Force Task Force to provide strategic options on the appropriate mix of Total Force capabilities, and to inform our strategic planning for fiscal year 2015 and beyond. This task force will also serve as a resource to the congressionally directed National Commission on the Structure of the Air Force that is standing up this month. In summary, our proposed force structure is relatively stable for now, but, beyond fiscal year 2014, is dependent on decisions yet to be made and especially on achieving a balanced approach to deficit reduction to avoid further sequestration. Turning to readiness. While the Air Force has met the demands of a high operational tempo in support of today's fight, this has taken a toll on our weapons systems and people. Unit readiness declined significantly from 2003 onward, and despite significant investments in the past few years, only half of our combat air forces have met acceptable readiness standards. With the rebalance to the Asia-Pacific and our continued presence in the Middle East and Africa, we expect the demand for Air Force capabilities will remain constant, perhaps even increase over the next decade. We must improve readiness to prevent a hollow force. With respect to fiscal year 2013, the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Air Force leaders have already recounted the readiness impacts we anticipated this year as a result of sequestration. Passage of the final fiscal year 2013 continuing resolution, which included defense appropriations, was helpful to DOD overall, but did not improve the Active Air Force's operation and maintenance budget, left shortages in the overseas contingency operations accounts, and did not mitigate the impacts of sequestration, which required approximately 10 billion in reductions to be taken in the last 7 months of fiscal year 2013. Except anticipating this challenge, we took steps to cut back normal operations, including a civilian hiring freeze for permanent, temporary, and term vacancies; canceling non- mission-critical official travel and conferences; reducing major command and combatant command O&M [Operations and Maintenance] budgets by approximately 10 percent; and deferring non emergency facilities sustainment projects. However, these steps alone are not sufficient to absorb the full impacts of sequestration without affecting readiness. Collectively, the sequestration reductions and readiness impacts are now being felt across the Air Force. This week eight fighter and bomber units ceased flying operations, four additional squadrons will completely stand down when return from deployment in the next few weeks, and one additional bomber squadron will stand down this summer when it returns from deployment. Flying hour reductions will halt training for the rest of the year in many units and will take up to 6 months to restore pilot proficiency. Other impacts include reductions in weapon systems sustainment that will delay necessary maintenance, increase costs and take potentially 2 to 3 years to recover from repair backlogs. And there is the potential furlough of our valued civilian workforce, significantly reducing their pay and potentially devastating morale and slowing productivity. Our main objective in the fiscal year 2014 budget mirrors our objective for 3 years running: to slow and reverse the erosion of Air Force readiness. To that end the fiscal year 2014 budget is aimed at setting the Air Force back on a course toward full-spectrum readiness. The budget prioritizes funds for 1.2 million flying hours, an increase of 40,000 hours from last year, to ensure pilot proficiency and continue new pilot production. It funds training ranges to enhance flying training effectiveness and to restore infrastructure. It also adds 1.5 billion across the 5-year defense plan to weapons systems sustainment to keep our aircraft and space systems ready. Unfortunately, fiscal year 2013 sequestration now jeopardizes the gains we had hoped to achieve next year. Even assuming this budget is approved as proposed, and even if the Congress acted sometime this summer to repeal and replace sequestration in fiscal year 2013, we would almost certainly begin fiscal year 2014 carrying forward a significantly degraded readiness posture from this year. The Air Force is working with DOD on a fiscal year 2013 reprogramming requests to indicate OCO [Overseas Contingency Operations] and other O&M shortfalls and to address some of the worst effects of sequestration. However, the budgetary transfer authority available to DOD is not sufficient to address all our known shortfalls. Even if such transfer authority were available, we do not have sufficient internal resources to pay for these shortfalls without digging far too deeply into modernization programs, and there may not be sufficient time left in fiscal year 2013 to repair the damage now immediately ahead. To sum up the readiness situation, we have been consuming Air Force readiness for several years and will continue to focus the resources available to meet combatant commander requirements, but with the steep and late fiscal year 2013 budget reductions brought on by sequestration, the readiness hole that we have been trying to climb out of just got deeper. The full readiness and budgetary implications of this situation could not be accounted for in the fiscal year 2014 budget and are still under review, and we will continue to work with DOD and Congress to fashion a practical way forward. Turning to modernization. As I previously testified to this committee, the modernization challenge facing the Air Force is pervasive and will, if unaddressed, seriously undermine our ability to accomplish the missions the Nation asks us to undertake. The average age of our fighter aircraft is now 23 years; rescue helicopters, 22 years; training aircraft, 25 years; bombers, 36 years; and tankers, nearly 50 years. Satellites for missile warning, navigation, secure communications, and other needs are also aging, and the replacements must be built and launched on a schedule consistent with the life expectancy of current constellations. Our most significant Air Force priorities remain on track in fiscal year 2014, the fifth-generation F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, the KC-46 tanker, the Long-Range Strike Bomber. The continued modernization of existing fleets, such as the B-2 [Spirit stealth bomber], the F-22 [Raptor fighter jet], F-15 [Eagle fighter jet], F-16 [Fighting Falcon fighter jet], and C- 17 [Globemaster III tactical airlifter], to name some, to keep them operationally effective and to extend their service lives is also key. We request funding for preferred munitions as well as critical space satellite assets, such as the Global Positioning System, the Advanced Extremely High-Frequency, AEHF, Satellite, and Space-Based Infrared System programs. We intend to maintain science and technology funding in order to stay on the cutting edge of technological innovation and sustain our airpower advantage. While we often face challenges with major acquisition programs, we have recently achieved some notable success using block buys and more efficient procurement strategies to drive down the cost of three large space programs by over $2.5 billion. And the fiscal year 2014 request includes the first of a multiyear procurement for the C-130J, which is expected to save over 500 million over the next 5 years. We will need more successes like these in the future because there is still significant pressure on our modernization programs. Last year, in programming the Air Force share of the first $487 billion in DOD reductions over 10 years, the cancellation or delay of modernization programs accounted for 65 percent of total Air Force reductions across just the first 5 years. This year each program was reduced by more than 7 percent in sequestration. In the immediate years ahead, major programs like the F-35, the KC-46, and the bomber are scheduled to grow as the overall DOD budget declines, and some longstanding needs like a new trainer and a replacement for the E-8 JSTARS [Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System] remain unfunded. Looking ahead, if there continues to be resistance to force structure adjustments, base closures, and constraining growth and compensation, and given our current need to focus on improving readiness, it is very likely that outyear reductions in the Budget Control Act will require further disproportionate cuts in our modernization programs. As advanced technologies continue to proliferate around the globe, these cutbacks in modernization would put at risk the Air Force capabilities this Nation will need in the decade ahead. The decisions ahead of us are extraordinarily difficult, but Congress has the power to help the Air Force and the Department of Defense maneuver through these unparalleled budget challenges. In recent years Congress has placed limits on the Air Force's effort to take tough, but urgently needed actions to balance our readiness, modernization, and force structure, and rejected some of DOD's proposals to help slow the growth in military compensation. As our DOD leaders have testified, these congressional actions, if sustained, would add billions to our costs over the next 5 years. We hope that in view of the serious economic problems facing the Nation and our Department of Defense, Congress will allow us to implement these and other important changes. It is now all the more critical that we get your support for reductions in base infrastructure. The Air Force executed BRAC [Base Realignment and Closure] 2005 on time and under budget, and those adjustments are today generating savings estimated at $1 billion per year. We are looking at European basing requirements with our DOD partners, and we are ready to begin next steps in the continental U.S. We estimate that more than 20 percent of our basing infrastructure is excess to need. BRAC authority is a tool that we urgently need to allow DOD to divest excess infrastructure and refocus resources to meet other critical needs, including readiness, modernization, and taking care of our people. In the area of military compensation, we are committed, as you are, to taking care of our airmen, but the impact of increasing personnel costs continues to be a concern in the Department and can no longer be ignored. Therefore, we support DOD's efforts to slow the growth of personnel costs. We support the modest 1-percent pay raise and the TRICARE [health care program] fee and pharmacy copay changes included in the fiscal year 2014 budget. While these are some of the broad outlines of our request, there is clearly more work to do as we assess the rolling implications of sequestration in fiscal year 2013 and beyond. We will need your help to make necessary adjustments in our force structure, to keep us ready, and to avoid a hollow force, and to equip this Air Force with the modern capabilities it needs for the future. But perhaps one of the most helpful things Congress can do is to return to regular order and approve the annual defense authorization appropriations measures in a timely way. Throughout history our Nation has effectively dealt with strategic challenges and fiscal constraints, but our recent track record of delay and uncertainty, continuing resolutions that disrupt programs and budget planning, and midyear cuts that impair readiness and threaten civilian furloughs must not become the new normal. We sincerely appreciate the ongoing commitment and efforts of this committee and its professional staff to return to regular order. Today's world is a dangerous place, and it is counterproductive to generate problems of our own making when so many other serious threats beyond our control demand attention. Together we must do better for our men and women in uniform and their families, our civilian workforce, and for our national security. Mr. Chairman, the American people have the world's best airmen and the world's finest Air Force. Your Air Force leadership team remains committed to you and the most capability possible from whatever level of resources you provide. We remain grateful for the support of this committee and its unfailing support in providing to the Air Force and to the men and women of our Armed Forces the best capabilities available. We stand ready to assist in any way we can and look forward to discussing our budget. Thank you. [The joint prepared statement of Secretary Donley and General Welsh can be found in the Appendix on page 42.] The Chairman. Thank you. General Welsh. STATEMENT OF GEN MARK A. WELSH III, USAF, CHIEF OF STAFF, U.S. AIR FORCE General Welsh. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member Smith, and distinguished members of the committee, for letting us be here this morning. It is always an honor, and it is a special privilege to be here with my boss and partner, Secretary Mike Donley, who is coming up on about 5 years running our Air Force, a long road, and he has done it tremendously well. Despite the budgetary turbulence and what I hope will be an atypical year, I believe we will see a continuing demand for American airpower in the future. From the airlift requirements of a responsible drawdown in Afghanistan to, as the chairman mentioned, the vast distances and increasingly vocal international actors in the Asia-Pacific region to growing national reliance on space-based capabilities, America's foreign policy choices reflect a conscious reliance on its Air Force to help realize success. These strategic choices followed 22 years of sustained combat operations for your Air Force and a slow decline of readiness that we simply must reverse. These choices are also bounded by shifting fiscal realities that will force the entire Defense Department to focus on those capabilities and missions that are truly essential in the future. As an indispensable part of that joint force, the Air Force intends to continue operating in airspace and cyber, and to prioritize those core missions that have existed since our birth as a separate service in 1947: air and now space superiority; rapid global mobility; intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance; global strike; and command and control at the theater level. Our airmen perform these missions exceptionally well, and, in doing so, they do provide global vigilance, global reach, and global power for America. Out fiscal year 2014 budget request does not fully account for necessary recovery actions from the current budgetary turbulence, nor does it fully incorporate the potential cuts for sequestration in 2014 and beyond, but what it does do is prioritize the effort to reverse our declining readiness trend, recognizing that low states of readiness negate many of the strategic advantages of airpower. Flying hours are allocated to maintain and, in some cases, incrementally improve readiness levels across the Total Force in this budget. In the past we have relied on overseas contingency operations funding to partially fund those flying hour programs and to maintain our current and substandard readiness levels. We will continue to reduce our reliance on that OCO funding for the flying hour program through 2015, at which point we should have as much as 90 percent of our peacetime flying requirement back in our baseline budget, a level we haven't reached in quite some time. We have also restored emphasis on training ranges, funding about 75 percent of the requirement in that area, up from recent lows of only 25 percent. Our fiscal year 2014 budget request also seeks to corral the force structure cost creep in both personnel and infrastructure that we have been experiencing. After years of trading quantity for quality, we now have fewer people in aircraft in our Air Force than at any time since we became an independent service in 1947. Unfortunately, while the numbers have gone down, both the real cost of personnel and their proportion relative to rest of the budget has increased dramatically. Pay and benefits continue to rise, as have the costs of the Defense Department health care program, which has grown approximately 270 percent over the last 11 years, and, as we all know, these are huge cost drivers. They scream for more control. We support the Defense Department's request to limit the military pay raise to only 1 percent in this budget proposal and to explore meaningful modifications in the TRICARE system. As a side note, we may also realize personnel cost savings from the Total Force Task Force that the Secretary mentioned. This group was formed to examine the operational impacts and cost factors associated with various approaches to Total Force integration. By identifying and implementing the optimum force mix of an Active, Reserve, and Guard Component, we should be able to maximize operational effectiveness, better optimize Total Force efficiencies, and provide better stability over time to our Guard unit States and Reserve organizations. You can expect to see the results of this work reflected in next year's budget submission. Our fiscal year 2014 budget request also restores military construction investment to historic norms, following our deliberate infrastructure pause in fiscal year 2013. The $1.2 billion proposal in this area prioritizes bed-down requirements for the KC-46 and the F-35, for combatant commander nuclear deterrent and cyber requirements, and for projects to facilitate a rebalance of the Asia-Pacific region. We will look to consolidate infrastructure and reduce excess capacity where allowed, and we support the Defense Department's request for further BRAC authority in fiscal year 2015. As difficult as a BRAC would be for everyone, we can simply no longer afford to retain unnecessary overhead that diverts precious resources from readiness and modernization. Our fiscal year 2014 budget request strives to protect that modernization in order to support current defense guidance and to preserve the ability to execute our core missions in the future. The KC-46, F-35, and Long-Range Strike Bomber remain our top three investment priorities. We need the F-35. It remains the best platform to address the proliferation of highly capable integrated air defenses and new air-to-air threats. The Long-Range Strike Bomber will give our Nation a flexible, credible capability to strike globally with precision on limited notice should the national interest require. The KC-46 is our highest modernization priority and will ultimately replace a third of our current tanker fleet, most of which is almost as old Secretary Donley. Hard to believe, I know. That tanker fleet puts the ``global'' in global vigilance, global reach, and global power. It provides strategic options for our Nation. We simply must modernize it. Four of the Air Force's 10 largest modernization programs are space-based platforms. We plan to extend our streak of 58 consecutive successful launches, and expand and modernize our constellations, like the Global Positioning System, the Defense Meteorological Satellite program, and others upon which the entire Nation and many of our allies and partners depend. We will also continue to invest in our most important resource, our airmen. We will provide the training, education, and professional development opportunities they need to be the best in the world at what they do. If we can't do that, they will find other work. We will continue to foster work environments that are safe and respectful. We will develop leaders of character who demonstrate operational effectiveness and innovation, but also the selfless, caring approach required to lead America's sons and daughters. We will continue to do everything in our power to care for our airmen and their families, while balancing the resources required to do that with the understanding that our primary job is to fight and win the Nation's wars. My job is to help Secretary Donley field the most capable, credible Air Force possible. I believe our 2014 budget request moves us in that direction. It postures the Air Force to improve readiness, to limit force structure cost, and to protect vital modernization, and Secretary Donley and I stand ready to answer any questions you may have about it. Thank you again for the chance to be here, Mr. Chairman. The Chairman. Thank you very much. I am glad the tankers are only as old as Secretary Donley. If they were my age, we would really have problems. Gentlemen, I am fully aware that without the equipment, aircraft space systems and networks, we have no Air Force. Air and space forces, more so than ground forces, require materiel and technology to execute the mission. Investments in RDT&E [Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation] and procurement during the Cold War provided the Air Force with much of the equipment that it is using today; however, all of this equipment is aging out, and it is aging out simultaneously, because many procurement and modernization programs failed, were delayed, or were deferred during the past 15 years. The Air Force needs to simultaneously recapitalize across major categories of capabilities. There is great risk that the effort is unsupportable in the current fiscal environment. How is it that with all the efforts and emphasis on reforming the acquisition process, to include Secretary Hagel's recent remarks at NDU [National Defense University] on the matter, we haven't had a confirmed senior acquisition executive for the United States Air Force since 2009? All the while we continue to see Air Force acquisition failures, such as over a billion dollars wasted on a failed logistics program known as ECSS [Expeditionary Combat Support System], more than $750 million wasted on C-27J [Spartan military transport] aircraft, a DOD IG [Inspector General] investigation and subsequent cancellation of the G222 airlifter acquisition for the Afghans at a price of over $600 million, and GAO [Government Accountability Office] protests and court proceedings on the Light Attack Aircraft program for the Afghans. Please tell me what your plan is to remedy this egregious situation. Secretary Donley. Well, first, Mr. Chairman, regarding the absence of a confirmed acquisition official, we had had in place a very capable principal deputy for 2 years of that period, and since his departure last year, we have been looking for a replacement. I do believe we have a candidate lined up who will be in place within the next month or so. So, this has been more a product of the personnel process than from a lack of interest in filling the position on our part. We have had several candidates. We have discussed who we have identified along the way who have been unable to step up to the requirements of leaving their corporate position to spend time in Government. So it has been a lengthy process, certainly longer than I would have liked. We have undertaken a number of acquisition improvements in the Air Force, as I offered. We have made great progress on controlling the costs of our space programs over the past several years, some of our largest programs and the ones that had the largest cost growth in the early 2000s, so there has been some progress there. With respect to ECSS, which was one program that was canceled last December, we have no apologies for that. We had been working on the program for 7 years. We could have done better up front in having the right technical expertise on that program, more oversight from our logistics team and logistics experts on the contractor team. That program went through multiple restructurings over 7 years until we finally got to a point where it was just unacceptable to proceed. So we have no hesitation in canceling programs that are not performing. The G222 falls in the same category. This was a version of the C-27 program, earlier version of the C-20 program that had been purchased for the Afghan Air Force, again at some expense to the American taxpayers, where the contractor simply did not perform over several years, and we reached a point where we viewed that performance by that contractor and that airframe to be unrecoverable. And, again, we have no hesitation in stopping a program that we don't think is working correctly. The Chairman. That is a good point, and I think it is very important to stop programs that aren't performing. I think my criticism would be--and this is not just the Air Force, it is across the whole Pentagon--is sometimes we take too long to make the decision to cancel it. If we could identify the problems earlier, like the marine landing vehicle that we went 20 years, I think that is important. The comment you made on the problem with getting people, if there is something we can do to help you on that as we go through our bill this year, if you can think of anything that we could do that could make it easier to bring people into--I realize it is a sacrifice for a lot of these people to come to work, such as yourself. They can make more money on the outside, and then the complications that they have to go through, the things they have to comply with to work for the Government makes it almost too big of a burden for--to even ask people to undertake, but if there is something we could do, please, please let us know on that. Mr. Smith. Mr. Smith. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Just two questions, one on the KC-46. I know the new tanker. I know there was an issue about whether or not the contract, given sequestration, you would be able to continue with the contract. That was really important that you got an appropriations bill this year, which after a fashion we got. Is the existing contract on that new tanker sustainable now based on where we are at, admittedly not predicting for the future here, but based on where we are at for fiscal year 2013? Secretary Donley. Yes, sir. Mr. Smith. Okay. And then on BRAC, you know, it is sort of self-evident when you look at how the military is going to change as the budgets have come down with sequestration, you know, drawdown from Iraq, drawdown from Afghanistan, the fundamental changes that are happening in our strategy, do we need to realign our base structure? I don't think there is any question about that. You know, Members are understandably nervous about that because it affects individual districts in unpredictable ways. One of the criticisms of it--and I am a strong supporter of base closure. You know, BRAC, however you want to get there, it needs to be done in order to get our force in the right structure and to save the money that needs to be saved. One of the problems, of course, is that BRAC actually winds up costing money in the first 5 to 6 years, depending on the BRAC. So within the BCA [Budget Control Act] timeframe, if you do a 2015 BRAC, it doesn't actually save you money for those 10 years. Can you please, you know, give us your justification for doing a BRAC in that timeframe despite that reality, and also what you might be able to do to make it less costly this time? Secretary Donley. Well, sir, the costs of BRAC vary significantly, depending on how you approach the problem. If you are just trying to realign forces from point A to point B, or if you are actually able to close locations, bring down force structure at the same time, that involves much less cost. So depends how you are able to approach BRAC---- Mr. Smith. So, do you envision then a BRAC process that could save money within the BCA timeframe? Secretary Donley. I don't see why not, if we get started on it. Just to give you an example, on BRAC 2005, we spent about $3.5 billion, and, as I indicated in testimony, it has generated savings now of about a billion dollars a year, so that will pay back in 3 or 4 years. So I think that is an investment well worth making. I also think that beyond the 10-year period, if you just-- -- Mr. Smith. Absolutely. Secretary Donley. Yeah, if you just think about the places you have never heard of, Castle, Williams, Hamilton, places from deep in the Air Force's past, there are dozens of them because DOD, Air Force, and congressional leadership stood up to close those bases decades ago. If we were carrying that overhead with us today, we would have enormous costs. Mr. Smith. No, I think that is absolutely true. I think long-term there is no question. The main thing you need to work on in terms of making the pitch is to show how it--you know, within the BCA timeframe, how you can do it more cost- effectively. Thank you very much. I yield back. The Chairman. Thank you. Mr. LoBiondo. Mr. LoBiondo. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Secretary, General, thank you for being here. You have certainly got a very challenging situation. We all do. I was very pleased to see that you followed the guidance of the fiscal year 2013 NDAA and provided us with the budget breakout for the air and space control alert mission. That was really a long time in coming. However, in the missions fiscal year 2014 budget, there was no request for MILCON [Military Construction] projects, and I find this concerning and troubling, because, as you may recall, there was House report language for the fiscal year 2013 MILCON and VA [Veterans Affairs] appropriation bill that stated opposite. It pretty much said that the committee recognized the strategic importance of Air Guard Components of the ACA [Aerospace Control Alert] mission and their role in the country's homeland defense, and the committee urges the Secretary of the Air Force to reprioritize its investments and place the maintenance facilities for legacy F-16 fighter aircraft with ACA missions that are responsible for high-value metropolitan areas at the top of the military construction list. Now, listening very carefully to your opening statement, Mr. Secretary, you stated that it is a priority of yours to keep operationally effective the legacy assets, and certainly of all the alert missions in the country, the 177th Fighter Wing fits your criteria for a prime metropolitan facility. There is no other facility in the Nation that, when alerted, can be over top of Washington, D.C., or New York simultaneously if necessary in 9 minutes or less. So that having been said, I have to believe that there was an oversight that in the MILCON, the new fuel cell and corrosion control hangar was not put in fiscal year 2014, but rather let go to fiscal year 2017, especially since in the reprioritization of the F-16 fighter aircraft, we looked at, because another base is going to be drawing down, that the 177th will be receiving newer legacy aircraft. So, I am hopeful, in light of what I think is an oversight, that you can agree to work with our office and work with the wing commander to see if there isn't something we can do that seems like it would meet with what your request in priorities are. Secretary Donley. Thanks for that input, sir. I will just offer that we are way behind on MILCON, so the focus is new mission capabilities that are right out in front of us, F-35, tanker, some immediate operational things at locations like Guam. And last year was our lowest year almost on record for MILCON, so we are just in the process of recovery. We are not nearly where we want to be, but we understand the priorities as you see them. Mr. LoBiondo. Can we count on at least some dialogue in attempting to work together considering the high priority that you placed on the metropolitan bases? Secretary Donley. Sir, we have lots of MILCON priorities, but we would be happy to talk with you and your staff about its placement in fiscal year 2017. Mr. LoBiondo. Okay. And just lastly, General Welsh, I would be hopeful you can chime in here. When can the committee finally expect to see a plan on paper that will address the need for recapitalization of the Air National Guard's F-16 fleet in this coming year? It is something we have been asking for and asking for, and I understand there have been complications, but I am hopeful you can shed some light here. General Welsh. Congressman, the Total Force Task Force, the guidelines we have given them are to put together a proposal for active ARC [Air Reserve Component] mix to include mission assignments, the model we use, whether it is a proportional--a percentage of the active mission set, resides in the Reserve Component, whether it is specific missions that reside exclusively in the Reserve Component, and what are both the costs and the operational impacts of those courses of action that they are going to review. We have three two-star generals leading this effort, one Guard, one Active, and one Reserve. We have two TAGs [Adjutant General] advising them. They report out weekly to me, monthly to the Secretary, monthly to the Chief of the National Guard Bureau, and then quarterly the intent is to work through OSD [Office of the Secretary of Defense] to update the Council of Governors. The discussion on the options they look at and are assessed by a common team of analysts will go on for the next 6 months or so. At the end of that timeframe, we will bring a recommendation to the Secretary for inclusion in the 2015 budget. That is where we intend to have this on paper. Mr. LoBiondo. So, somewhat possible this calendar year? General Welsh. Oh, I think the recommendations will clearly be being discussed this calendar year, yes, sir, by this fall. Mr. LoBiondo. Okay. Thank you very much. The Chairman. Thank you very much. Mrs. Davis. Mrs. Davis. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you very much, both of you, for being here. You know, you said, and we all know this, that the strength of our military lies in our people, and one of the most difficult issues that I think we always address come back to personnel. There are recommendations in the budget that would increase TRICARE fees and decrease the traditional way that we have paid the military, the raises beyond 1 percent, and I know this is difficult for everybody because we face our constituents and the men and women who serve our country. If that change does not come forth in the NDAA, where does it come from? Where do those increases come from? How do they affect readiness? What are the consequences of that? We know that there are certainly consequences; there always are. How can you respond to that? I think it is important for us to understand it. Secretary Donley. Yes, ma'am, and I think they are pretty clear, especially in the constrained environment in which we live. Just again sort of the context for this on TRICARE. When TRICARE was created in the mid-1990s, retirees paid about over 20 percent of the costs of their medical care. Mrs. Davis. I think it is 27 percent. Secretary Donley. Yes, ma'am, I believe it is 27 percent. Today they pay 11 percent. So costs have moved up without changes in the fees, so that certainly needs to be addressed. If we don't address these issues, the dollars come out of modernization, or they come out of readiness, or they make the military smaller. Mrs. Davis. Can you be a little more specific? Secretary Donley. Actually, if you look at the historical data, and I think you are familiar with this, ma'am, the U.S. military has been getting smaller over the last 30 years, and our personnel costs have been going up. So there has not been a correlation between a declining size of the Department of Defense and its military personnel and a decline in military personnel costs. Even on an inflation-adjusted, that is kind of--that costs have continued to rise for these kinds of reasons. So if those personnel costs are left unaddressed, they will squeeze out modernization, they will squeeze out the readiness of the force. Mrs. Davis. General, did you want to respond? General Welsh. Yes, ma'am. I will admit freely to not being the world's best researcher, but in research to try and understand the problem we are in now with the drawdown from the peak spending of a few years ago and where we are going, with the potential of sequestration cuts over 10 years, the first thing that became obvious to me is related to the Secretary's point about personnel costs going up so remarkably over the last 10 years. One of things that has happened over time is that as we built up force structure, our top-line budget in the Department of Defense would rise, and then when it was time to draw it down, it came down to just below where we started from typically. One of the differences this time is that in the past, when that budget line went up, our force structure went up with it. This time in the Air Force, our budget went up, but because of that increase in personnel costs, our force structure went down. Mrs. Davis. Went down, yeah. General Welsh. So now the lines are split, which is why we are the smallest Air Force we have ever been since we became an independent service. As we come down the topline curve, we will come down in parallel in the force structure curve. That is the thing that makes this noticeably different from a capability perspective as I look at the operational end of the Air Force. Everything we take from the capabilities side to fund the people side is worth considering carefully. Mrs. Davis. General, if I could interrupt because time is running out, but one of the other areas that is so critical is military professional education, and it is my understanding from a previous hearing that about 8,000 airmen would not be receiving the military professional education that they need to be promoted and obviously to go on to be the great officers that we need. Is that the case, or with some changes in sequestration in terms of the way you can move your dollars around a little bit more, does that change, or are we still looking at that number for the number of the airmen who might not be able to be promoted? General Welsh. Congresswoman, we are doing everything we can to not have that happen. It all comes out of the same pot of money. It is all out of the O&M account. And so one of the things that we are trying to do is as we get reprogramming authority, which the Congress has given us, the Department, and we have gotten part of that, we have been able to shift money back into flying hours to support combatant commanders who have been able to minimize the impact on people's ability to go to school. We will continue to work to do that, and, over time, clearly that is money well spent. It is not something we should stop doing. Mrs. Davis. Thank you. Mr. Thornberry. [Presiding.] Mr. Forbes. Mr. Forbes. