Air Force Chief of Staff Mark Welsh said there are three keys to strengthening the Air Force team: common sense, communications, and caring. “We’ve got to make sure common sense is the first standard we apply,” he said in his address to AFA’s 2013 Air and Space Conference on Tuesday in National Harbor, Md. Welsh said the service has “hundreds and hundreds” of Air Force instructions, “many of which haven’t been rewritten in a long time.” The world changes “real quickly in this business,” he said. He acknowledged that the Air Force possesses many “frustrated” people operating on the front end, not understanding why they are asked to do what doesn’t make sense to them. “If it doesn’t make common sense, if it doesn’t make the mission better . . . don’t do it,” he said. As for communications, specifically “corporate communications,” Welsh said he was not doing a “good-enough job” getting information out to airmen. It gets “stuck in stovepipes” or in publications not being viewed. Welsh emphasized the need to fix this issue because airmen “want answers.” Finally, he said, “we have to care more” about fellow airmen. “The people we work beside are the greatest people on Earth,” he said.
The Air Force has added new self-guided gliders to deliver cargo to “high-risk environments” without putting a manned aircraft in danger. Contractor DZYNE and the Air Force Research Laboratory unveiled the new “Grasshopper” gliders, which can be dropped out of a C-17 or C-130 and fly “tens of miles.”