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AFSOC Transformation begins with People

  • Published
  • By Air Force Special Operations Command Public Affairs

Air Force Special Operations Command’s guiding principle is that our human capital is a competitive advantage. All airmen – officer, enlisted and civilians – must be enabled and empowered to meet the needs of the Nation, in an increasingly complex and multipolar world.

After nearly 20 years of fighting the Global War on Terrorism, processes and decisions formulated to address an almost singular focus on counter-violent extremist organizations are being challenged, as AFSOC transforms to the “AFSOC We Will Need.”

“This is an AFSOC primed and ready to compete against pacing and peer threats within the larger joint force, while remaining a critical part of the joint SOF team,” said Lt. Gen. Jim Slife, AFSOC Commander. “Without enabling our people, we are unable to create the AFSOC we will need.”

AFSOC’s Strategic Guidance released in January, is synchronized with the Air Force Chief of Staff’s strategic approach, released Aug. 31, 2020. In his first-wave strategy document, called “Accelerate Change or Lose,” Gen. Charles Q. Brown, Jr., the Chief of Staff of the Air Force, outlined five focus areas requiring attention to maintain the Air Force’s competitive advantage in current and future conditions. 

“I fully support the Chief of Staff’s position on empowering and trusting Airmen to solve any problem, and we have been seeking better ways to do this in AFSOC over the last ten months,” said Slife. 

AFSOC’s alignment with CSAF guidance doesn’t end there. The command emphasis on equipping it’s airmen to compete and win echoes the broader Air Force commitment that “We must collaborate within and throughout to succeed.”

Both strategy documents agree the things that brought the United States combat success for decades no longer guarantee success in the future; instead, an urgent concentration on developing our airmen and while modernizing AFSOC is needed to avoid failures amid great power competition.

AFSOC’s strategic guidance emphasizes three main focus areas:

  1. Develop our human capital to enable our Airmen to maximize their potential
  2. Organize to ensure our human capital is ready for full-spectrum operations, from the lowest tactical level to a theater-wide operational level
  3. Equipping our human capital with concepts and technology to compete and win

These efforts include developing new developmental pathways for officer, enlisted, and civilian career paths, creating a sustainable AFSOC Force Generation model, increase investments in training, and pathfinding for the Air Force to rapidly field new technology.

AFSOC Airmen will see investment by leaders at all levels and opportunities to participate in the change we need in order to transform from the “AFSOC we needed” to “the AFSOC we will need”.

“The world has changed, the key players have evolved, and to remain competitive we must rapidly change, too,” Slife said.