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Is the USAF flying force large enough? : assessing capacity demands in four alternative futures / Alan J. Vick, Paul Dreyer, John Speed Meyers.

Van Pelt Library UG633 .V535 2018
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Vick, Alan J., author.
Dreyer, Paul, author.
Meyers, John Speed, author.
Contributor:
Rand Corporation.
Project Air Force (U.S.)
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
United States. Air Force--Planning.
United States.
United States. Air Force--Operational readiness.
United States. Air Force--Personnel management.
United States. Air Force.
Manpower planning--United States.
Manpower planning.
Armed Forces--Personnel management.
Armed Forces.
Armed Forces--Operational readiness.
Personnel management.
Planning.
Military planning--United States.
Military planning.
Physical Description:
xix, 89 pages : color illustrations ; 28 cm
Other Title:
Is the United States Air Force flying force large enough?
Place of Publication:
Santa Monica, Calif. : Rand Corporation, [2018]
Summary:
The U.S. military has mostly operated at a high operational tempo since the end of the Cold War, and there appears to be no significant reduction in demand on the horizon. However, the U.S. military has few analytical tools for identifying the force requirements associated with ongoing operations, and there are no systematic efforts within the Department of Defense to collect data on the nature of operational demands over time. This report is intended to help address this imbalance. Drawing on a dataset of U.S. military operations since 1946, the authors quantify historical demands placed on the U.S. Air Force (USAF). They then use this historical evidence to estimate demands on the USAF flying force in four possible futures: two futures in which the United States enters a new cold war with Russia or China; one in which United States renews peace enforcement commitments like those between 1990 and 2000; and one in which U.S. military operations are dominated by global counterterrorism and counterinsurgency operations, as they have been since 2001. The authors find that the current USAF force experiences capacity shortfalls in all four futures, and that no class of aircraft performs well across all four futures. The analysis suggests that prolonged operations are particularly stressing to the force, which is significant given that the average length of operations has been increasing since the end of the Cold War. The authors also find that the identified shortfalls cannot easily be corrected through changes to deploy-to-dwell policies and policies that set a maximum deployment length. Drawing on these findings, the authors provide recommendations for USAF and Department of Defense leaders and force planners.
Contents:
Introduction
An Overview of Joint Operations: 1946-2016
Analytical Approach
Force Structure Implications of Alternative Futures
Findings and Recommendations
Appendix A: Air Force Future Environment Scheduling Simulation (AF-FESS) Model Description
Appendix B: Notes on the Joint Operations Dataset, 1946-2016
Appendix C: Prolonged Joint Operations, 1946-2016
Appendix D: Joint Operations Chronology, 1946-2016
Appendix E: Force Packages Used in AF-FESS
Appendix F: MDS-Level Simulation Results
Appendix G: Estimating a Vietnam War-Level Demand on the USAF FY17 Force.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
1977400728
9781977400727
OCLC:
1049797504

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