Overview. Vision Guiding Principles Across the FYDP FY15 President s Budget (PB) Request FY15 Opportunity, Growth and Security Initiatives

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Overview Vision Guiding Principles Across the FYDP FY15 President s Budget (PB) Request FY15 Opportunity, Growth and Security Initiatives I n t e g r i t y - S e r v i c e - E x c e l l e n c e 2

Vision In this constrained budget environment, we will continue to look for ways to reduce overhead, improve efficiency and maximize combat power, but we must do so in a deliberate manner after careful consideration of how best to ensure this department is able to carry out its mission of defending the nation. Honorable Chuck Hagel, Secretary of Defense December 2013 I have personally laid out three priorities for the Air Force. They are taking care of our people, balancing today s readiness with tomorrow s readiness, and making every dollar count Tomorrow s Air Force has to be the most agile, credible, and affordable total force team capable of meeting what our Combatant Commanders need. Honorable Deborah Lee James, Secretary of the Air Force January 2014 We have a dilemma immediately in the Air Force of do we want a ready force today or a modern force tomorrow? That s the dilemma. You can t have both. And so you re looking at a balance going forward between capability, capacity, and readiness. General Mark A. Welsh III, Chief of Staff of the Air Force December 2013 Global Vigilance Global Reach Global Power for America I n t e g r i t y - S e r v i c e - E x c e l l e n c e 3

AF 2023 Provide the Nation with Global Vigilance, Global Reach, and Global Power With innovative Airmen who are highly trained, well-equipped and always ready Respond in hours not days Fly, fight & win from home to anywhere on the globe Win against any adversary in a highly contested environment Guiding Principles Delivering Air Force Core missions since 1947: Air and Space Superiority, Command and Control, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance, Global Strike, and Rapid Global Mobility FY15 PB Guiding Principles We must remain ready for the full-spectrum of military operations by providing Airmen with the right training and equipment When forced to cut capabilities (tooth), we must also cut the associated support structure and overhead (tail) We sought to maximize the contribution of the Total Force Our approach will focus on the unique capabilities the Air Force provides the joint force, specifically against a fullspectrum, high-end threat Informed by national defense requirements and Combatant I n t e g Commanders r i t y - S e r expectations v i c e - E x of c e their l l e Air n c Force e 4

Tough Choices Striking the Balance First: Seek efficiencies and cut overhead Reduce major headquarters operating budgets to achieve savings Support military compensation recommendations Re-invest savings into readiness and quality of work/life Take risk in military construction, facility sustainment and installation support Limits on TDYs and contract services continue Second: Balance capability, capacity and readiness Divest fleets (A-10 & U-2) to achieve maximum savings Reduce some tactical fighters, command and control, electronic attack and intra-theater airlift Favored funding new capabilities over upgrading legacy equipment Bottom line, keep no more force structure than we can afford to keep ready requires tough choices to absorb billions in reductions We're going to build the most capable AF against a high-end threat that is affordable in 2023. To do that we'll have to balance capability, capacity, and readiness. I n t e g r Gen i t y - Welsh, S e r v December i c e - E 2013 x c e l l e n c e 5

Billion 115.2 12 Enacted BASE BLUE 13 PB *Includes base to OCO transfer 104.7 13 Enacted 114.1 108.8* 14 PB 14 Enacted FY13/FY14 Recap FY13 Recap Flying units stood down: ~1/3 active duty fighter & bomber units stood down and not ready Civilian furlough (6-days) and hiring controls Limited facility repairs and upgrades Deferred depot maintenance and engine inductions Emergency congressional reprogramming of 1.7B addressed OCO shortfall Freed baseline funds for flying hours, weapons system sustainment (WSS), critical MAJCOM requirements & operations not covered under OCO FY14 Update BBA provides gradual path to readiness recovery Returned flying hours & WSS to near FY14 PB Allows limited relief for civilian hiring freeze Preserves top three recapitalization programs (KC-46A, F-35A & LRS-B) Sustains multi-year contracts (C-130J & CV-22) to avoid increased costs Supports key modification / munition programs Provides funds to support force management actions if we re not ready for all possible scenarios, we ll be forced to accept what I believe is unnecessary risk, which means we may not get there in time, it may take the joint team longer to win, and our people I will n t be e g placed r i t y at - greater S e r risk. v i c e Gen - E Welsh, x c e September l l e n c e 2013 6