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And, Mr. Secretary, General, thank you for being here. I have two questions and only 5 minutes, so I am going to throw them both out and for either or both of you to respond to, if you would. The first one is the Air Force's bomber force is aging rapidly, with the B-52 [Stratofortress strategic bomber] and B-1 [Lancer strategic bomber] scheduled for complete retirement by 2040 and the B-2 by 2058. What value does the Long-Range Strike Bomber, the LRSB, offer the Air Force as a replacement for these systems, particularly in the antiaccess/area denial environments that we will be dealing with? That is one. And then the second one, a followup kind of on what Mrs. Davis just asked. We know with the President's F-14 budget failing to meet the restrictions of the Budget Control Act by a reported $52 billion, there is a concern about sequestration across-the-board cuts continuing to fiscal year 2014. Could you address specifically how that might impact your flight hours and training for less experienced pilots, and what impact that would have on our long-term readiness? So either or both of you on those two questions Secretary Donley. Mr. Forbes, I will take the first one, and I think the Chief is in a good place to answer about pilot training. With respect to the Long-Range Strike Bomber, you outlined our challenge with the bomber force, which is aging. Even the B-52 now is--excuse me--even the B-2, our most capable stealth bomber, is 20 years old now, so we are particularly concerned about the age of the B-52 and the B-1s. Long-range strike has been a core function of the United States Air Force since our inception, and it offers the President options to strike any place on the planet at any time if national interests require it. It is a good tool for the U.S. military to have, and it is an essential capability for our Air Force, so we need to get on with the LRSB. It is especially important as we look to the Asia-Pacific rebalance and as we consider the possibility of denied areas and the anti-access/area-denial challenges that we may face in the decades ahead. We need long-range and payload to deliver a punch, and while our fighter force structure does this in many different dimensions, it falls to the bomber force to be able to do this at long ranges and with high payloads. So it is a very valuable tool for national security. Got supported in the defense strategic guidance. And we need to get on with LRSB. It is a very important priority. Mr. Forbes. Thank you, Mr. Secretary. And, General, if you could address the training hours and the impact sequestration might have on those flight hours and how that impacts our overall readiness. Sometimes that gets lost in what we are looking at here. General Welsh. Congressman, thank you. It is a great question. As you know, with the abrupt and kind of arbitrary nature of the mechanism of sequestration, flying hours became a problem for us instantly. We are protecting basic flight training, and we are protecting our flying training units that transition new pilots into specific weapons systems, whether they be fighters or bombers. They are going to be funded through the rest of the year, at least until September, when we may run out of flying hour money completely if something doesn't change and we have more reprogramming authority. But until then, we will protect those courses. Our advanced training programs, instructor pilot upgrades, the fighter weapons instructor courses we are shutting down. We don't have the flying hours to operate them. That gift will keep on giving throughout the 20-year career of the individuals who did not attend. There is no way we have the capacity to plus-up in the future years to go back and fix that. So it will have an impact on our force for a while. In 2014, we must prioritize money for flying hour training. We recruit the best people we can. We have to train them better than anybody else in the world does. We have to prioritize it. Mr. Forbes. General, thank you. Mr. Secretary, one of the things that not many of our citizens would be comfortable with is putting their sons or daughters on a commercial airliner where the pilot only had 70 percent of his training. We don't want to make sure our men and women going to fight for us have anything less. So thank you for fighting for both of those. With that, Mr. Chairman, I yield back. Mr. Thornberry. Thank you. Ms. Bordallo. Ms. Bordallo. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Secretary Donley and General Welsh, thank you for appearing today and providing us with your testimony. And I look forward to working together as one of the co-chairs of the Air Force Caucus. The island of Guam is very proud of the close relationship that we share between Anderson Air Force Base and our local community. And, as you know, Guam is very supportive of the overall DOD efforts to rebalance forces to the Pacific. Now, my first question is for both of you regarding Guam Strike, or Pacific Airpower Resiliency, as I believe it is now referred to. The Asia-Pacific region is the world's most militaried region, with 7 of the 10 largest militaries and multiple nations with declared nuclear arms. Instability in this region will have a direct and immediate effect for our entire Nation. The current missile threat from North Korea highlights the need for hardening and disbursal of Air Force assets in the region. Now, unfortunately, the Senate has had a very unique and interesting position on this matter, so I do appreciate the Air Force's continued support of the effort. Can either of you comment on the need for hardening of structures on Guam, the funding and the technology improvements for runway repairs, and elaborate on other aspects you see as vital for the protection of Guam's forward defense assets. Secretary. Secretary Donley. Thank you, ma'am. Guam is a very important anchor for the United States in the Pacific and a very important anchor for the United States Air Force. So Andersen Air Force Base gets a lot of attention and a lot of business from our Air Force. We routinely use this location in both fighter and bomber deployments into the region. And, as you know, it is a joint area of operations of interest to all of the military services. We have five projects in our MILCON budget this year that are focused on the kinds of improvements which you described. We see ourselves at Guam in perpetuity. Andersen is a very important asset to us. And as potential threats develop in this region, we need to be prepared to respond to those threats. And I think you put your finger on it. This is not a choice between disbursal or hardening; it is a combination of factors that will help make our bases, from which we fight, resilient in any number of threat scenarios. Ms. Bordallo. Thank you. And, General, do you have anything to add to that? General Welsh. Congresswoman, I would just add that, operationally, if we expect to be able to survive an attack with the weapons that are now available to the enemy and continue to operate from Guam, hardened facilities will be mandatory. Ms. Bordallo. Thank you. I have a second question. The Air Force has expressed concerns about the current ISR [Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance] assets and their capability in a more contested area. However, I believe that the Global Hawk remains a proven platform with continued utility. The language in last year's bill is very clear: Congress believes the Global Hawk program should be continued. Can you comment on how the Air Force intends to sustain the Global Hawk Block 30 program past fiscal year 2014? Will the Air Force use the funding provided in the appropriations bill to procure the additional three Block 30 aircraft? And, finally, what is the Air Force doing to work with the contractor to address some of the cost and capability concerns? I personally believe there are commonsense solutions that enhance the Block 30 capabilities, like the transferring of some of the equipment from the U-2s [``Dragon Lady'' reconnaissance aircraft] to the Global Hawk. So could you answer that, either one of you? Secretary Donley. Well, ma'am, this remains a difficult area where we have been in disagreement with the Congress over the past year. We have funded the force structure for the Global Hawk Block 30s, as I indicated, through fiscal year 2014, and there is procurement money that has not been expended. Ms. Bordallo. Decided. Secretary Donley. We went through this discussion again in our Air Force leadership, concluded that the decision that we had made last year to divest Global Hawk force structure is probably the right one. We like the persistence of the Global Hawk, but it does not have the sensor capabilities of the U-2. Ms. Bordallo. Can you exchange equipment? Secretary Donley. Not without cost and time. And at this point, our outyear budgets do not include funding for sustaining the Global Hawk force structure. So if we would add that back, that would be a bill to the Air Force. The moving of U-2 sensors onto the Global Hawk is another bill to the Air Force. So---- Ms. Bordallo. Well, thank you. But I will continue my interest in the Global Hawks. I yield back. The Chairman. [Presiding.] Thank you. Mr. Bishop. Mr. Bishop. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Secretary, General, thank you for being here again. If I could be shameless at the very beginning, basically since Korea, this country has maintained air superiority, which is a fact we usually take for granted, which is too bad. In the present situation, when the United States wanted to show a show of force, it was missile defense, it was bombers, it was the F- 22 that was sent over there to illustrate the United States commitment. So much for those outside the military that told me that these were relics of the Cold War and we didn't need them in the future. Not that I am bitter. I still wish we still had 200 more of those F-22s to be flying around here. It also shows that the role of the Air Force is both significant and--I am as frustrated as others with not only of the impact of sequestration but the other two cuts to the military that took place in these last 5 years. It is the three cuts combined that have caused the significant problems that we now face. And each of those cuts was a difficult one to handle. So if I could ask you, General, just a couple of questions that are probably more parochial than anything else, I would appreciate it. General Welsh. Sure. Mr. Bishop. The Secretary of Defense was quoted in the press the other day as saying that--and he said this yesterday, as well--that we have to do some substantial reductions in our civilian workforce. Obviously, the air logistics complexes, we have a large civilian defense population. With AFCM's [Air Force Materiel Command] reduction in personnel over the last couple of years as well as the reorganization that took place last year, is it the contention that we still have a large number of civilian workers that could easily or should be reduced at our air defense depot sustainment programs or systems? General Welsh. Congressman, I will tell you that that is not my contention. I believe we have taken a look at the problem. I think what the Secretary of Defense has discussed, at least in the meetings where I have been in the room with him, is the need for us to take an honest look at the joint force of the future: Pick the essential capabilities the Department will need; look at everything, to include worst-case options if sequestration is in place at max impact for 10 years; and then come up with a realistic game plan for how we go from here to there. That move will require reductions in lots of areas. Mr. Bishop. All right. Thank you. I will try and get these last three in as quickly as I can. Once again, parochial, the same time. The FAA [Federal Aviation Administration] contract towers reduction has had an impact on maybe only a couple of bases. I think Congressman Fleming has Barksdale in Louisiana, and I have Hill, Utah, where the bases are within 3 miles of the airport. The airspace overlaps, and there is potential there for conflict if this actually goes through. I would simply like to ask if either of you have a problem with allowing your local base commanders to communicate safety concerns they may have with the FAA, either in letter or other kinds of communication forms. General Welsh. No, sir. And they have been doing that. Mr. Bishop. I thank you. And they have. Two other questions very quickly, if I could. You mentioned briefly in there the total force integration. Is it your contention that this so far has been a success? And do you have the intentions of continuing that concept in the future? Secretary Donley. Yes, it has been a success, and absolutely. Mr. Bishop. And this is probably the last one unless I can get more to sneak in here. Other than what Congresswoman Bordallo said about the Global Hawk, I agree with her. The last one is, General Hostage the other day talked about ranges, maintaining a couple of the long ranges but having smaller ranges being some kind of jeopardy as this kind of infrastructure, that we need it to be able to make sure that we can drop bombs properly. Would you just like to mention a couple of words about the significance of the range infrastructure that we have and its maintenance potential? General Welsh. We cannot train our force to be the best Air Force in the world without a range infrastructure. That is why we are bumping our funding back up from 25 percent to 75 percent for the infrastructure and the people that support it. We have to try and do even better in the future. Mr. Bishop. All right. Gentlemen, once again, thank you for being here. And I appreciate what the Air Force does to defend this Nation. And, obviously, in recent weeks, we have seen the significance of having a strong and powerful Air Force. I hope that we can maintain that going into the future. I yield back. The Chairman. Thank you. Mr. Courtney. Mr. Courtney. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Secretary Donley and General Welsh, first of all, I want to thank you for the work that you did in the last Congress regarding the force structure change with the Air National Guard. Obviously, there was a gap or a disagreement at the outset of that process with Congress. But, again, the final product in the defense authorization bill was obviously a very positive step. And I know that wasn't easy, and I just want to at least publicly thank you for that effort. And just to follow up on that, you know, the 2014 budget, which was released this week, I mean, can you comment about whether or not the resources are there to implement that force structure change for the Air Guard? Secretary Donley. Yes. Mr. Courtney. Okay. And, I mean, in Connecticut, we were pleased to see and we are looking forward for welcome eight C- 130s to the State. There are a couple issues that we are trying to work out in terms of that transition period. And, again, I hope, you know, we can continue with the collaboration, you know, that was the hallmark of last year to try and work through those issues, and I hope I can get that commitment from you here this morning. Secretary Donley. Absolutely, we will continue to work through those issues. In the white paper that I referenced earlier in my testimony, we have provided schedules for all the force structure adjustments. And we are happy to respond to any questions you or your staff may have on that. Mr. Courtney. Great. And as far as the C-130s are concerned, again, there was an issue regarding modernization, which, again, ended up getting referred to the Institute for Defense Analyses. And I was wondering if you have anything you can share with us this morning about where you see that headed and just the general issue of C-130 modernization, which is going to be an issue, I think, for the fleet. Secretary Donley. It is important to us, but I would offer that we have been trying to find ways to minimize the costs there as we get squeezed on the budget front. So we had a C-130 AMP [Avionics Modernization Program] program that you are probably familiar with, which was a broad Avionics Modernization Program for C-130s. It would have been a $2 billion effort. That was terminated, and we dropped back to something called an optimized CNS [Communication, Navigation, and Surveillance], navigation upgrades. That was about a $650 million program. We have terminated that, backed off even further. And this year we are proposing a minimum program, a minimized strategy, if you will, that will include only the FAA upgrades to the C-130s that are required to meet FAA requirements for the National Airspace System by 2020 and to meet other international FAA-equivalent standards. Mr. Courtney. Great. Well, thank you. Again, I want to, again, just end by applauding the work that you did with Congress last year, and look forward to continuing it this session. With that, I yield back. The Chairman. Thank you. Mr. Turner. Mr. Turner. