USAF Tells Rogers They See Risk If Defense Budget Top-Line is Not Increased 

U.S. Representative Mike Rogers (R-AL), Ranking Member of the House Armed Services Committee, asked General Charles Brown, Chief of Staff of the Air Force, if he shared the same concerns regarding President Biden's defense budget top-line as service chiefs of the Navy and Marine Corps expressed yesterday.

A transcript of the exchange is below:

ROGERS: Thank you Mr. Chairman. General Brown, I've made it pretty clear in my opening statement that I'm unhappy with this top-line. Yesterday we had your naval counterparts, sitting at that table, and General Berger said, ‘if our budgets don't even match inflation, the risk is high, that at some point in the future, we're overmatched and that's not a place I want to be.' Admiral Gilday said ‘If the Navy's top line remains flat or lower, the fleet will decrease.' Do you share their concerns about this top line and what it would mean to our readiness and capabilities?

GEN. BROWN: Ranking Member Rogers I do, and this is why is exactly why I wrote accelerate change to lose, because I do see risk if we do not. Whether you increase the budget or not, and I realize that increasing the budget will be helpful, but as the Chairman mentioned, we've got to do things differently, a bit smarter in executing the budget we do have. And part of that is actually, as part of this FY22 budget, the ability to modernize, which includes retiring and making the transition from where we are today, to a more modernized fleet in the future and aircraft fleet in the future and capabilities in the future to ensure that we do not have future risk. And that's balancing risk between where we are today with today's combatant commanders, in addition to ensuring that all of the risk is incurred, 10 to 15 years from now, not only for the Air Force, and the joint team, but also for the nation.

ROGERS:
Well, I completely agree with the Chairman's view about being smarter and one of the ways we've got to be smarter is with the F-35 and getting the problems worked out there, so we don't have the problems that we suffer now. But going back to, Admiral Gilday and General Berger, both indicated their support for the National Defense Strategy Commission's recommendation for a 3 to 5% increase in defense spending. Do you share their support of that recommendation?

GEN. BROWN: I do.