Across the FYDP At FY15 PB Levels: Still required to make strategic choices Fleet divestitures (e.g. A-10) Force Management Programs Maintains Flying Hours and WSS funding to continue on gradual path to recovery of full-spectrum readiness Supports readiness components: ranges, simulators, exercises (Red Flag), training pipeline (weapons school) Protects investments in Primary Fighter Trainer (T-X) and the next generation of Space Based Systems (e.g., AEHF, SBIRs, Space Fence, Weather System Follow-on) Preserve top recapitalization programs (KC-46A, F-35A, LRS-B) Accelerates munitions inventory recovery At Sequestration Levels: Reduces tanker and ISR capacity Divests KC-10A and RQ-4 Block 40 fleets Reduces steady state ISR orbits (to 45) Reduces investment in new capability: KC-46A, F-35As & MC-130J Cuts S&T funding and investment in new jet engine tech Halts radar, ISR sensor, comm modernization programs Slows readiness recovery due to cuts in WSS/ranges Compounds existing facility erosion Defers even more legacy fighter modification Stalls munitions stockpile recovery, reducing ability to meet national defense requirements Sacrifices capacity to meet minimum Less ready, less capable, less viable capability requirements I n t e g r i t y - S e r v i c e unable - E x to c e fully l l e execute n c e defense strategy 7 7

FY15 PB Request Billion 140 120 100 80 60 40 138.3 Non- Blue 29.5 MILPERS 29.2 RDT&E 16.0 Procurement 16.8 OCO Transfer 2.8 137.8 Non- Blue 28.5 MILPERS 29.1 MILCON 1.8 MILCON 1.4 RDT&E 16.0 Procurement 18.5 109.3B AF Blue Baseline MILCON 1% Installation Support 3.4B 4% MAJCOM/ COCOM 9.6B 13% Flying Hour 7.6B 10% WSS 10.7B 15% FSRM 2.3 3% MILPERS 29.1 40% Civ Pay 10.8B 15% 20 O&M 42.2 FY14 Enacted O&M 44.3 FY15 PB Procurement Top Aircraft: 7.1B Top Space: 2.1B Top Munitions: 0.6B Sub-Total: 9.8B % of Total: 52.9% RDT&E Classified: 3.6B KC-46, F-35, LRS-B: 2.3B T&E/S&T: 3.0B Space: 0.9B Sub-Total: 9.8B % of Total: 61.3% Without time and approval to reduce capacity, we can t avoid cuts to readiness or I n t e g r i t y - future S e r capability v i c e - E x c e l l e n c e 8

End Strength in K Military Personnel FY14 Enacted FY15 PB (B) Delta Air Force Active Duty 23.2 23.1 (0.1) Air Force Reserve 1.7 1.7 0.0 Air National Guard 3.1 3.1 0.0 Medicare Eligible Retiree Health Care 1.2 1.2 0.0 Total 29.2 29.1 (0.1) Funds 483K Total Force Airmen Incorporates a balanced end-strength reduction approach, force mgt initiatives & limited compensation changes to preserve a ready and modernized force. 506K FY14 PB FY15 PB 503K 503K 501K 483K 479K Force Reductions: Driven by the divestiture of associated force structure / weapon systems, headquarters realignment & rebalancing of aircrew-to-cockpit ratios in a post-afghanistan environment Reduces end-strength authorizations from 503K to 483K FY05 FY14 FY15 FY19 Active: 360K 328K 311K 308K AFR: 76K 70K 67K 67K ANG: 107K 105K 105K 104K Force Management: Targeted programs to meet end strength; focused first on voluntary separations / retirements, then involuntary measures Military Compensation / Health Care Benefit: Proposed reforms avoid deeper reductions to force structure, readiness and modernization Basic Pay raise held at 1.0% increase, General Officer pay frozen Basic Allowance for Housing held to 1.5% increase Our people are very proud of who they are and what they do. They love being the best in the world I at n it t and e g they r i t want y - to S remain e r v i that c e way. - E x Gen c e Welsh, l l e n December c e 2013 9

