The Air Force’s civilian workforce is so crucial to the service’s day-to-day functioning that it can’t be separated out when discussing readiness issues, Air Force Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Larry Spencer told lawmakers. “I don’t [make] a distinction between civilian airmen and readiness because they are so key to readiness,” he told the Senate Armed Services Committee’s readiness panel on April 18. Spencer noted that some 80 percent to 90 percent of the service’s civilian employees “don’t work in the Pentagon.” Instead, “They work out in the field. And I’m not sure everybody quite understands that,” he said. He cited the critical role of civilian mechanics in Air Force pilot training. At Laughlin AFB, Tex., for example, civilians perform “100 percent of the maintenance” on the airplanes there, he said. Thus, a furlough of Defense Department civilians—which the Pentagon is facing due to the budget sequester—would mean “a direct cut to the amount of airplanes” available for that training and “the amount of pilots we can train,” said Spencer. (Spencer’s prepared statement)
US Has Struck Over 1,000 Houthi Targets in Renewed Campaign
April 30, 2025
U.S. forces have struck more than 1,000 Houthi targets in Yemen since March 15, U.S. officials said, as the Trump administration’s military campaign against the militants reached the 45-day mark. Dubbed Operation Rough Rider, the campaign has drawn on U.S. Navy and Air Force warplanes and drones. The campaign shows…