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Secretary Donley, General Welsh, thank you for being here. I want to echo the statements of Rob Bishop concerning the importance of the Air Force as we look to the crisis that we are currently in. I think it absolutely illustrates the need for strong air superiority and air capabilities and for missile defense. And as chairman the Tactical Air and Land Subcommittee and, of course, the co-chair of the Air Force Caucus and with Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in my backyard and the 30,000 people who work inside the fence, who contribute every day to the national security, I know that you know that I appreciate what the Air Force mission is. And I want to commend General Wolfenbarger of Materiel Command at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base for her effort and leadership with the workforce at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, considering the difficult time of sequestration. She has raised the issue that sequestration, which I know both of you gentlemen know that I opposed, the effects that this has on individuals and that there are people who have kids in college, house payments to make, family vacations that are being cancelled, as you look to the almost 13,000 people at Wright- Patterson Air Force Base and the civilian workforce that would be facing furlough. So I appreciate your dedication and attention to those individuals as we go through the sequestration implementation. A few comments about the issue of sexual assault, which has unfortunately been one that the Air Force has had to deal with very frequently. I want to commend General Harding. He has done an excellent job on the Special Victims' Counsel Program as a result of legislation that came out of the House and this committee trying to provide victims with legal counsel. General Harding has, I believe, a model for DOD. And my co-chair, Niki Tsongas, and I of the Sexual Assault Prevention Caucus are very pleased with that. And, General Welsh, thank you for your support for the amendment of Article 60 as a result of General Franklin's, I believe, inappropriate and improper setting aside of a sexual assault conviction in the officer's court-martial conviction. Congresswoman Tsongas and I are working on language that would amend Article 60, and we think we have a good proposal that we appreciate, General Welsh, your willingness to work with us on your thoughts on that. Mr. Secretary, we have talked before about NASIC [National Air and Space Intelligence Center]. As we look to cuts in budgets and we look to sequestration, I am always concerned about the effect on our intel community. I believe that, you know, as we look to reorganizations, BRACs, sequestration, issues like that are always at risk. And I think you know that NASIC is a high performer and is critical to our intelligence community and certainly has played a significant role as we look to the issue of the threats of North Korea. I wondered if you might speak for a moment on the importance of NASIC's function and the Air Force's recognition that, as we go through this process, the importance to uphold NASIC. Secretary Donley. Well, NASIC is critical to our air and space intelligence enterprise. It provides not just good intelligence support to the Air Force and the joint team, but this combination of intelligence and technical support that is focused on aerospace matters is particularly important to the Air Force right now, and especially in the space domain and in the cyber domain as those areas grow in importance. So this is a very important asset for the United States Air Force. Mr. Turner. Great. Thank you. General Welsh, as we look to sequestration and the effect on our tactical fighter inventory, we have grave concerns as to what those impacts will be in the short term, long term, and also the effects of--as we look to inventory shortfalls, productions, increased costs later as we try to respond. If you could speak for a moment about the effects of sequestration on that production, I would appreciate it. General Welsh. Congressman, as you know, it affects us near-term, and clearly it will affect the cost of modernization and the cost of acquisition of new programs. Everything that delays a program like the F-35 will add unit cost over time; it will stretch the program out, which will add additional costs. I think our focus has to be to minimize that, which is the reason for some kind of predictable topline budget going forward which allows us to do the long-range planning we need to do to be able to do this the right way. Everybody understands that we are going to have to take cuts in the Department; we would just like to responsibly plan to get from point A to point Z. Mr. Turner. Thank you. And, gentlemen, as we look to sequestration, I would appreciate your articulating very clearly the impacts on our national security and how it affects our readiness. I know DOD was restrained previously from doing that. Unfortunately, the President, in his budget, as you know, when he stated he was going to give us a sequestration proposal, did not. There are things in here like ``have savings in Medicare as a result of eliminating waste, fraud, and abuse.'' This is not a proposal that could either go to the House or the Senate and be passed and be implemented in any way that would offset sequestration. I would appreciate you telling the Administration they need to come up with a real proposal. Thank you. The Chairman. Thank you. Ms. Tsongas. Ms. Tsongas. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. At the outset, I would like to echo the comments of Congressman Turner about the work that the Air Force is doing on victims' counsel, providing access to counsel. I do agree it is a model, and I appreciate all the work that General Harding has put into it. And we continue to look forward to working with you on the powers of the convening authority. But I want to thank you both for being here as part of the regular process. I am the daughter of an Air Force officer. He was a survivor of Pearl Harbor, went on to serve for 20 years. And I grew up on Air Force bases across this country and the world, and it was quite a life. And I believe it is vital for our committee to work with you both to make sure we are providing the very best services for our airmen and fielding peerless technologies to defend our Nation. Clearly, as one of the country's preeminent high-tech clusters of industry and academia, my State, Massachusetts, plays a critical role with this latter responsibility. So to get to an issue that is close to home, my office has been working with the committee for the past year to look for a path forward for a $450 million enhanced-use lease renovation project for MIT's [Massachusetts Institute of Technology] Lincoln Labs, which is located on the grounds of Hanscom Air Force Base. Lincoln, as I am sure you know, is one of the Nation's very finest federally funded research and development centers. And since the height of the Cold War, Lincoln has led the way in long-term defense technology development as well as rapid system prototyping and demonstration. But, unfortunately, parts of the facility have run into obsolescence issues. I view this as a critical project to keeping Lincoln Lab on the cutting edge of technology and to make sure it is able to continue to work to confront the Nation's most complex technological challenges. I appreciate the work both the Air Force and the Office of the Secretary of Defense have been doing to develop a path forward on this lease. But I would ask that you put a priority on this project and that you keep me informed should you have any issues or should you require the assistance of me or the committee. We included language in the last year's defense conference report urging the proposal to move forward. We have to remember there are no taxpayer dollars associated with this. This is a commitment that MIT is making. And yet it has been too long in the making. So my question is a very simple one: Can I count on both of your support with this request, that we work on this and resolve it as expeditiously as possible? Secretary Donley. Ma'am, I am aware of this problem. I don't have a solution for you today. As far as I can tell, this has to do with the scoring mechanisms that are out there, which are prejudicial, in the sense that the United States Air Force cannot stand behind a loan without having it be scored by OMB [Office of Management and Budget]. And if it has to be scored by OMB, it is the equivalent of a MILCON project. In other words, it goes on our books as a liability in that context, as a cost. We will continue to work those issues with OMB to try to find a way forward. I am going up there in 2 weeks and expect to get briefed on this project. I understand the larger scheme of the requirement and the need to find a way forward. Ms. Tsongas. Thank you. As I have learned in life, where there is a will, there is a way. So let's harness the will so we can find the way. Another question, quickly. Another concern around Hanscom Air Force Base is that fundamentally there is a lack of appreciation for Hanscom's mission among many in the Air Force and that some of the misconceptions about Hanscom could be held toward other technical facilities as well. By the Air Force's own admission, Hanscom's C4ISR [Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance] acquisitions portfolio is the most complex in the service. It seems to me that the best way to better appreciate that is if I could invite you, General Welsh, up to Massachusetts to come to Hanscom with me so that we can begin to better understand really the extraordinary offerings at Hanscom and the extraordinary work it does on behalf of the Air Force. Could I invite to you come up there at your convenience? General Welsh. I am honored that you would ask me. I would love to do that. Ms. Tsongas. Great. Thank you so much. I yield back. The Chairman. Thank you. Mr. Conaway. Mr. Conaway. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Gentlemen, thank you for being here today. General Welsh, I would be remiss if I didn't pass on the fact that Carol Ann Bonds from San Angelo, Texas, sings your praises every single time I am around her. So you have done something to pull the wool over her eyes someway. I am not sure how that is working. General Welsh. Thank you. Mr. Conaway. As I spoke with Secretary Hagel yesterday, I am still keenly interested in the Air Force providing me and the rest of the taxpayers of the United States with auditable financial statements, systems that are sustainably auditable over the infinite horizon kind of thing. Can you talk to us a little about the struggles you are going to face with all these budget cuts, all these challenges to resources? And one of the easiest things to cut sometimes would be something like this, that we still have to move it forward in spite of everything else that is going on. So can you talk to me a little about where you are currently standing? Secretary Donley. We do have to continue to move this forward as a priority. I will say that it is more complicated as we make midyear changes and budgets go up and down and we focus on--in the Department of Defense and in the Air Force, we are spending more and more time on shorter and shorter distances in front of us. So we are very focused on just executing fiscal year 2013 right now, and a lot of other work has been pushed off. But to your specific question about audit readiness, we are still working this. We have had some progress. We have had some challenging aspects to this. Last year, we put out a bid for contractor support to get independent auditors to help us work through our auditable statements before they are submitted in their final form at the end of 2014 and beyond, to help us get ahead of this and get a professional look at what we are doing. That contract was protested and has been under protest, so we have lost some time there. But we have extended the DEAMS [Defense Enterprise Accounting and Management System], our new budgeting system at Scott Air Force Base, which is getting off the ground there. We did get a clean opinion recently on missile components, part of our enterprise. And I think this was the first time that a part of DOD's investment portfolio had gotten a clean opinion. So there has been some progress, but this is still uphill work for us. There is lots to do. Mr. Conaway. Well, I recognize that. And just understand that we are going to continue to push where we can. Under the rubric, or under the category of if you are faithful to small things, you will be faithful to big things, my mail budget out of my congressional office has shrunk considerably because I quit using all the slick, four-color, five-color things and just try to communicate, trying to trim it back wherever I could. I just got handed the fiscal-year- something rollout. And we have pretty slick documents here that I don't know what it cost to print them or prepare the data. But as you look at trimming costs wherever you can, these are the kinds of things that I think can--don't get read, quite frankly, and are just--the taxpayer could put that--you, I think, could put taxpayer money in better places than on these slick documents, some of which are just duplicates of things that have already been done. So I appreciate your commitment. General Welsh, I don't know if you had a comment. I need your leadership, as well, on this audit thing. And getting a few comments from you would be helpful to the team you lead to make sure that I and they know how committed you and Secretary Donley are to this auditability thing. General Welsh. Congressman, I think we are on a well- designed and aggressive path to getting where we need to be by 2014. As you well know, the availability of IT [information technology] systems that allow us to expose and share data across system and functional lines is the biggest shortfall we have. It is a big shortfall. And there are an awful lot of people working awfully hard to figure out how to sneakernet and manually overcome that while we develop the IT systems in the future. This is a huge task. We are working it as hard as we can. Mr. Conaway. And you are committed to---- General Welsh. Absolutely. Mr. Conaway. All right. Thank you, General. Secretary, thank you. I yield back. The Chairman. Thank you. Mr. Johnson. Mr. Johnson. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Gentlemen, what are the costs, the Air Force costs, of forward-deploying nuclear weapons in Europe? General Welsh. Congressman, there are several types of costs that go into this. There are operations and maintenance costs. There is the cost of maintaining the storage facilities. There are the costs of the people that you train and station overseas to protect those facilities. There are the flying-hour costs to keep aircrews certified in the mission itself. There is the cost to do integrated training with NATO [North Atlantic Treaty Organization] because it is an integrated mission inside the NATO structure. And then, of course, there are the costs over time of upgrading infrastructure, like the weapons storage vaults, upgrading weapons systems, upgrading command and control systems to support it. I couldn't even begin to give you a number off the top of my head that incorporates all of that, but it is expensive over time. Mr. Johnson. Uh-huh. Approximately, per year, are we talking about, what, $5 billion? $10 billion? Neighborhood. General Welsh. Yeah, Congressman, I would have to get back to you with that, unless the boss knows a number. There are so many pieces of that are in different places, that we would have to pull that together. I would be glad to try and do that and give you a ballpark figure, though. [The information referred to can be found in the Appendix on page 79.] Mr. Johnson. Okay. You would not have anything to add to that, Mr. Secretary? Secretary Donley. No. Mr. Johnson. All right. Well, what about cyberspace and the Air Force's ability to operate within that space? Is the Air Force currently addressing cyberspace as a part of its defense capabilities? Secretary Donley. Absolutely. This has been part of our force structure for some period of time. And it has been about 4 years since we established 24th Air Force, which is the Air Force component of U.S. Cyber Command, which reports to Strategic Command. So we have had a dedicated number at Air Force to the cyber work. And there are other cyber capabilities that we provide to the DOD and joint community that are considered very high-value assets. This is one area where it is not clear how big the cyber workforce is going to be in the future. We all face manpower constraints, and it is one where technology and expertise plays a very big role. And so we are not quite sure yet what the joint requirement will be or what the upper limit requirements will be for Air Force personnel and force structure. The chief, I think, has a little bit. Mr. Johnson. Are you recruiting and training airmen with cyber skills, and are you retaining them after the training? Secretary Donley. Absolutely. There is cyber training at three or four levels in our Air Force, from basic introductory to journeyman to highly expert network warfare kinds of training, takes place across our Air Force. We have been able to retain airmen, generally. Where we have had more difficulty in doing that at some of the more highly skilled levels that are prone to having airmen leave and go to work in the private sector, we have extended enlistments and we have added dollars to our personnel accounts to induce airmen to stay longer to provide extra benefits and extra pay, if you will, to keep them longer. Mr. Johnson. Is that something that you need any help from this committee with? Secretary Donley. If we do, we will be sure and tell you. Mr. Johnson. All right. Thank you very much. I yield back. The Chairman. Thank you. Dr. Fleming. Dr. Fleming. