Among several points made last week by Robert Martinage with the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessment during a House hearing on special operations forces was the need to expand Air Force Special Operations Command’s combat aviation adviser (also known as aviation foreign internal defense, or AvFID) rolls. Roger Carstens with the Center for a New American Security, would expand that list to include more special tactics forces. The Pentagon in early 2006 directed AFSOC to double the size of its 6th Special Operations Squadron from 110 to 230 AvFID advisers, but Martinage told a House Armed Services panel, “That expansion is still insufficient.” He believes, like other defense analysts, that AFSOC must create a wing-level organization. Carstens told the lawmakers that these billets require “the most experienced AFSOC personnel,” calling the challenge to fill additional slots “a bit to ask an already overstretched organization.” Carstens noted, too, that AFSOC’s elite STS field is “manned at only 75 percent” and predicted that trend would continue “as AFSOC faces emerging and expanding missions overall.” (Martinage written testimony; Carstens written testimony)
The first flight of the secretive B-21 bomber has slipped to mid-2022, but the program is moving along well, Air Force Rapid Capabilities Office director Randall Walden said in an exclusive interview. The second copy of the B-21, which will be used for structural testing, is now on the production…