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News > Directors: Air Guard, Army Guard are cost-effective forces
Directors: Air Guard, Army Guard are cost-effective forces

Posted 12/13/2010 Email story   Print story

    


by Army Sgt. Darron Salzer
National Guard Bureau


12/13/2010 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- We are trained to the same standards of the active duty Air Force, we are available and on call 365 days a year, and it doesn't cost the taxpayer a thing until the governor picks up the phone, the director of the Air National Guard said Dec. 8 at the Reserve Officer Association here.

"I think that's a great value," said Lt. Gen. Harry "Bud" Wyatt.

General Wyatt said 70 percent of the Air Guard is made up of drill-status guardsmen, "not employed by the federal government, which means that the Air Guard is a cost-effective force, and a value to America as we go through these tough economic times."

Like General Wyatt, Army Maj. Gen. Raymond Carpenter, the acting director of the Army National Guard, also said the Army Guard is a cost-effective value for the United States, "but the national leadership has got to figure out how much belongs in the Army Guard and how much in the active component."

Speaking with a panel of industry leaders, both directors agreed that personnel are the key to the value of both components.

"With about 106,700 Airmen in the Air Guard, we form about 20 percent of the total uniformed personnel of the U.S. Air Force." General Wyatt said. "And what this all means is that any cuts in the Air Guard force structure would severely limit the capabilities of the Air Force."

"If we didn't have the people -- and the right people -- that we do today in the Army National Guard, then the rest of what we do today would not matter," General Carpenter said. "End-strength, and the recruiting and retention of our Soldiers have been to key where we're at now and will be for where we're going."

General Wyatt said, "it's not just our personnel that make us cost effective, it's also our partnerships that we have with civilian airports."

We have about 75 percent of our wings co-located with municipal or city airports, which allows us access to about $12 billion in infrastructure for about $4 million a year," he said.

"For as little as the Air Guard is represented in the Air Force budget, we provide about 35 percent of the Air Force's combat capabilities," General Wyatt said. "So as far as cost effectiveness goes, the Air Guard is a great investment."

As the Air Guard moves forward, it will be able to meet the challenges of the future, but recapitalizing the fleet will continue to allow the Air Guard to be a capable force, General Wyatt said.

"The older these aircraft get, the more costly they will become to maintain," he said. "Another thing to consider is that with the change in the threats we face today, even maintaining these aircraft will not keep them as combat-ready."

"It should come as no surprise that the Air Guard faces the same challenges as the active-duty Air Force when it comes to modernizing our fleet, as (most) of our stuff is old and out of date," General Wyatt said.



tabComments
12/14/2010 10:13:18 AM ET
As a ten year veteran of the Texas Air National Guard and a veteran of the Reserves and active duty my conclusion is that we sure do not need both organizations. The two organizations pay for extra headquarters extra mahogany furniture extra complexity extra coordination. The actual historical militia is still alive and well - in the State Guard forces. The National Guard pretends to be the decendants of the militia but actually is more federal resources. A militia force has no need for F-16s no need for tanks. We need to consolidate but that means that some Generals will not be needed.
Charles Phillips LtCol USAF Retired, Houston Texas
 
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