Secretary of the Air Force Michael Donley listens as Master Sgt. Adam Jensen, a Tactical Air Control Party Airmen working with the program office at Hanscom Air Force Base, Mass., explains new technologies of an integrated vest aimed at reducing the size and weight of current equipment. During his visit, the secretary also met with military and civilian award winners and held an Airman's call with base personnel, thanking Hanscom members for their contributions to providing innovative technology to Airmen around the world. (U.S. Air Force Photo by Linda LaBonte Britt)
Secretary of the Air Force Michael Donley addresses a packed crowd inside the Aero Club hangar during his visit at Hanscom Air Force Base, Mass., April 25, 2013. The secretary also met with military and civilian award winners and received briefings and technology demonstrations. Donley emphasized the value of work being done at Hanscom and also spoke about strategic Air Force issues and budget challenges. (U.S. Air Force Photo by Mark Wyatt)
Secretary of the Air Force Michael Donley checks out the Mini-Thermal Monocular device acquired by program managers at Hanscom Air Force Base, Mass., and used by Air Force Tactical Air Control Party members to view thermal imagery and mark targets during his visit here April 25, 2013. During his visit, the secretary also met with military and civilian award winners and held an Airman's call with base personnel, thanking Hanscom members for their contributions to providing innovative technology to Airmen around the world. (U.S. Air Force Photo by Linda LaBonte Britt)
Secretary of the Air Force Michael Donley and 66th Air Base Group commander, Col. Lester Weilacher, look on during briefings at Hanscom Air Force Base, Mass., April 5, 2013. During his visit here, Donley met with military and civilian award winners, received briefings and technology demonstrations and held an Airman's call with base personnel. He also traveled to Cambridge, Mass., where he received the 2013 Doolittle Award from the MIT Security Studies Program. (U.S. Air Force Photo by Linda LaBonte Britt)
4/26/2013 - HANSCOM AIR FORCE BASE, Mass. (AFNS) -- Systems that help collect, process and push data to where it's needed quickly and securely are vital to Air Force operations, Secretary of the Air Force Michael Donley said during a visit here April 25.
"Working independently and also with world-class high tech talent in the Boston area, you help ensure that our Airmen have the innovative technology they need and should have and will have for mission success," he said.
In addition to the Airman's call, Donley also met with military and civilian award winners, and received briefings and technology demonstrations from various program offices.
Citing Hanscom's many accomplishments, the secretary singled out a few "game-changers that will help chart the future for our Air Force."
He lauded the Responsive Cyber Division for working side by side with the 24th Air Force.
"They're giving us the ability to rapidly improve capabilities in the dynamic cyber environment," he said.
Donley also spoke about the air operations center, which he called "a command and control tool without equal." And he commended Hanscom for working to enhance reliable and secure communications.
"Whether those comms go from halfway around the globe or from an F-22 to a nearby aircraft, Hanscom is enabling a linked future for our Air Force," he said.
At the strategic level, the Air Force is facing many challenges, the secretary noted, and nearly all of them are driven or heavily affected by budget constraints. The heavy operational tempo of the last decade also has taken a toll on Air Force weapon systems and people.
"Unit readiness has declined significantly from 2003 onward," he said. "With the rebalance to the Asian Pacific and the continued presence in the Middle East and Africa, demand for Air Force capabilities will remain constant and perhaps even rise in the next decade. And we must improve readiness in order to prevent a hollow force."
Shortages in Air Force operations and maintenance and overseas contingency operations accounts continue to hamper these efforts, he said, noting that sequestration requires the Air Force to subtract $10 billion from the last seven months of the fiscal year.
"With the steep and late FY 13 budget reductions brought on by sequestration, the readiness hole we've been trying to climb out of just got deeper," Donley said.
Effects on modernization are no less severe. In fact, given Congressional resistance to force structure changes, infrastructure reductions and military compensation amendments - combined with the required focus on readiness - modernization could be affected disproportionally in the years ahead.
If left unaddressed, the resulting deficiencies will "seriously undermine our ability to accomplish the mission the nation asks us to undertake."
However, Air Force leadership will continue to fight for the capabilities modernization provides, he said, vowing to maintain an Air Force that is "the envy of the world."
"We do face difficult choices, but the glass is at least half full," Donley said. "I commend the Airmen who make it so."