The bomber rotations to Andresen, AFB, Guam have “done several things,” Brig. Gen. Timothy Ray, operations director for Air Force Global Strike Command, said in a recent interview. They give crews the “chance to deploy forward and focus on a particular area of responsibility, to fly conventional missions and long-range strike missions, support a combatant commander, integrate with joint partners, and participate in larger exercises,” he said. Because Guam is a deployed environment, crews and maintainers can really focus intensely on training and flying their aircraft, added Ray. Global Strike Command and Pacific Air Forces officials are trying to ensure the deployments create a “readiness bounce, not a tax,” he said. PACAF has allowed AFGSC to keep training for nuclear mission profiles while its bombers are on Guam, to keep up crewmembers’ skills and proficiencies. “You are not flying combat missions,” like you would be in the US Central Command region, but “here you can train,” said Ray. Many flight skills are applicable to both nuclear and conventional missions, and allowing crews to ingrain and sharpen those skills in a deployed environment means less “spin up” when they return home, he said. “The idea is to work a win-win experience between PACAF and our crews and maintainers,” said Ray.
The design of the launch facilities for the Air Force’s new Sentinel intercontinental ballistic missile are likely to undergo major revision, posing yet another challenge for the much-delayed and over-budget program to modernize the land-based component of America’s nuclear triad, officials said.