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And thank you, gentlemen, for being here today. And Mr. Bishop opened up the question of the long-range strike bomber, and so, Mr. Secretary and General Welsh, I want to return there. The home of Global Strike Command is in my district. I was very pleased to hear you say very supportive things about the fact that we need to continue funding the development and, in fact, increase funding for development of this valuable program. I didn't get a chance to ask this question, though, to Secretary of Defense Hagel. Can you give me an idea of, does he share, Mr. Secretary, your feelings about the long-range strike bomber and the need to develop it? Secretary Donley. I would say over the course of the last month the Secretary and I have not had an opportunity to talk specifically about the long-range strike bomber. I believe he understands the value of this capability. It got support in the Defense Strategic Guidance, which remains an anchor for the Department as we consider future alternatives and options going forward. So I believe he supports the program, but I have had no direct conversations with him on that. Dr. Fleming. Okay. Yes. One of the issues that pops up at times is this nuclear triad, which, of course, has been a fundamental part of peace through strength and nuclear deterrence. Mr. Secretary and General Welsh, both, what is your feeling about maintaining and continuing the concept of a nuclear triad? Secretary Donley. Well, I would just offer and would like the chief to chime in, as well, with his views. My view is that, even if the nuclear enterprise gets smaller, it is important that we remain committed to, we take advantage of the diversity of the nuclear triad. So each, the land-based, the sea-based, and the bomber- based, leg of this triad has operational advantages and disadvantages. And our task and our opportunity with the triad is to complicate an aggressor's problem by presenting so many problems and challenges that no one would contemplate using nuclear weapons against the United States. And I think the triad helps fulfill that. Dr. Fleming. Extremely well put. Yeah, General Welsh. General Welsh. I would just like to add to that by saying, in operational terms, what the triad gives us is flexibility, responsiveness, and survivability. And those three things together, I think, are kind of the strength of our nuclear deterrence posture. Dr. Fleming. Obviously, deterrence is the real bottom line to nuclear weapons. We have them and we can deliver them so that we never have to do that. And, certainly, I agree with you; creating serious problems for potential adversaries in that arena is really our goal here. What about the ALCMs [air-launched cruise missile]? What is our follow-on to our current ALCM, which is, of course, the modern system by which we deliver both conventional and nuclear weapons from our bombers? Secretary Donley. Well, our plan is to sustain the ALCMs through about 2030. There is a follow-on program, the long- range standoff missile, which is early in development and is part of the nuclear modernization plan that has been described to Congress in the past. Dr. Fleming. Uh-huh. Anything else to add to that, General Welsh? General Welsh. No, sir. Dr. Fleming. Okay. Great. With that, thank you, gentlemen, and thank you for your service. I yield back, Mr. Chairman. The Chairman. Thank you. It looks like votes are imminent, and we still have several Members that haven't had the opportunity to ask questions. We will try to get one or two in, and I think we can still make the first vote. And there are three votes, so we would have to have a short recess. But I want to ask, any of the Members, will you be coming back? One, two--okay. Mr. Secretary, General, if you could be patient with us. Let me ask again, will any of you return after the series of votes that don't get to ask your questions first? Okay. Then we will come back after the recess. Mr. Gallego? No questions? Mr. Gallego. I am happy ask after or submit them. The Chairman. It is your turn now, if you want to ask. Mr. Gallego. Mr. Chairman, I am happy to submit them for the record, as well. The Chairman. Okay. Then, Mr. Coffman. Mr. Coffman. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Secretary Donley, our national security space capabilities provide a tremendous advantage to the warfighter, whether it is GPS [Global Positioning System] signals navigating bombs to targets or missile warning satellites keeping watch around the globe 24/7. We invest billions in these capabilities. We rely on our space launch infrastructure to provide us assured access to space and these capabilities. The Air Force's launch program, Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle, has a tremendous record of over 50 consecutive successful launches. Can you describe what the Air Force's plans are in fiscal year 2014 and beyond in regards to maintaining the space launch capability? Secretary Donley. Sir, I think we are very well-positioned in that area. As you described, EELV [Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle] has been a very successful program. Our concern has been that it has been growing in costs. We now have potential alternatives to that that are coming along through a group of companies that are described as new entrants into space launch. Working with NASA [National Aeronautics and Space Administration] and the National Reconnaissance Office, the intelligence community, we have crafted a strategy for how to bring in new entrants and certify them in space launch. At the same time we have been doing that, we have been working with ULA [United Launch Alliance] to drive down the costs of EELV and have developed an acquisition strategy to do that through block buys. And so we are getting--I think we are poised to get the best for the warfighter and the best for the taxpayer at the same time. So we will have block buys of EELV for the next few years. And then in the midteens, there will be an opportunity for new entrants to compete. And we will have the capability, subject to their certification and their readiness to compete, we will be able to have EELV and new entrants competing for launch capability. Mr. Coffman. Great. Let me just clarify, in your view, should the EELV launch capability contract be phased out or continue? Secretary Donley. There is a separate contract, I think it is referred to as the ELC [EELV Launch Capability] contract, which involves ULA support at the east and west range. And we recognize that this is an additional cost in EELV that needs to be worked out in order to create a level playing field between ULA and the new entrants when we get into a competitive environment. So we are looking at how to work out that ELC contract in the context of creating a level playing field. Mr. Coffman. Okay. Just a couple points on your budget and sequestration. You know, obviously, your hands are tied. But we are going to rely on you, in part, for your professional advice, General Welsh and Secretary Donley, on how to reprioritize these cuts if, in fact, these deficit-reduction targets are with us to stay. And so a couple of the things I would like to look at are, if we are going to do a base realignment and closure commission and if--and I rely on you. If you say we have surplus capacity that is driving unnecessary costs, I am going to support you on that. But I really strongly believe that--and I think that there was language passed in the previous National Defense Authorization Act for you to look at foreign--I mean, overseas basing, as well. I really think that the notion of, you know, maintaining permanent forward-deployed bases where, you know, we have all the infrastructure there to support the military families and the schools, dependent schools, and all those things, as opposed to, you know, doing joint military exercises to demonstrate our support for our allies and rotational forces for shorter periods of time, moving units in and out, I think, is a lot more cost-effective. And especially when we are looking at closing bases down in the continental United States, I think it is unfair not to take that strong look in terms of our overseas bases. Would any of you like to comment on that? General Welsh. Congressman, I absolutely think we need to be taking a hard look at overseas infrastructure. We are in the process of doing that right now, both within the Air Force and in conjunction the Department of Defense, which is taking a broader look, and we are feeding that discussion. I don't think we will find that end game that you can bring everything home. I think the idea that everything can be done rotationally---- Mr. Coffman. Sure. General Welsh [continuing]. Is a nonstarter. Mr. Coffman. Nobody is saying that. General Welsh. But I think there are opportunities for consolidation and closures in areas in Europe, for example. I think we should do that. We are doing that this year to make it very clear so that we have done that before we ask for a round of BRAC in 2015. Mr. Coffman. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I yield back. The Chairman. Thank you very much. Mr. Enyart. Mr. Enyart. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Good morning, Mr. Secretary, General Welsh. General Welsh, in the fiscal year 2013 through 2017 FYDP [Future Years Defense Plan], Scott Air Force Base, which happens to be in my district, was positioned for three construction projects, two of which are the building of a TRANSCOM [Transportation Command] mission planning center for fiscal year 2016 at a cost of $76 million, and in addition to the 126th Refueling Wing, a squadron operations facility, that also was fiscal year 2016, at a cost of $11.4 million. Now, as you are well aware, Scott is, of course, the headquarters for TRANSCOM as well as AMC [Air Mobility Command] and other critically important missions. And the service they provide there to our Nation is critical, particularly considering the important work being done to transition our forces out of Afghanistan and enabling our military and, indeed, our Nation's global reach. Yet, in the President's new budget, these projects have been removed. Can you explain to me why they were a priority last year but not a priority this year, according to DOD? General Welsh. Congressman, I can't. I will ask the Secretary if he can or I will take it for the record and get you an answer very quickly. Secretary Donley. Happy to do that for the record. [The information referred to can be found in the Appendix on page 79.] Mr. Enyart. Thank you. I would yield back the balance of my time and submit the balance of my questions in writing. The Chairman. Thank you. Mr. Scott. Mr. Scott. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Gentlemen, thank you for being here. And you spoke briefly about the JSTAR, Secretary Donley. Obviously, that is in my district. I am very familiar with that platform. It is time that we either have to re-engine or replace. They are aircraft that continually fly. It is a mission that is extremely important to the Air Force and our national security. And I want to work with you in any way I can to make sure that we do what the Air Force needs there. My question is about the preferred approach to modernizing these aircrafts. It is my understanding that you prefer to replace it with a new platform. Is that correct? And could you speak to that briefly? Secretary Donley. Yes. Mr. Scott. And so---- Secretary Donley. But right now that--the funds to do that are not available. Mr. Scott. Yes, sir. Just turning briefly to weapons system sustainment. We have three depots left in the Air Force. Obviously, aircraft is what we do in the Air Force, and we have to maintain a lot of them. Are you comfortable with the current requirement that the Air Force maintain the three depot strategy? Secretary Donley. I am. I think the Air Force is about right-sized at three depots. They are all very busy and have plenty to do. I am concerned in the near term about the impacts of sequestration---- Mr. Scott. Yes, sir. Secretary Donley [continuing]. Which will defer about 60 aircraft, about 35 engines, and will create some backlogs for us moving forward. Mr. Scott. Yes, sir. I am extremely concerned about that, as well, and want to work with you any way I can. I hope to have both of you at Robins Air Force Base and then in Moody Air Force Base, as well, in Georgia. I represent both of those areas. And, gentlemen, thank you for your service to the country, and thank you for your time. I yield the remainder of my time back. The Chairman. Thank you very much. We have 1 minute left. Mr. Nugent, if you want to take 1 minute? Mr. Nugent. What I will do is give my question to the record, you know, if they would answer. We appreciate your time. Obviously, having been in the blue, we appreciate what you do, both of you, in seeing you just recently. So my question will come back in a form in writing to you. Thank you so very much for your service. The Chairman. Thank you very much. I just don't want to see you miss the vote, and we have 2 minutes left to get there. And Mr. Langevin also had a question, and there may be some others that would submit for the record. But I don't want to have you sitting here and then have them not come back. So thank you very much for being here. Thank you for your comments. I think this has been well worthwhile. And this committee will stand adjourned. [Whereupon, at 11:46 a.m., the committee was adjourned.] ======================================================================= A P P E N D I X April 12, 2013 ======================================================================= PREPARED STATEMENTS SUBMITTED FOR THE RECORD April 12, 2013 ======================================================================= Statement of Hon. Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon Chairman, House Committee on Armed Services Hearing on Fiscal Year 2014 National Defense Authorization Budget Request from the Department of the Air Force April 12, 2013 The committee meets today to receive testimony on the President's fiscal year 2014 budget request for the Department of the Air Force. I am pleased to welcome Secretary Donley and General Welsh. It takes great leadership to guide people through the kind of uncertainty we have been experiencing, and our Nation is fortunate to have you as our Nation's flight leads. Thank you for your outstanding service as you tackle the incredible national security issues we face. After reading your budget materials, I was struck by the fact that in fiscal year 2013, your Active end strength was 329,500 men and women, a number which makes the Air Force about the same size it was when it became a separate component in 1947, and yet the world is certainly a different place today. Your fiscal year 2014 request reduces end strength to 327,600. I worry about this, especially as we consider the strategic implications of recent events on the Korean Peninsula where airpower plays such a critical role in assuring our national security interests. As you say in the budget materials, you are attempting to trade size for quality, but quantity often has a quality all of its own, particularly in the vast expanse of the Pacific. You know, when Admiral Locklear was here a few weeks ago, he pointed out to us that if you take the size of the Pacific, you could put all the land mass in that space and still have room left over for, I believe he said, Africa and Australia. Pretty big area. At some point we almost recognize that the assumption of mission risk will be too great. I hope that you will highlight your concerns regarding this issue in your testimony and provide more detail about where you see this trend going into the future. I also hope you will discuss the recent announcement at unit standdowns across the Air Force and its implications for force readiness. You know, I think this committee is well aware of these problems, but I don't think the whole Congress is, and I am convinced that the Nation really doesn't understand the severity of the cuts that we have been imposing. It could take years to recover from this decision because your people won't be able to train. This complicates an already seemingly untenable situation after nearly two decades of procurement, reductions, or deferrals for the Air Force and the resulting risks of maintaining an aged fleet of aircraft. With pilots not training, depot maintenance not being done, and the continued reduction of new aircraft procurement, we must ask ourselves where is the breaking point, and what we need to do to prevent it, how much risk is too much. I am encouraged by the request for the Air Force's three most important modernization programs, the KC-46A tanker, the F-35A, and the Long-Range Strike Bomber, but those programs are budgeted to stay on track, but the effects of sequestration in fiscal year 2013 could result in a potential $1.6 billion bow wave in research, development tests and evaluation, and a $1.3 billion bow wave in procurement. The fiscal year 2014 budget request does not provide any margin to repay programs that will be sourced to pay for critical readiness in fiscal year 2013. Air Force modernization cannot wait for the next big uptick in defense spending. We are in a difficult time, and we must make hard choices. Your testimony today will go a long way to help this committee and others in Congress make the right choices. Statement of Hon. Adam Smith Ranking Member, House Committee on Armed Services Hearing on Fiscal Year 2014 National Defense Authorization Budget Request from the Department of the Air Force April 12, 2013 I think the chairman has summed up quite well the challenges that you face. And we are all familiar with the impacts of sequestration, or I should say we are familiar with the fact that it did make things very difficult. The particular impacts are still being sorted out, I mean, literally on a day- by-day, if not hour-by-hour basis by all of our Services, and, of course, outside of the Department of Defense all aspects of the Government that are impacted by sequestration, and that is the great challenge. Given the defense threat environment that we have out there, which is not shrinking, it may be shifting and changing, but it is certainly not shrinking, how do we meet those threats? How do we budget? How do we plan in this uncertain environment? We have heard some about some of the changes the Air Force had made, the air wings, bomber wings that you have had to stand down, and I think what we are going to be most interested in throughout this hearing is how you plan to manage through that process. Again, I will just take this opportunity to emphasize that as a Congress, we need to stop sequestration. However we put it together, whatever the agreement is, mindless across-the-board cuts is simply the wrong way to run a government, you know. We can find ways to save that money, gosh, even within the discretionary budget a lot smarter than we are doing so right now, and I think a sense of urgency is simply not where it should be with this Congress to fix that problem. But we look forward to your testimony, Secretary Donley and General Welsh. You have served this country very, very well. We appreciate your hard work, and please let us know how you are dealing with this challenge and what we might be able to do to