Billions Operations & Maintenance (B) FY14 Enacted* FY15 PB Delta Flying Operations 18.0 18.3 0.3 Civilian Pay 11.0 10.8 (0.2) Space/Other Combat Forces 5.4 5.7 0.3 Installation Support & FSRM 6.3 5.7 (0.6) Logistics Ops & AF Wide Support 2.3 2.1 (0.2) Training & Recruiting 1.1 0.9 (0.2) Mobility Forces 1.0 0.9 (0.1) Total 45.0 44.3 (0.7) On the path to readiness recovery to support full spectrum combat operations for AF 2023 Readiness: Funded all executable flying hours: 1.2M hours / 7.6B Weapon System Sustainment funded at 70% (80% w/oco) Supports ISR capability for today s fight Sustains required space enterprise capabilities Supports USCYBERCOM s mission force Fully funds Nuclear Enterprise ops: ICBM, B-2 & B-52 People / Base Operations: Funds SAPR billets, supports core Airmen services Childcare, fitness centers and food services 1% civ pay increase; targeted hiring for critical skills Min funding for Installation Support / Facility Sustainment at 65% Readiness is The right number of units, with the right equipment, trained to the right level, in the right skills, with the right amount of support and supplies to accomplish what the President tasks us to do in the I n right t e amount g r i t of y time and - S e r v survive. i c e - Lt E Gen x c Field, e l l e HAF n c A3/5 e 10 9 9 8

Military Construction, BRAC & Military Family Housing (B) FY14 Enacted FY15 PB Delta Military Construction 1.2 1.0 (0.2) Military Family Housing 0.5 0.3 (0.2) BRAC 0.1 0.1 0.0 Total 1.8 1.4 (0.4) Funds minimum essential levels to free resources necessary to support force structure, modernization, and operational readiness requirements Funds highest priority facility req ts for COCOMs, Joint Partners & Total Force Airmen Fourth increment of the US Strategic Command Headquarters project (180M) Second increment of the US Cyber Command Joint Operations Center (166M) First phase of the Joint Intelligence Analysis Complex (92M) Second increment of Fuel Cell Maintenance Hangar (64M) Pacific Regional Training Center Combat Communications Infrastructure Facility (3.8M), RED HORSE Logistics Facility (3.1M) and Fire Station (6.5M) Quality of Life (14M): 72-room dormitory for unaccompanied personnel Air Force Reserve: KC-135 Tanker Parking Apron Expansion (9.8M); AFRC Consolidated Mission Complex (27.7M); Explosive Ordnance Disposal Facility (3.7M) Air National Guard: Remotely Piloted Aircraft (RPA) Bed-down (6M); RPA Operations Center (5.8M); RPA and Targeting Bed-down (9.1M) C-130 Fuel Cell and Corrosion Control Facility (16.3M); KC-46A mission facilities (41.9M) New mission bed-downs: KC-46A (145M); F-35A (67M); F-22 (14M) Funds COCOM missions and weapon system bed-downs I n t e g r i t y - S e r v i c e - E x c e l l e n c e 9 9 8 11

Program Highlights ( in millions) FY14 Prioritized new capabilities over upgrading legacy platforms FY15 LRS-B 359 914 KC-46A 1,559 777 T&E 852 853 F-35A EMD 629 563 SBIRS EMD 322 320 S&T 2,308 2,129 AEHF 266 314 GPS III-OCS 373 300 F-15E Sq 234 262 Research, Development (B) Test & Evaluation FY14 FY15 Enacted PB Delta Basic Research 0.5 0.5 0.0 Applied Research 1.1 1.1 0.0 Adv Technology Dev 0.6 0.6 0.0 Demonstration/Validation 0.8 1.4 0.6 Engineering Manufacturing Dev 4.5 3.3 (1.2) RDT&E Management Support 1.1 1.2 0.1 Operational System Dev 7.2 7.9 0.7 Total 16.0 16.0 0.0 Preserves top three recapitalization programs: Sustains design/development of LRS-B Maintains developmental & operational testing for F-35A s Blk 2B & Blk 3F mods Continues KC-46A development and test supporting 1st flight Invests in future technology & capabilities: Minimizes reductions to Science & Technology and Test & Evaluation activities Begins next generation JSTARS; re-enforces commitment to joint and global C2 Funds RQ-4 viability, reliability, and sensor improvements Starts T-X, Primary Fighter Trainer, program to recapitalize T-38C Made affordability tradeoffs across the FYDP: Delays delivery of B-2 Defensive Management System Modification Extends delivery of Space Based Space Surveillance follow-on by a year RQ-4 UAV 120 245 "The Air Force is a high-tech force so recapitalization is a requirement to be a viable I n t e g force r i t in y the - S mid-2020s". e r v i c e - Gen E x Welsh c e l l e n c e 12 8

