The alternative plan that Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve officials have been working with USAF would temporarily rather than permanently transfer some reserve component C-130s to the active force, Lt. Gen. Harry Wyatt, ANG director, told the House Armed Services readiness panel Tuesday. Numerous lawmakers and state officials had complained when the original plan came to light last month. Wyatt said the new arrangement “complies with the President’s budget as far as the savings generated.” He added that there would be no transfer of reserve personnel. Under the new plan, when legacy C-130—E and H model—training needs drop as the service acquires more new J models, “those tails that have been loaned by the states will be returned back to those states,” explained Wyatt, adding that the return would occur over time, “about a four- to five-year period at the longest.”
Air Force exercises in the Indo-Pacific may soon get even bigger and more robust, as lawmakers move to invest more than $620 million in such efforts. The bulk of that money, contained in a $150 billion reconciliation package currently making its way through Congress, is $532.6 million for earmarked for…