help. [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] ======================================================================= WITNESS RESPONSES TO QUESTIONS ASKED DURING THE HEARING April 12, 2013 ======================================================================= RESPONSE TO QUESTION SUBMITTED BY MR. ENYART Secretary Donley. The Air Force is carefully positioning our most urgent military construction requirements in the Future Year's Defense Program. While there remains a requirement for the projects in question at Scott Air Force Base, there is not enough funding to accommodate all of the Air Force's requirements within the current Air Force Budget. We will strive to include these projects in a future President's Budget as funds are available and priorities permit. We look forward to your continued support for military construction projects and other critical Air Force priorities through the fiscal year 2014 budget cycle. [See page 32.] ______ RESPONSE TO QUESTION SUBMITTED BY MR. JOHNSON General Welsh. The current amount funded by the Air Force to support forward deployed nuclear weapons in Europe is: ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal Year ($M) FY13 FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FYDP (FY14-18) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Officer 7.0 7.2 7.2 7.4 7.5 7.8 37.1 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Enlisted 64.9 66.2 67.8 69.1 70.8 71.8 345.7 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- O&M 2.4 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.6 2.6 12.7 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Weapon Storage Sys. 2.4 2.3 2.4 2.4 2.4 2.4 11.9 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Transportation Costs 2.9 2.9 2.9 3.0 3.0 3.0 14.8 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total 79.6 81.1 82.8 84.4 86.3 87.6 422.2 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- [See page 27.] ? ======================================================================= QUESTIONS SUBMITTED BY MEMBERS POST HEARING April 12, 2013 ======================================================================= QUESTION SUBMITTED BY MR. MILLER Mr. Miller. The GAO High Risk Report identified ``Potential gaps in environmental satellite data beginning as early as 2014 . . . have led to concerns that future weather forecasts and warnings--will be less accurate and timely.'' Is the Air Force considering commercial data purchases from American companies as an alternative to some sensors on the next- generation DMSP satellite to reduce cost and as a way of mitigating this ``data gap?'' The Space Commercialization Act established incentives to build new American companies to provide military and commercial space capabilities. Are there additional authorities Congress could add to the Space Commercialization Act authorities to assist the Air Force in incentivizing American commercial sources of weather data as another viable alternative for the DOD follow-on satellite program? Secretary Donley. As part of the ongoing Department of Defense Space Based Environmental Monitoring Analysis of Alternatives, we considered commercial data purchases from American companies as an alternative to sensors on the next-generation Defense Meteorological Satellite Program satellite. Once the Analysis of Alternatives (AoA) concludes its analysis, the Department will look for the most affordable means to deliver those needed capabilities, including commercial data purchase. At this time, the Air Force has no recommendations for additional authorities to the Space Commercialization Act. We will reevaluate our assessment as required based upon the outcome of the ongoing AoA. ______ QUESTION SUBMITTED BY MR. LOBIONDO Mr. LoBiondo. We have been told by U.S. Transportation Command that some of the C-5 and C-17 overflight hours can be attributed to a lack of availability of certain aircraft in the Civil Reserve Air Fleet. What is the Air Force doing to preserve the service life of its aircraft by shifting B747 eligible cargo to the CRAF carriers and flying the C-17/C-5s only for outsize/oversize cargo? Secretary Donley. The programmed flying hours we execute today are based on steady-state, non-mobilized scenarios that for the most part assume only voluntary participation from the Reserve Component. C-17/C- 5 over-flight is a direct result of organic oversize/outsize capabilities and access to hostile environments that the Civil Reserve Air Fleet (CRAF) cannot support. When U.S. Transportation Command receives an air movement request, they flow the request through a lengthy logic process to determine the most appropriate asset to accomplish the task. The logic process is designed to optimize the participation of our Commercial Augmentation and CRAF partners. CRAF augments organic airlift, but we utilize CRAF carriers to the maximum extent possible. All Department of Defense (DOD) commercial missions are conducted in compliance with the Fly America and Fly CRAF Acts. The ``Fly CRAF'' statute (49 USC 41106) requires that DOD contracts for air transportation of passengers and cargo on ``CRAF-eligible'' requirements be awarded to CRAF carriers if ``available'' (for flights within the United States and between the United States and a foreign country) or ``reasonably available'' (between two non-U.S. points). ______ QUESTIONS SUBMITTED BY MR. LANGEVIN Mr. Langevin. Mr. Secretary, I continue to be concerned about the overall strength and size of the Nation's cybersecurity workforce. What type of education and training is the Air Force implementing to recruit and provide our young airmen with the cyber skills they need to make up the new teams that General Alexander announced during a recent Intelligence, Emerging Threats and Capabilities Subcommittee hearing? What is the Air Force doing to encourage them to stay in uniform to maintain the Services' advantage? Secretary Donley. Air Force cyberspace training programs develop Total Force cyberspace professionals from numerous career fields. Core training includes Undergraduate Cyberspace Training and Cyberspace Defense Operations at Keesler Air Force Base (AFB), Mississippi, and Intermediate Network Warfare Training at Hurlburt AFB, Florida. We have also developed an Intelligence Cyber Analyst course at Goodfellow AFB, Texas, to train our digital network analysts. This analyst training is complemented with a six-month follow on Joint Cyber Analysis Course at Pensacola Naval Air Station, Florida. Cyber personnel attend further joint cyberspace and related courses based upon position requirements and work roles. In addition, the Air Force Institute of Technology at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, conducts graduate-level cyber curricula and professional continuing education. Growth and change is constant in the cyberspace domain, and these schools adjust as technology and tactics evolve. Currently, retention for Airmen in most cyberspace career fields is healthy. Where we have challenges (e.g., digital network analysts), we have increased the use of assignment availability codes to ensure mission continuity and tour stability. We have also established active duty service commitments to ensure a return on training investments. Furthermore, the Selective Reenlistment Bonus (SRB) program is one of the Air Force's most flexible and responsive force management tools. It provides monetary incentive to retain existing members in critical skills that have low retention and/or low manning, as well as entices Airmen from less critical skills to retrain into critical career fields receiving SRBs. Cyberspace Airmen have multiple opportunities to advance in their careers. They are deliberately force managed to acquire breadth in their career fields and depth in the cyberspace field. For example, certain specialties will serve consecutive operations tours in cyberspace positions at different locations to build depth as they progress through their career. This experience is coupled with continuing professional cyberspace education to build cyberspace experts. Mr. Langevin. Mr. Secretary, as we negotiate these challenging budgetary times, we must attempt to preserve the investments needed to succeed in the future, even as we deal with the constraints of the present. In particular, in your view, are we adequately protecting the investments in advanced research and development, such as directed energy, IT, materials, and other fields that we will depend upon to maintain technological superiority in the future, as well as investments in advanced education for the officers and airmen that will become the leaders who must cope with future challenges that we cannot yet envision? Secretary Donley. Yes. The fiscal year 2014 President's Budget reflects the Air Force's commitment to protecting science and technology funding as a share of our total resources. This includes investments in advanced research and development in many areas including basic research, directed energy, information technology, cyber, materials, aerospace systems, human effectiveness, sensors, munitions, and space. Today's strategic environment presents a broad range of threats and an unpredictable set of challenges, ranging from non-state actors to nuclear armed nations. We must continue to invest in our science and technology base to ensure that the future balance of power remains in our favor. To maintain an airpower advantage, we must ensure that we remain the most technically proficient, best-educated, and best-trained air force in the world. Changing trends in technology and a dynamic threat environment dictate that we reserve resources for advanced academic degrees in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM), nuclear, and cyber education. These developmental educational requirements are necessary to ensure the development of future capabilities. As such, these educational programs will be protected to the extent possible. Mr. Langevin. Mr. Secretary, the U.S. Air Force announced late last year that certified New Entrants would be allowed to compete along with ULA for up to 14 rocket cores through FY17. Given that the incumbent provider currently receives over $1.2B annually in cost-plus payments under the Launch Capability contract line, how does the Air Force intend to ensure that the competition will occur with a level playing field when the incumbent competes against New Entrants? What actions will the Air Force take to ensure that the incumbent does not offer artificially low prices in the competition, given that the Government is providing payments for all of its fixed costs? Secretary Donley. The specific method in which the current incumbent Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicles (EELV) Launch Capability (ELC) and EELV Launch Services (ELS) costs will be competed with new entrants has yet to be determined, but will be addressed in the source selection plan. The details of the competition are being developed and will ensure the best value for the Government among all certified providers and will be conducted in accordance with Federal Acquisition Regulations. Mr. Langevin. The Launch Capability cost-plus contract structure was instituted in 2006 as a measure to ensure ``assured access'' for the Government by maintaining the industrial base capacity of the only remaining domestic company capable of conducting space launch. However, as the Air Force recognized by opening launches to competition, there now exist new American providers in the market, providing redundancy and lowering costs. Once multiple providers are competing for all launches in the program, does the DOD have a plan to phase out the ELC cost-plus contract after the current round of acquisitions? Secretary Donley and General Welsh. Given that the Air Force and, to some extent, the National Reconnaissance Office currently fund infrastructure and other facility support costs for the incumbent provider, can you help us understand why the funding of fixed costs requires a cost-plus contract? What requirements are unknown? The Phase 1 Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicles (EELV) Launch Capability (ELC) efforts will continue under the cost plus incentive fee (CPIF) construct. The EELV program requires operational flexibility to meet its National Security Space (NSS) mission. ELC provides the program flexibility to manage changes to mission requirements without requests for equitable adjustments or schedule penalties. Potential unknown requirements include launch slips due to satellite vehicle acquisition issues, first time integration delays, and anomaly resolution from a previous mission. The Air Force is examining options to restructure ELC to allocate appropriately the discrete and unambiguous costs to the launch vehicle and each individual payload customer. Our plan is to incorporate these adjustments into the Phase 1 contract and consider them for future acquisition phases of the program. Mr. Langevin. General, in your view, what must the Air Force do next in order to ensure the total force--the Active, Guard, and Reserve--is coordinating the right cyber effects? Specifically, can you speak to the interactions of how the Guard, such as the 102nd Network Warfare Squadron in Rhode Island, can interact with the Air Force to support the global fight in cyberspace? General Welsh. The sudden growth in demand levied on all Services based on increased dependence on cyberspace and emerging threat profiles requires cooperation and innovative approaches to capitalizing on expertise across the Total Force. Proper balance across the Total Force will ensure sustained ability to meet mission requirements today and in the future. The Air Force already relies heavily on Guard and Reserve cyber units and has integrated them into its operations run by the 24th Air Force. For example, the Cyber Command Readiness Inspections conducted by the 102nd Network Warfare Squadron (NWS) (Rhode Island Air National Guard (ANG)) are a key pillar of the Air Force's network defense posture, and are tasked and tracked by the 624th Operations Center at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. The Air Force leverages the Guard to fulfill its commitment to provide forces to U.S. Cyber Command's (USCC) new Cyber Mission Force construct. This construct will be the primary means through which USCC defends the Nation in and through cyberspace, and it integrates cyber effects to meet the combatant commanders' requirements. The 166th NWS (Delaware ANG), 175th NWS (Maryland ANG), and 262nd NWS (Washington ANG) augment active duty forces to meet the demand for these cyber teams. We plan to further develop this construct to determine the optimal integration of the Total Force into USCC's Cyber Mission Force. The Total Force Task Force (TF2) is exploring the integration of the Total Force into USCC's Cyber Mission Force. The Air Force also partners with the Air Force Reserve (AFR) in multiple cyber missions including cyberspace defense, cyberspace security, and cyberspace command and control. AFR is an integrated part of the Air Force's commitment to USCC. The Air Force Personnel Center and AFR are working together to identify the missions which best fit AFR strengths. Currently, AFR believes that the missions of cyberspace vulnerability assessment, cyberspace intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance, and offensive cyberspace operations are well-suited for the AFR. These missions require a high level of experience that are best suited to AFR's strengths of retaining highly skilled personnel, low turn-over, and allowing members to leverage their civilian experience. Mr. Langevin. General, are you confident in the ability of our networks, sensors, and datalinks to operate in the complex cyber and electromagnetic environment likely to be a part of any future anti- access/area denial battlespace, and are you satisfied with your ability to train to cope with such challenges? What can we do to help the Air Force train as part of the joint force to operate in such highly contested environments? General Welsh. The ideas behind anti-access/area denial are not new. Adversaries have tried to keep each other out of areas since the beginning of warfare. But what is new is that our adversaries (state and non-state actors) can challenge us in the air, at sea, in space, and on land simultaneously. They can use cyberspace independently as well as to enhance attacks everywhere. Our operations will likely be heavily and comprehensively contested--something that we have not faced in decades. Meeting these challenges will require new capabilities and tactics so that we can conduct missions across the range of military operations. Together with the other Services, we are aggressively preparing to operate in this future environment by investing in and exercising new capabilities and tactics. I am confident that we can do this with our planned investments, enhanced by the innovation of our Airmen. This will help us meet our strategic mission to project power in even the most challenging and contested environments. Future adversary strategies could include both cyberspace and electromagnetic attacks to disrupt and deny our networks, sensors, and data links. We are working to field systems that seamlessly exchange information across all joint platforms, sensors, and weapons in a heavily contested environment. We will not be satisfied until we have this infrastructure in place and have trained combat forces who can conduct effective kinetic and non-kinetic fires against the most capable adversaries, in the most challenging environments. This will enable our Air Force, as part of joint forces, to provide an integrated and war-winning response. The Air Force recognizes the importance of developing capabilities and tactics, techniques, and procedures to operate in contested environments. The Air-Sea Battle concept was developed to meet the challenges of operating in current and future contested environments under heavily challenged conditions. Through implementation of this concept, the Air Force is partnered with our sister Services to explore the development of advanced capabilities and tactics in order to prevail now and in the future. This effort involves the integration of capabilities in the air, at sea, and on land, and includes cyber and the electromagnetic environment. We are also actively involved in integrating these capabilities into future exercises, including both the Air Force's future capabilities and Unified Engagement wargames. ______ QUESTIONS SUBMITTED BY MR. TURNER Mr. Turner. We understand that the Air Force has a requirement for 1900 tactical fighter aircraft, and that that inventory would meet the requirements of the National Military Strategy with moderate risk. Last year, the Air Force did not predict any fighter inventory shortfalls through 2030. However, with sequestration in fiscal year 2013, some aircraft or engines that had been planned for depot modifications may not be inducted. How will sequestration affect the tactical fighter inventory and do you expect any near-term or short-term tactical fighter inventory shortages as a result? We also understand that the Air Force has requirements for both capability and capacity in its tactical fighter inventory. Do you have any concerns about the capabilities or capacities of the tactical fighter inventory to meet the requirements of the National Military Strategy? General Welsh. Sequestration itself will not affect the tactical fighter inventory, but we are concerned that sequestration will result in significant readiness shortfalls that will have an impact on our ability to meet future warfighter requirements. Sequestration does impact the fighter force by delaying field-level maintenance activities and depot inductions, reducing depot production, and slowing down modification and modernization efforts. We estimate that the existing depot backlogs alone will take up to five years to correct. Analysis of warfighting requirements in the defense strategy and increased aircraft service life expectations allowed the Air Force to reduce fighter force structure capacity from 2,000 total active inventory (TAI)/1,200 primary mission aircraft inventory (PMAI, or combat-coded) to 1,900 TAI/1,100 PMAI. This force meets the National Military Strategy, but with greater aggregate risk. The capability of this force against potential future adversaries is reliant upon planned modernization efforts to be able to meet high-end threat scenarios. Mr. Turner. In the FY budget request, there seems to be a significant reduction in Air Force UAS accounts compared to last year. This seems counterintuitive based on the critical role ISR performs and the demand from the combatant commanders. In your opinion, does the FY 14 budget request meet combatant commander requirements for unmanned aerial ISR systems? General Welsh. The fiscal year 2014 budget request meets the Joint Staff adjudicated requirements levied on the Air Force to support the combatant commanders. This includes achieving the Secretary of Defense- directed 65 combat air patrols by May 2014 and continuing Global Hawk Block 30 operations through calendar year 2014. The remotely piloted aircraft (RPA) systems are a key element of airpower, and we will continue to ensure that we have the right mix of systems, both manned and unmanned, as we continue to work through the challenges of sequestration. The Air Force remains committed to leading the world in all aspects of airpower, including RPAs. ______ QUESTIONS SUBMITTED BY MR. FRANKS Mr. Franks. To ensure that adequate aircraft are available for training and operations at Luke, as well as to provide certainty for the level of operations and investment at Luke for the F-35A mission, I would ask the Air Force to reach a favorable decision in Calendar year 2013 on the assignment of Squadrons 4-6. This would allow environmental reviews and infrastructure investment to be queued up. Would you provide me with your thoughts, and hopefully assurances, that this objective can be met this year? Secretary Donley. The August 1, 2012, record of decision (ROD) assigns 72 F-35A aircraft to Luke Air Force Base and stipulates that the next basing decision will be made no later than December 2014. Since the ROD was signed, several foreign nations have shown an interest in purchasing aircraft through the foreign military sales (FMS) program. These foreign nations have requested to base their initial training programs in the United States. This drives another Air Force basing decision, and is linked to the next training basing decision for the U.S. Air Force aircraft. Given that the first FMS aircraft is scheduled to be delivered in fiscal year 2016, it is not appropriate to make the basing decisions for the FMS aircraft and the additional U.S. Air Force training aircraft in calendar year 2013. Mr. Franks. Secretary Donley and General Welsh, as you may know the DOD relies on the commercial electric grid for 99% of its electricity needs. That concerns me because the commercial bulk power grid is incredibly vulnerable to EMP and severe space weather. Can you please update me on what the Air Force is currently doing to protect your assets and other aspects of the power grid from this growing threat? Do you feel that the power and electricity needed to carry out your mission is important enough to require those commercial providers of the power grid to successfully harden their grid from severe space weather or manmade electromagnetic pulse. Can the DOD require that of commercial providers of the grid? Do you feel that this issue is important enough that legislation is needed to force the hand of industry to act? Secretary Donley and General Welsh. The deployment and sustainment of military forces are increasingly a function of interdependent supply chains and privately owned infrastructure within the United States and abroad. However, in many cases, this infrastructure falls outside Department of Defense (DOD) direct control. The Air Force's dependency on the commercial power grid represents a critical asymmetric vulnerability that must be addressed through partnerships with industry, state, and local governments. The Air Force conducts critical asset risk assessments (CARA) to identify key critical assets and supporting infrastructure. Identification of critical assets focuses within installation boundaries, and extends to the first critical infrastructure nodes outside perimeters. The Air Force has identified over 900 critical assets, and 62 of those are Tier 1 assets, where loss or degradation of energy would impact strategic-level missions. Of the 62 Tier 1 assets, 22 of them are defense critical assets (DCA); the loss of a DCA would result in mission failure for a DOD capability. The Air Force is also a member of the Department of Defense's Energy Grid Security Executive Council (EGSEC), which exists to discuss grid concerns across the Services and coordinate with other federal agencies. As the EGSEC chair, the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Homeland Defense & Americas' Security Affairs would be in the best position to provide information on the need for future legislation. It does not appear that the Air Force can require commercial providers to harden their grid from severe space weather or man-made electromagnetic pulse. As discussed in its recent Energy Strategic Plan, the Air Force supports the concept of improved resiliency and increased energy security and will continue to work to ensure that it has the ability to recover from energy interruptions and sustain the mission. By reducing the energy needed and diversifying generation and distribution options, the Air Force puts less reliance on an already vulnerable electrical grid system. Mr. Franks. As the Air Force looks down range--is there a benefit to have a blended wing of combat-coded and training F-35As at Luke AFB to support both the F-35 training mission and contingency operations, given that USAF is seeking increased efficiencies in this constrained budget environment? General Welsh. The addition of combat-coded F-35As at Luke Air Force Base would drive different training requirements and different weapons storage facility requirements, ultimately changing the use of the range airspace and requiring a new environmental impact statement. Combining both training and combat-coded aircraft at one location would also force different inspection timelines and criteria onto an already dynamic base with two F-16 foreign military sales squadrons. This adds complexity for little benefit, and a blended wing at Luke AFB would not result in increased operational efficiency. In addition, future decisions concerning Luke AFB may expand training operations to include three additional F-35A squadrons, which would fall within the constraints of the environmental impact statement. Luke AFB also is under consideration as the location of F- 35A partner pilot training, to include participants from seven countries. This would make Luke AFB a critical component of U.S. Air Force and international F-35A training. The Air Force's only other F- 35A training location is Eglin AFB, which is currently limited to 24 F- 35As. Program and service analysis shows that all of these squadrons need to be used for pilot training in order to meet Air Combat Command demands at combat units. ______ QUESTION SUBMITTED BY MR. SHUSTER Mr. Shuster. I understand that since 2001 at least 8 CRAF carriers have gone out of business. In 2012 alone, 5 CRAF carriers declared bankruptcy. I am concerned that if we lose these carriers, we may not be able to accomplish our operational plans and objectives due to a lack of available airlift capacity, particularly for cargo carriers. What steps is the Air Force taking in conjunction with Air Mobility Command to maintain this asset through decisions to increase cargo movements for CRAF carriers whenever possible? Secretary Donley. Air Mobility Command is in the final phase of a two-phase post Operation ENDURING FREEDOM Civil Reserve Air Fleet (CRAF) study which we hope to complete in calendar year 2013. This expansive body of work will assess the near-term health and future viability of the CRAF program. Upon the study's conclusion, we will have formulated the recommendations for the most effective methodology for restructuring policy, practices, and procedures for the CRAF that most accurately reflect the volatile business environment. We have integrated our industry partners throughout this process to fully vet their concerns, ensuring we maintain a collaborative approach. Furthermore, we've been proactive by providing our industry partners requirements and forecasts of the drawdown period via semi-annual executive working groups. ______ QUESTIONS SUBMITTED BY MR. CARSON Mr. Carson. With the F-35 plagued by continual cost overruns, some suggest that we could achieve significant savings by cancelling the ``B'' variant. I strongly disagree with this argument. But I am interested to know how cancelling a variant would change the load on Air Force F-35s and whether you anticipate that such cancellation would require additional procurement down the line. And how would such a cancellation change mission cooperation between the Air Force and Marine Corps? Secretary Donley. The Air Force currently plans to procure 1763 F- 35As to replace F-16s and A-10s. The consequences of cancelling the the ``B'' variant are speculative, but could include an increased load on Air Force F-35s and the need for additional procurement in the future. Cancelling the ``B'' variant would result in the Department of the Navy and the Office of the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Joint Program Office and the Air Force, determining the best way forward to support Marine and Department of Defense requirements. Specific changes to F-35A procurement numbers and mission cooperation between the Air Force and the Marine Corps would flow from that decision. It is important to also note that if the Marine Corps canceled production on the ``B'' variant, Unit Recurring Flyaway (URF) costs would increase for the remaining production aircraft for the Air Force, the Department of Navy, international partners, and foreign military sales partners. Additionally, development costs and production would continue for the ``B'' variant, despite a withdrawal by the Marine Corps, as the ``B'' variant is being purchased by the United Kingdom and Italy. The ramifications of this decision, to include an increase in URF, could cause these two partner nations to reassess their commitment to the program. Mr. Carson. While it is clearly past time for us to end our combat mission in Afghanistan, we know that our departure will not also mark the end of terrorist presence and operations in the region. So, it seems likely that we will need to continue flying missions to target terrorist leaders. How will the conclusion of combat missions in Afghanistan impact our ability to fly drone missions in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region? What efforts are being made now to ensure our continued access to this region after 2014? General Welsh. As demonstrated by the Chicago Summit in 2012, the United States and our partners in the International Security Assistance Force are committed to the goal of preventing Afghanistan from ever again becoming a safe haven for terrorists that threaten Afghanistan, the region, and the world. Our counter-terrorism mission in this region will continue after the conclusion of our combat activities in 2014, but any potential basing strategies and locations inside Afghanistan are still being discussed as part of the ongoing bilateral security agreement currently being negotiated between the United States and Afghanistan. To ensure access and to provide the greatest number of basing options in support of the counter-terrorism mission, we are also investigating potential ways to increase the range and endurance of our unmanned aircraft in the event in-country basing becomes an issue. ______ QUESTION SUBMITTED BY MR. SCOTT Mr. Scott. We know the importance of our A-10 aircraft fleet which provides close air support for ground personnel and the need for the fleet to have new wings to complete this critical mission. In FY13, Congress appropriated $226.5M for acquisition of wings for the A-10 aircraft. a. How many wings did the Air Force acquire or intend to acquire before the end of FY13? b. When does the Air Force intend to purchase additional A-10 wings with the remainder of the FY13 appropriation? c. There are 283 A-10 aircraft in the Total Air Force inventory. It is Congress' understanding that all aircraft require new wings, and the current contract for wings expires in FY16. Through FY13, Congress has appropriated funding for approximately 181 wings. What is the Air Force's plan to acquire wings in order to refit the entire 283 aircraft fleet? General Welsh. In fiscal year (FY) 2013 Congress appropriated a total of $251.1M (Aircraft Procurement, Air Force (APAF)) for the A-10 program, PE 0207131F. Within the $251.1M (APAF) total, $161.2M was for ``retain A-10 force structure.'' a. The Air Force intends to acquire 50 enhanced wing assemblies (EWA) in FY13, which is the maximum allowed annually per the existing contract. This will bring the total number of EWAs procured to 167. b. The Air Force intends to use the remainder of its FY13 APAF funds to purchase 14 additional EWAs in FY14. These funds will be added to FY14 APAF funds which are currently slated to purchase nine EWAs. This will bring the total number of EWAs purchased in FY14 to 23, and the total program to 190. c. The Air Force plans to acquire a total of 190 EWAs by the end of FY14. The Air Force's contract with Boeing allows it to acquire as many as 50 EWAs in both FY15 and FY16. The Air Force has the option to acquire the remaining 93 EWAs over those two years to complete EWA acquisitions for the entire 283 aircraft fleet. ______ QUESTIONS SUBMITTED BY MR. ENYART Mr. Enyart. The Air Force Energy Plan recognizes the need to increase supply in light of the fact that avaiation in FY 11 represented 86% of energy consumption for the Air Force at $8.3 billion. With this in mind, would Air Force leadership be supportive of legislative efforts to pilot a program at Scott Air Force Base to do research and develop of effective biofuels for use throughout the force? With Air Mobility Command being headquartered at Scott AFB this would appear to make perfect sense. Secretary Donley and General Welsh. The Air Force has a global aviation mission and must have assured access to reliable supplies of energy to meet operational needs. Alternative fuels are a critical part of that effort and helps the Air Force address availability, price volatility, and energy security. Since 2006, the Air Force has been working to test and certify its fleet on alternative aviation fuels, led by the Alternative Fuels Certification Office located at Wright- Patterson Air Force Base (AFB), Ohio. Based on an evaluation of market conditions and discussion with commercial partners, the Air Force has evaluated three processes: Fischer-Tropsch (FT), hydro-processed renewable jet (HRJ), and alcohol to jet (ATJ). FT and HRJ have been evaluated in a 50/50 blend with traditional JP-8 and have been fully certified for the entire fleet. With the current efforts already underway at Wright-Patterson AFB, the Air Force does not feel a similar program at Scott AFB is necessary and would not be the best use of taxpayers' dollars. Mr. Enyart. During your testimony you stated there was 20% excess capacity that needed to be addressed through a BRAC process. How much of this excess capacity would come from the Active Duty versus the Reserve and National Guard Component? In addition, how much of this excess capacity would come from CONUS versus OCONUS installations? Secretary Donley and General Welsh. Parametric techniques used to analyze aggregate assessment of excess capacity in 2004 indicated that the Department of Defense had 24 percent excess overall relative to the force-structure plan developed by the Joints Staff. Because BRAC 2005 eliminated only about 3 percent of the Department's capacity (very little being Air Force infrastructure) and since then, the Air Force has retired approximately 500 aircraft and reduced its total manpower by approximately 7 percent, we believe we have significant excess today. The Air Force has not conducted a capacity analysis and therefore cannot specify a percentage of infrastructure reduction needed from the Components or the locations from which that reduction would come. The Air Force is participating in the Office of the Secretary of Defense-led European Infrastructure Consolidation study and will determine if there are opportunities for reducing its European infrastructure. If legislation is enacted authorizing another round of base realignment and closure for United States installations, the Air Force will base its analysis on an approved force structure plan and will evaluate all bases equally to determine