Funds top procurement programs, sustains space capabilities & maintains munition inventories Aircraft FY14 Millions FY15 F-35A 3,319 4,269 KC-46A - 1,582 C-130J MYP 1,732 1,283 Space SELC 559 750 EELV 808 631 SBIRS 525 451 AEHF 328 299 Munitions JASSM 271 337 JDAM 179 101 AIM-9X 108 140 FY14 Enacted FY15 PB (B) Delta Aircraft Procurement 10.3 11.5 1.2 Missile Procurement 3.8 3.8 0.0 Ammunition Procurement 0.7 0.7 0.0 Other Procurement 1.9 2.6 0.7 Total *Numbers do not add due to rounding 16.8 18.5 1.9 Procurement Aircraft: Funds first production lot of 7 KC-46 Tanker aircraft Maintains stable production ramp for F-35As (26 a/c); will increase to 60 a/c by 2018 Preserves C-130J Multi Year Procurement; procures 13 a/c supporting SOF & mobility Space: Space Expendable Launch Capability (SELC): Reflects funding required to support launch and acquisition of National Security Space launch vehicles Reflects Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) newly negotiated contract savings Sustains Efficient Space Procurement strategy for AEHF & Space Based Infrared System Munitions: Increases quantity of Joint Air to Surface Standoff Missiles with extended range (JASSM-ER) Maintains min sustainment rates for Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile & AIM-9X Other: Funds C2 capability for network infrastructure, communication for STRATCOM HQ and replaces end of life distributed common ground systems "The objective is that we continue to control the skies just as we have in the decades past. project power like no one else and extend global reach for many years to come. I n t e g r i t y - S e r v i c e - E x c e l l e n c e Secretary James, January 2014 13 8

Major Procurement Quantities AIRCRAFT FY14 FY15 F-35A Lightning II 19 26 KC-46A Tanker 0 7 MC-130 Recapitalization 4 2 MQ-9A Reaper 20 12 CV-22B Osprey 3 0 HC-130 Recapitalization 1 4 C-130J Super Hercules 6 7 AC-130 Recapitalization 5 0 Total 58 58 Atlas V Delta IV KC-46A WEAPONS FY14 FY15 JDAM 7,536 2,973 AGM-114 Hellfire 413 283 AIM-9X Sidewinder 225 303 AIM-120D AMRAAM 183 200 AGM-158 JASSM 187 224 Small Diameter Bomb 144 246 Total 8,688 4,229 SPACE FY14 FY15 GPS III 2 1 EELV 5 3 Total 7 4 JASSM I n t e g r i t y - S e r v i c e - E x c e l l e n c e 14

FY15 Opportunity, Growth and Security Initiative Installation Modernization Recapitalization Readiness Munitions Training and Ranges F-35As C-130J MQ-9s Aircraft Mods Restoration & Modernization MILCON Facility Sustainment to 80% Readiness enhancements will help AF recover and position us better for fight tonight Procures 2 F-35As Accelerates C-130J and MQ- 9 recapitalization efforts Funds deferred modifications for legacy fleets and more advanced platforms Opportunities to improve installations and accelerate MILCON The President s Opportunity, Growth and Security [Initiative] would allow us to continue to restore and sustain readiness helping to mitigate this risk. Honorable I n t e g Chuck r i t y Hagel, - S Secretary e r v i c e of - Defense, E x c e February l l e n c 2014 e 15

Final Thoughts FY15 PB attempts to balance capability, readiness and capacity to support the fight tonight and a high-end fight in 2023 Reinvest in Airmen readiness: train, equip core people programs Begins the gradual road to recovering full-spectrum readiness Shields highest-priority capabilities But still forced to make difficult capacity trade-offs At Sequestration levels forced to make even tougher choices Global Vigilance degraded with additional loss of ISR capacity Global Reach capability reduced with loss of KC-10 fleet Global Power diminished with loss of additional F-35As & critical 4th generation fighter modifications Airmen travel where no one has ever traveled before fly the fastest planes that have ever been built, reach the highest altitudes.and hold in their hands the most awesome destructive power that any nation or any man has ever conceived. President John F. Kennedy, May 1963 I n t e g r i t y - S e r v i c e - E x c e l l e n c e 16

More Information For more information, please visit the website below or scan the QR code for the Department of the Air Force s budget overview http://www.saffm.hq.af.mil/budget/index.asp I n t e g r i t y - S e r v i c e - E x c e l l e n c e 17 17