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siegecrossbow

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Until the Air Force can make the changes it wants in the fiscal 2024 budget and beyond, it isn’t a force “that wins,” Air Force Futures director Lt. Gen. S. Clinton Hinote warned the Senate Armed Services airland subcommittee—and without action, the service’s hoped-for transformation could “fall off the rails.”

Hinote, presenting his final testimony in Congress before capping a 35-year career, said the Air Force is at an inflection point and must break from prioritizing “fight tonight” forces to invest in future capabilities. Until that happens, USAF risks losing a peer fight, he said.

In the April 26 hearing, Hinote said he feels a “sense of urgency to push the changes that we need.”

“For too long, we have privileged current risk at the expense of future risk,” Hinote said, adding that too often that future risk is treated as theoretical, rather than a hard-nosed appraisal of the threat.

“What it really means is that we are not handing off ‘an Air Force that wins’ to the next generation,” he said. “I’m not OK with that. And I know you aren’t, either.”
Hinote said the budget now before Congress “helps us get to the change that we need. It’s not perfect—no budget is—but due to the leadership of Secretary [Frank] Kendall and Gen. [Charles Q.] Brown, we are seeing real progress in our operational imperatives and force design.”

While
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around the budget have focused on its divestment of older, less capable platforms, Hinote said it goes well beyond that.

“There is real and transformational change in this budget,” Hinote said. “We are shifting major resources to the new capabilities that will be used in new ways. For years, we have needed a change-oriented budget. This is it.”

As the leader of
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, Hinote noted
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“is to be the voice of tomorrow’s Airmen, to advocate for the capabilities and concepts the next generation of leaders will need to be successful.” To get there, “we will have to change, and change is hard,” he said.

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has been a staple of his efforts for several years, Hinote said, and the systems and organizational changes USAF is implementing are the only way to win, he said. These include Collaborative Combat Aircraft, future air superiority capabilities, and Agile Combat Employment, he specifically noted.


More generally, he pointed out that serving under three different presidential administrations, “I found it remarkable that they arrived at three common conclusions”:

  • China “is the primary challenge”
  • The mission is to deter, and deterrence rests on “being ready to fight and win”
  • Change is necessary to keep up with the threat
China, he added, is “a worthy adversary” and its rapidly-advancing military capabilities must be taken seriously.

Asked by Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) what he wants to “get off his chest” before leaving the service, Hinote said “I’ve watched this … story unfold, and we’ve known we needed a change for many, many years, and it feels like we’re finally—maybe—getting to a pivot point right now.

“That’s exciting, but it’s also scary, because it could come off the rails right away. We don’t want that, so, I’m cautiously optimistic and I’ll be cheering from the sidelines,“ Hinote concluded.
 

Strangelove

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Deadly crashes ground US Army flights​

Twelve soldiers have been killed in incidents over the last month, including a fatal episode earlier this week

The US Army has ordered non-critical military flights to be grounded after lethal helicopter crashes in Alaska and Kentucky. The Pentagon said all aviators, including active-duty troops, must undergo additional safety training.

The military branch
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the move on Friday, saying the order is effective immediately for all Army personnel excluding those “participating in critical missions.”

“The safety of our aviators is our top priority, and this stand down is an important step to make certain we are doing everything possible to prevent accidents and protect our personnel,”
Army Chief of Staff James McConville said.

The ground stop was prompted by a string of recent mishaps involving Army aircraft. On Thursday, two AH-64 Apache helicopters crashed near Healy, Alaska following a training mission, leaving three soldiers dead and another wounded. The military has not yet determined the cause of the incident, but investigators were expected to arrive at the scene of the crash on Saturday.

Nine Army troops from the 101st Airborne Division were also killed in a separate training accident in Kentucky last month. During a nighttime mission, two UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters collided in midair while flying in formation, leaving no survivors.

Yet another helicopter wreck took place in Alaska last February, also involving an Apache gunship, which resulted in injuries to soldiers and damage to the aircraft but no fatalities.

Though the lethal crashes are still under investigation, the Army said “there is no indication of any pattern between the two mishaps.”
To avoid incidents going forward, active duty troops are set to receive new safety training between May 1 and 5, while National Guard and Reserve members will have until May 31 to complete the course, according to Army spokesman Lt. Col. Terence Kelley.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
These were published in mp.net before it went bust but I don't remember who posted them, maybe they are around here if they want credit where it is due
I posted them. There was another member of mp.net, wicked_hind that was aboard USS Harry S Truman that took them. Here are links to the photos I posted in this forum;


 
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