what bases may be candidates for closure or realignment. ______ QUESTIONS SUBMITTED BY MR. BROOKS Mr. Brooks. The goal of the Air Force acquisition strategy is to promote competition. While it may be fair to give new entrants an opportunity to become certified, to what degree does the Air Force feel it is the Air Force's responsibility to ensure that new entrants can meet the certification requirements? Does the Air Force intend to fund development of any changes necessary for new entrants to meet certification or capability requirements for EELV payloads? Secretary Donley and General Welsh. The Air Force does not intend to fund the development of new entrant launch vehicle systems or development of any changes necessary for new entrants to meet certification or capability requirements for Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) payloads. Space vehicle (SV) mission specific requirements, should they arise in the future, will be included as part of any competitive launch service, and funded with procurement funding by the SV program, as they are for current EELV missions. The New Entrant Certification Guide (NECG) outlines the process and requirements that must be met for new entrants to become certified to compete for National Security Space missions on the EELV program. The NECG makes it clear that the Government is not funding the development of new entrants' launch systems. The Department will issue an early integration contract with any new entrant provider who has submitted a statement of intent in accordance with the Air Force NECG and has successfully launched their first launch vehicle of the configuration intended to meet certification. These early integration efforts will help the new entrant provider and the potential SV programs understand the environments (shock, vibration, acoustic, etc.) and performance capabilities of each system and begin development of interface control documents. Mr. Brooks. Does the Air Force believe a new entrant must meet all requirements in the EELV Operational Requirements Document (ORD) and Systems Interface Specification (SIS)? If not, what requirements are new entrants being allowed to ignore and please explain the rationale? Secretary Donley and General Welsh. The Air Force published a New Entrant Certification Guide that states, ``a new entrant must meet . . . specific reliability and interface requirements,'' and comply with the ``standard payload interface''. To encourage competition the Air Force is planning to compete missions which can be potentially launched by new entrants in the fiscal year (FY) 2015-2017 timeframe. Not all ORD II key performance parameters (KPP) will have to be met for this potential competition. In this timeframe, KPPs that new entrants may be unable to meet are mass to orbit and standard launch pads. However, all KPPs will have to be met in order to compete for the next phase starting in FY18. The Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicles standard interface specification (SIS) outlines the standard mechanical and electrical interfaces as well as the required launch environments to include shock, acoustic, and thermal envelopes of multiple launch vehicle configurations. Any new entrant must meet the requirements of the SIS prior to certification completion. Therefore, existing space vehicles (SV) that currently meet the SIS, such as GPS III, should not require modification as the SV is already compatible with the SIS requirements. In the event modifications need to be made to the launch vehicle to accommodate a SV, those mission unique modifications will be incorporated into the price of the launch service in a manner consistent with how we procure launch services from the incumbent. Mr. Brooks. Has the Air Force or DOD done an independent cost estimate on new entrants to launch an EELV class mission? Please provide the estimate. Secretary Donley and General Welsh. No, neither the Air Force nor DOD has done an independent cost estimate on new entrants to launch an Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle-class mission. The Government does not yet have the necessary insight into the new entrant's costing/ accounting processes to complete a formal assessment of new entrant costs. ______ QUESTION SUBMITTED BY MR. NUGENT Mr. Nugent. After 4 years and $40 million, the CHAMP program had a Joint Capability Technology Demonstration last year. The Air Force described this JCTD as ``a very successful flight test.'' You have developed and now tested a working capability that can knock out all the electronics of an enemy target without doing any physical damage to the facility or people. This is a remarkable achievement that has produced a nonlethal weapon with broad application that is cheap to make and expensive for our potential adversaries to defend. Why are you not requesting funding to get CHAMP beyond the research phase and out to the Combatant Commanders? The FY14 budget request is for $209,000 less than this year to conduct an Analysis of Alternatives on a new reusable platform. Why are you not finishing development on the platform that you have and works, while asking Congress for the money to begin procurement? Secretary Donley. As this was an S&T demonstration, the JCTD was limited in scope and did not account for weapon survivability and effects delivered in an operational relevant threat environment. A CHAMP JCTD final report is currently being drafted by United States Pacific Command. The Air Force will use this final report and any additional information/data from the demonstration to feed the Air Force's non-kinetic counter electronic (NKCE) weapon concept of using HPM technology to affect real world electronic equipment in an operationally relevant threat environment. The Air Force is completing the NKCE comprehensive concept analysis (CCA) in fiscal year (FY) 2014. The CCA will define the technological characteristics required to integrate HPM technology into a weaponized platform and be survivable in an operational relevant threat environment long enough to deliver the intended effects. CHAMP, along with other potential solutions, will be part of NKCE analysis of alternatives (AoA) notionally scheduled to take place during FY15. FY13 and FY14 funds supporting these analyses has been requested in a system development and demonstration program element (PE) 0604429F, Airborne Electronic Attack. The referenced decrease of $209,000 occurs in PE 0603605F, Advanced Weapons Technology. This S&T PE was the primary source of funding for the CHAMP JCTD. Since the CHAMP S&T program has been completed, the S&T funding requirements for further counter-electronics research and technology development in FY14 are less than requested for FY13. ______ QUESTIONS SUBMITTED BY MR. BRIDENSTINE Mr. Bridenstine. The United States Government has performed four independent studies on the C-130 AMP solution between 1998 and 2008 and found it was the most cost-effective solution to modernize the C-130 fleet and at the same time, consolidate the multiple configurations and increase equipment reliability and availability. It appears from the FY14 President's proposed budget that a new start effort, named Minimize CNS/ATM option, has been identified. Will this new start provide less capability than the current program of record? Is the current Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA) study evaluating the C-130 AMP program of record against the Minimize CNS/ATM option identified in FY 14 PB document? Secretary Donley. The fiscal year (FY) 2014 Minimize C-130 communication, navigation, surveillance/air traffic management (CNS/ ATM) program is a less robust avionics modification program than the current program of record. The Minimize program is an airspace compliance only program to ensure the C-130H fleet meets the Federal Aviation Administration's January 2020 CNS/ATM mandate. The current IDA study, which will be delivered to Congress in October 2013, will evaluate all three C-130H modification alternatives: C-130 Avionics Modernization Program, FY13 Optimize Legacy C-130 CNS/ATM, and FY14 Minimize C-130 CNS/ATM. Mr. Bridenstine. At the Air Force posture hearing in FY 12, then- Chief of Staff of the Air Force General Norton Schwartz commented that ``the Air Force C-130 AMP provides military capability equal or greater than alternative programs and at less cost than those programs.'' What requirement or mission changed that would allow for a change of direction of this magnitude? Has an acquisition strategy been developed for the FY14 Minimize CNS/ATM new start option? Secretary Donley. The C-130 mission and requirements have not changed. Many of the upgrades with Avionics Modernization Program (AMP) dealt with modernization of the aircraft and enhancing its viability. Given the current fiscal environment and the impacts of sequestration, the Air Force does not have sufficient resources to fund the AMP program. The Air Force has decided to pursue a lower cost program that provides the minimum required upgrades for communication, navigation, surveillance/air traffic management (CNS/ATM) compliance. The Air Force, in compliance with Section 143 of the fiscal year 2013 National Defense Authorization Act, has not taken ``any action to cancel or modify the avionics modernization program for C-130 aircraft.'' Mr. Bridenstine. The FY14 President's Budget states, ``with termination of C-130 Avionics Modernization Program (AMP), the Minimize C-130 Communication, Navigation, Surveillance/Air Traffic Management (CNS/ATM) option provides minimal airspace compliance focused program to modify 184 C-130H aircraft.'' As directed by the FY13 NDAA, have you begun the Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA) study and what is the current status and projected completion date to report back to the committees? Has there been any analysis of long-term cost savings the current C-130 AMP provides versus the proposed for FY 14 Minimize CNS/ ATM capability? Secretary Donley and General Welsh. The directed study was placed on contract with the Institute for Defense Analysis (IDA) on March 1, 2013. IDA is currently in the data collection/clarification phase of the study and met with appropriate military and defense industry organizations in May. The study plans to conduct life cycle cost comparisons for the three C-130H modification alternatives: C-130 AMP, fiscal year (FY) 2013 Optimize Legacy C-130 CNS/ATM, and FY14 Minimize C-130 CNS/ATM. We anticipate the study will be delivered to Congress in October 2013. ______ QUESTION SUBMITTED BY MR. PALAZZO Mr. Palazzo. As you know, last year's NDAA contained language that set up a National Commission on the Structure of the Air Force; I believe last week the committee actually named General Raymond Johns and Erin Conaton to the commission. That Commission is tasked with the job of completing a comprehensive study of the structure of the Air Force to determine whether, and how, the structure be modified to best fulfill current and anticipated mission requirements for the Air force in a manner consistent with available resources. It would seem to me that we may be putting the cart before the horse here and we should be waiting until after this committee completes its job before we actually move any planes around. So, my question is why would the Air Force already start moving planes around before we have the recommendations of the Commission? It just doesn't make any sense. And if cost savings is the issue, then what is the point of having the commission at all? Secretary Donley and General Welsh. All Air Force force structure adjustments occurring in fiscal year (FY) 2013 were authorized by the FY13 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) and funded in the Appropriations Act (Public Law 113-6). In addition, these FY13 actions were part of a long-term plan submitted by the Air Force which included force structure adjustments through FY18. This plan, as adjusted by subsequent dialogue with the Congress prior to and after enactment of the FY13 NDAA, is the basis of the proposed Air Force force structure adjustments in the FY14 President's Budget submission. ______ QUESTION SUBMITTED BY MR. BARBER Mr. Barber. General Welsh, thank you for your service to our Nation and your testimony today. I know you agree that we must be good stewards of the taxpayers' money. Sustaining our current inventory is one way the Air Force is doing this, and I applaud you for it. For example, the budget mentioned maintaining the C-130 for airlift capability rather than procuring a new, more expensive airplane. The budget also noted the Department will retain F-15 and F-16 fighters to fill a critical role in the Air Force's global strike core function. While we greatly anticipate the continued procurement and fielding of the F-35, the fact remains that the Air Force currently lacks the necessary fleet of F-35s to replace the A-10. Yet, also within the budget, the Department continues with its plans to either shift to the Air Force Reserve, or retire, the A-10. The President's budget requests no funding for A-10s beyond FY14 even though the Air Force continues to transition A-10s to the Reserve. In my district, we have Davis-Monthan Air Force Base that is home to the 354th Fighter Squadron, a squadron of A-10s. They just returned from Afghanistan this week. Wouldn't you agree that these pilots, and the A-10s that they fly, provide a critical close air support role not readily filled by another airframe? What measures is the Department undertaking to ensure sufficient numbers of A-10s are kept mission-ready and able to support our forward forces and Combatant Commanders? General Welsh. The A-10 Thunderbolt II has served the country very well for the last 30 years. Through two wars in Iraq and for the last 12 years in Afghanistan, the A-10 has been operated by all of the Components--the Active Duty, Guard, and Reserve--and has been a significant battlefield force multiplier. The A-10 continues to undergo a series of airframe structural changes to ensure viability, has completed Precision Engagement (integration of data links with a cockpit/avionics suite upgrade), carries advanced targeting pods, and employs the latest in guided weapons. The Air Force will continue to invest in the A-10 for the foreseeable future, while still planning for the F-35 replacement process to fulfill future close air support (CAS) needs. We continue to train A-10 pilots and our budget ensures that the requisite number of A-10s necessary to support combatant commander requirements are available. Until we have sufficient numbers of F-35s, the Air Force intends to keep the A-10 viable and combat-ready. In short, the Air Force is ensuring A-10 availability, reliability, and maintainability with procurement of enhanced wing assemblies, scheduled structural inspections, replacement of aging fuselage longerons, and operational equipment upgrades. Combined, these efforts extend the A-10 service life to 14,000 hours. The A-10 will be kept operationally viable through software suite development that enhances the capabilities of its targeting pods and weapons upgrades. The Air Force is equipping the A-10 with a Helmet Mounted Cueing System to satisfy an Air Force Central Command (AFCENT) urgent operational need. Overall, these efforts ensure our A-10s are kept at a mission-ready status and are able to support our forward forces and combatant commanders. As the Air Force reallocates aircraft within its Components, the A-10 will continue to provide CAS as it has for the last 30 years, no matter where the A-10 resides--the Active Duty, Guard, or Reserve. ______ QUESTIONS SUBMITTED BY MRS. NOEM Mrs. Noem. Since cost savings will obviously be the goal of any future BRAC Congress would authorize, how important is proximity to military training areas--especially considering cost of fuel for ground transport and cost per flying hour? Secretary Donley and General Welsh. Developing Airmen with a warrior ethos and an expeditionary mentality requires a robust and flexible training infrastructure. Basic and special skills training require diverse industrial, academic, and support facilities. Mission- oriented training requires airspace and ranges, ground maneuver areas, as well as simulators and other training aids. The Air Force will evaluate each of these areas during capacity analysis and Military Value determination, and shall retain and invest in installations that rate high in those areas. One of the Air Force basing principles used during previous base realignment and closure (BRAC) processes was maintaining flying squadrons within operationally efficient proximity to Department of Defense controlled airspace, ranges, military operations areas, and low-level routes. The Air Force must keep ranges and airspace relevant to our missions and develop basing strategies that use them efficiently. During previous rounds of BRAC, as we determined the Military Value of an installation, Criterion 1: Current/Future Mission included proximity of ranges as a geo-locational attribute. We anticipate this attribute will continue to be an important aspect when determining Military Value. Mrs. Noem. In any future BRAC, will the Air Force focus on eliminating any particular category of excess base infrastructure, more than others? Secretary Donley and General Welsh. The Air Force has no installation or category specific plan at this time, and will comply with any future authorizing legislation and Defense Department policy. Should Congress authorize another round of base realignment and closure, all United States installations will be considered for realignment or closure. The Air Force will conduct the required analysis to identify the infrastructure necessary to satisfy operational and support requirements, with a focus on closing unneeded installations and eliminating excess infrastructure. Mrs. Noem. If the Air Force believes it has excess installation capacity and needs to close some bases or consolidate certain activities, do you think a least disruptive approach to our National Security readiness would be to first focus on consolidating those bases that primarily only have service support functions, such as logistical centers or military schools, rather than seeking to close bases that house fighter or bomber wings? Secretary Donley and General Welsh. An authorized base realignment and closure process would provide the only effective way to reduce excess infrastructure in the United States and under that process the Air Force would consider all bases equally.