Flexbasing Achieving Global Presence for Expeditionary Aerospace Forces

Abstract

The U.S. Air Force has embarked on a process of reshaping itself to better meet the demands of the new strategic environment. This new environment presents challenges that are quite different from those the service faced when it came of age during the Cold War. In that struggle, the adversary was well known, and the theaters of operation were identified and defended with permanently stationed forces. Today's challenges are more diverse, and in many respects more unpredictable. There are both "pop-up" contingencies in places where the Air Force has rarely before operated and continuing "steady-state" regional security commitments far from any Air Force main operating base (MOB). This has forced a new mode of operation on the Air Force, one that has required frequent deployments of personnel and aircraft to austere forward operating locations. Not being structured to operate continuously in this way, the Air Force has had to pay a price for supporting these forward operations, a price that has been reflected in lower personnel retention rates and lower overall readiness. The service is responding to these challenges by reorganizing itself into an Expeditionary Aerospace Force (EAF). This reorganization represents an historic transition for the Air Force from a military service that has chiefly performed its mission by operating from MOBs to one that can quickly and easily project sizable forces overseas to austere and unanticipated locations, and sustain them there indefinitely. The research described in this report was conducted within the Aerospace Force Development Program of Project AIR FORCE, as part of a project entitled "Implementing an Effective Air Expeditionary Force." It was cosponsored by the Air Force Deputy Chief of Staff for Air and Space Operations (AF/XO) and the Deputy Chief of Staff for Installations and Logistics (AF/IL).

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2000
Accession Number
ADA375635

Entities

People

  • Brian Nichiporuk
  • Eiichi Kamiya
  • Lionel Galway
  • Paul S. Killingsworth
  • Timothy L. Ramey

Organizations

  • RAND Corporation

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Human Systems
  • Space

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Air Force
  • Air Power
  • Airborne Warning And Control System
  • Aircrafts
  • Civil Engineering
  • Combat Areas
  • Combat Operations
  • Contingency Operations (Military)
  • Control Systems
  • Employment
  • Logistics
  • Military Organizations
  • Organizational Structure
  • Transport Aircraft
  • Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
  • Warfare
  • Warning Systems

Readers

  • Aerospace logistics and air mobility.
  • Economics
  • Strategic Security Studies

Technology Areas

  • Space