The Reserve component is the “cost-effective means” to mitigate the risks to the US defense strategy resulting from “inevitable” large-force reductions in Active component end strength discussed in the Pentagon’s Strategic Choices Management Review, said Paul Patrick, deputy assistant secretary of defense for reserve affairs. Speaking at the Reserve Officers Association’s National Security Symposium on Aug. 8 in Washington, D.C., Patrick said relying more on the Reserve component as part of the operational force makes “business sense” as it preserves capacity and capability at a reduced cost. “If potential RC force reductions are envisioned to simply achieve required savings to meet a budget number . . . I only hope that programmers consider that the individual costs of a Reserve component service member [are] about one-third of an Active component service member,” he said. Shrinking the Reserve is “not an optimal way to reduce costs and preserve capability and capacity,” he said. (See also The Trade-Off.)
Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska, celebrated the beddown of its full complement of F-35s with a ceremony just weeks after the base received the last of its 54 fighters. The arrival of those F-35s in mid-April gave Eielson the Air Force’s second fully-equipped, combat-coded F-35 wing, comprising two fighter squadrons.…