Hunter’s Tack or Let the Truth Be Told: Hunter told Zakheim, “The real essence of what you were saying is, we need to increase the defense budget by a good $10 to $15 to $20 billion in real terms.” That is the approximate amount of the new personnel costs. He went on: “People costs, and particularly the medical costs, are here to stay” if the military is to sustain its high caliber force, considering there is continuing competition with the private sector. The alternatives, Hunter said, are to “keep modernization at 60 percent of what it should be or you increase the budget.”
With a new policy in hand, the Air Force’s Foreign Military Sales enterprise is looking to go beyond selling USAF systems to allies and partner nations—and instead help them develop their own capabilities. Such an approach, deemed “non-program of record acquisitions,” is part of a larger shift in FMS toward…