Reoptimization for Great Power Competition

Reoptimization for Great Power Competition

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Department of the Air Force
 

 

 

 

“I’m extremely proud of the Space Force and all the good it has accomplished. But, as good as we are, as much as we’ve done, as far as we’ve come, it’s not enough. We are not yet optimized for Great Power Competition.”

~ Chief of Space Operations
Gen. Chance Saltzman 

Space Force & Air Force announce sweeping changes to maintain superiority amid Great Power Competition

The establishment of the U.S. Space Force was a direct response to threats arising from Great Power Competition in the space domain. Nevertheless, our legacy roots leave us sub-optimized for the security environment confronting us today, and we must finish fine-tuning the service to continue meeting its National Defense Strategy responsibilities

In early 2024, the Department of the Air Force unveiled sweeping plans for reshaping, refocusing, and reoptimizing the Air Force and Space Force to ensure continued supremacy in their respective domains while better posturing the services to deter and, if necessary, prevail in an era of Great Power Competition. Through a series of 24 DAF-wide key decisions, four core areas which demand the Department’s attention will be addressed: Develop People, Generate Readiness, Project Power and Develop Capabilities.

The space domain is no longer benign; it has rapidly become congested and contested.

We must enhance our capabilities, develop Guardians for modern warfare, prepare for the high intensity fight, and strengthen our power projection to thrive and win in this new era of Great Power Competition.

 

Video by Airman 1st Class Dakota Carter
Ret. Maj Joseph Cullen’s 95th Birthday
9th Reconnaissance Wing
Jan. 17, 2020 | 2:03
Video package featuring World War II veteran Ret. Maj Joseph Cullen. Three pilots from Beale AFB had the opportunity to attend his birthday party and thank him for his service.
Additional footage provided by Airman First Class Joshua Altice.
Photos provided by the Cullen family.


TRANSCRIPT:
David Cullen: He served a total of 31 years in active and reserve. He flew, I think it was 52 combat missions in the South Pacific in the Reconnaissance version of the P-38. They were rated as combat even though he didn’t have any guns to shoot back with. But he was flying, doing a lot of low-level work over Japanese installations and getting shot at. He said “my mission was always to get the film to someone so that it could be developed to save lives and to have these combat people operate efficiently without risking their lives unnecessarily.” It wasn’t just a bunch of bravado. It was boys who probably were scared. And he admitted as much when he reflected back on this in his diary. He said, to show up, and the very first night he was in Morotai, the Japanese sent over a bomber from the North end of the island. And he said “the next day we went out and dug a deeper foxhole.” He wouldn’t certainly think that he was a hero., He was just 20 years old and he’d been overseas for a year and a half. It’s a pretty heroic enterprise to think about leaving high school, getting right out of high school, and going off and fighting a war.
Pilots: This is just a token of our appreciation on behalf of the 13th Reconnaissance Squadron.
David Cullen: He retired in ‘74, so he’d getting close to 50 years of being out, 45 years of being out and yet to have people come and say “Thank you. Thank you for your service” it really means a lot. He might have been one of those boys that got lost in the clouds over Morotai, people that flew off and never came back.
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Air Force Great Power Competition

 

 

 
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