Armed with results proving high-altitude effects on running performance, Air Force Academy officials pressed the Defense Department to reinstitute altitude-adjusted physical fitness scoring. Evaluating 55 runners from the Colorado Springs area, the Academy’s Human Performance Laboratory demonstrated a marked increase in 1.5 mile run-times, even after runners are acclimatized to altitude—unfairly penalizing airmen at high-altitude bases. “Due to atmospheric pressure, there is a significant difference in oxygen content at sea level (26.5 percent) than there is at 7,200 feet (20.9 percent),” said A.L. Wile, HPL director. Many people see “up to a minute increase in their run times” at the academy, noted its command chief, CMSgt. Todd Salzman. As a result of the study, DOD reinstated altitude-corrected scoring, absent since 2010, on Jan. 1. Starting at 18 seconds, time bonuses increase with altitude at the academy and five stateside bases. (Colorado Springs report by Gino Mattorano)
As the Air Force readied for its June 21-22 strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities, the service was also putting its Agile Combat Employment strategy into action, dispersing combat aircraft and Airmen from Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar in preparation for a possible Iranian retaliatory attack. Some defense experts say…