2/15/2013 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- The
Air Force has split the space and missile career field in an effort to
ensure more focused development for officers performing these critical
missions in increasingly complex operational environments, Air Force
officials announced today.
Under the old construct, more than 50 percent of space-coded company
grade officers' development time was spent as a missileer, said Col.
Joseph Prue, career field manager for space operations officers.
"Space and Missile Operations have become more and more technical in
application and execution--each in their own unique ways," said Prue.
"This split will enable each career field to continue cultivating
technical expertise via separate, yet equally important, avenues in
order to be more effective and efficient in meeting current and future
AF needs."
This change will allow the Air Force to further strengthen the nuclear
enterprise, said Col. Zannis Pappas, the new career field manager for
"Nuclear and Missile Operations," or AFSC 13N.
"Over the past four years, we have created distinct training and
development tracks for our space and missile officers to further ensure
that our Airmen are prepared for the unique challenges of these
missions," said Pappas. "The transformation of the career field will
allow for deliberate development of specialized skills, technical depth,
and experience to prepare for emerging challenges."
The change affects approximately 3,100 officers coded as either "Space
Operations" or "Nuclear Missile Operations" within the former 13S career
field. Those officers previously coded as "Space Operations" will
remain in the 13S career field and those officers previously coded as
"Nuclear Missile Operations" will have their AFSCs changed to 13N.
All new Air Force officer accessions headed for careers in the former
"Space and Missile Operations" AFSC will be classified as either a
"Space Operations" (AFSC 13S) officer or "Nuclear and Missile
Operations" (AFSC 13N) officer.
Affected officers should contact their career field managers for more
information about how the change will affect them, said Prue.
"The transformation of the career field will give space and missile
officers opportunities to develop the depth and breadth they need for
command, as well as the opportunity for career-long development in
specific mission areas," said Prue.
(Courtesy Secretary of the Air Force Public Affairs)
Saturday, February 16, 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment