By Jim Garamone DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Nov. 9, 2017 — Speed is the crux of innovation
and improvements the Defense Department will make to ensure the force is ready
for any contingency, Air Force Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Stephen W. Wilson said
here at the Defense One Summit this morning.
Wilson said the Air Force is focused on the need for speed.
“We can’t buy new capabilities using old ways,” he said.
Different Threats
The Air Force has been globally engaged for the past 26
years, Wilson said. But, he added, the nature of today’s threats are different.
They range from countering violent extremism to the return of Great Power
politics with Chinese adventurism in the South China Sea and Russia illegally
annexing Crimea and fomenting a civil war in Ukraine.
North Korea developing nuclear weapons and the means to
deliver them -- including testing an intercontinental ballistic missile --
helps “focus” Air Force goals and aims, the general said. “We are focusing our
efforts to be ready for any potential conflict around the globe and give the
President options,” Wilson said. “We organize, train and equip forces to make
sure they are ready to go for any contingency.”
The Air Force is in the midst of a major modernization push,
he said, because the changes in the threats require it. The Air Force is
modernizing its intercontinental ballistic missiles and bomber force. New
aerial refueling tankers are needed for global reach. The F-35 Lightning II
aircraft is hitting its stride, and research has begun on a 6th-generation
aircraft.
“Everything we do is to try to compress that time,” Wilson
said. “Speed is the big driver.”
Moving Quickly
Developing military capabilities is an involved process, the
general said. There is the requirements process, an acquisition process, a
contracting process, a testing process and finally a fielding process. “That
takes time,” he said. “We are doing everything we can to shrink that time.”
All this requires a stable budget, the general said,
something DoD has not had for years. Still the service is working with industry
partners to “do everything we can to compress the time to develop
capabilities,” Wilson said.
Part of this is enabling service men and women and their
civilian peers. The general spoke of going to bases and meeting young airmen
who -- on their own -- developed new methods to speed processes or wrote new
code to automate a particular capability.
Wilson was part of the small Air Force team that worked on
the F-117 Nighthawk stealth aircraft in the 1980s. That team, he said, was
empowered to make decisions quickly and the result was a game-changing aircraft
that performed brilliantly when it was needed.
“We are trying to do that broadly across all our acquisition
programs,” the general said.
The Air Force is heavily invested in artificial intelligence
research, he said, especially looking at how computers can sift data and learn.
Data, Speed
“Data is the new oil,” Wilson said. “How do we sense the
environment? How do we understand it? And how are we able to provide effects
around the globe? With speed.”
The Air Force and DoD need to work with industry to exploit
this new capability, Wilson said. Still, it will present challenges from a
development angle, he said, from a use angle and from an employment angle.
“We are going to have to be thoughtful about this as we go
about making truly autonomous things,” Wilson said. “We can’t just unleash
technology without being thoughtful about how autonomous it can really be.”
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