In US Pentagon chief pledges $1 bln boost for Air Force training
He said the Air Force would also invest in improving the infrastructure and resources at Nellis and other training ranges, and in hiring more mechanics.
he Pentagon's fiscal
2017 budget will propose a $1 billion boost in spending on advanced
training for the U.S. Air Force over the next five years, U.S. Defense
Secretary Ash Carter said on Thursday.
Carter
said the extra funding would pay for at least 34 major air combat
training exercises at Nellis Air Force Base and other ranges, helping
prepare U.S. forces for a variety of missions from counterinsurgency
operations to conflicts with technologically advanced enemies.
He
said the Air Force would also invest in improving the infrastructure
and resources at Nellis and other training ranges, and in hiring more
mechanics.
"This is a critical place. It's going to stay a critical place, and it's going to get budgetary priority. The key is readiness," Carter said.
The
Pentagon chief lauded the importance of the work done at the Nevada
base, which kicked off a large-scale air combat exercise called Red Flag
on Jan. 25 that runs through Feb. 12.
No other
U.S. training range offered the opportunity to integrate satellite,
cyber, aircraft and ground assets at once, preparing U.S. pilots ready
to fight in future wars, he said.
Carter toured
the base after previewing the Pentagon's $582.7 billion budget for 2017
earlier this week. The budget plan shifts funding to focus more on
potential threats from near-peer competitors such as Russia and China.
"We have to be ready for it all," Carter told reporters.
Lieutenant
Colonel Kevin Gordon told reporters the current Red Flag exercise, one
of four planned this year, included more than 2,400 personnel from the
United States, Australia and Britain, and 120 aircraft.
Three
weeks of complex and challenging exercises were meant to create the
"muscle memory" that would guide pilots if they had to go to war,
helping them train for challenges such as the loss of GPS navigational
signals and cyber attacks, he said.
The exercise also tests the ability of mechanics to repair and service aircraft far from their home bases, Gordon said.
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