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US Air Force to Fall Short of Recruiting Goal by 10% in Fierce Talent Battle.

The U.S. Air Force is facing⁢ a recruiting challenge as it expects to fall short of its goal ​for new active-duty personnel by​ about 10 percent by the end​ of the‌ fiscal year.

Air Force secretary Frank Kendall has ‍been projecting the ⁤10 percent recruiting shortfall for months and, ⁢in a Monday interview with Military.com, said that’s still ⁤the expected‍ outcome when ‍the fiscal year ends on ‌Sept. 30.

In real numbers, the Air Force aimed to​ recruit 26,877 new active-duty personnel between Oct. 1, 2022, and Sept. 30, 2023.

Leslie Brown, ⁢a spokeswoman for the Air Force Recruiting Service, ‍told NTD News‍ that the service‌ is likely to be about 2,700 recruits short of the⁣ fiscal year goal.

However, she mentioned that these numbers are⁤ still‍ estimates and the service has one ‌more week to ship⁣ recruits before final recruiting⁤ figures are posted for the year.

This 10 percent miss marks the first time ⁢the Air Force has failed to meet its active-duty recruiting ⁢quota since ​1999.

Despite the ⁣shortfall, Mr. Kendall‍ expressed some⁣ optimism in his comments with Military.com.

“I’m overall ⁢encouraged⁣ by where we are in ‍recruiting, but we still have a lot of work.”

Mr. Kendall said ⁤the Air Force is preparing‌ to address long-standing ⁣recruiting issues and⁣ hopes to improve​ matters next year.

While ⁣the Air Force missed its recruiting ​goal, the U.S. Space Force—which is⁤ organized under the purview ⁢of the Department of⁢ the Air Force—did manage to overshoot its recruiting quote for the 2023 fiscal year. The Space Force brought in 517 new enlisted personnel, about ⁤110 percent of ⁣the 472 recruit goal the branch set out for ‌at the start⁢ of ‌the 2023 fiscal ⁤year.

The Air Force’s 10 percent recruiting miss this year ​comes ​after all military⁤ branches struggled with recruiting in fiscal year ⁤2022.

While the Air Force ​met its active-duty recruiting goal in fiscal year 2022, the service‌ acknowledged missing its goals for attracting new Air Force Reserve ‍and Air National Guard troops.

U.S. Air Force Recruiting Service ⁣Commander Major General Garrett Harencak administrates an oath ceremony for the new recruits outside the renovated Times Square Recruiting Station in New York on Nov. 10, 2017. (Jewel Samad/AFP via Getty Images)

The Navy also hit its recruiting goals for‍ active-duty ‌personnel last year but fell short when it ⁤came to ⁣recruiting⁤ new active and⁣ reserve⁢ officers and reserve enlisted personnel. The service⁢ recorded falling short by‌ 209 active-duty officers, 378‍ reserve officers, and 1,958 reserve enlisted personnel.

The Marine Corps ‌was the only U.S. military ‍branch to report meeting⁤ its recruiting ‍goals in all its ⁢categories and components last year.

It was the Army, however, that saw the largest recruiting miss in the 2022 fiscal year. The service⁢ fell about 15,000 ⁢recruits short of its 60,000 recruit goal for ​fiscal year 2022, a 25 percent shortfall.

Recruiting shortfalls in one year can also⁣ have a compounding effect the following year.

In a typical recruiting year, the‍ military branches often meet their ⁣annual recruiting goal and ‍then have a pool of potential new recruits left over in delayed-entry programs, ‍giving them a headstart on the​ next year’s recruiting drive.

The Marine Corps, for example, typically has half of its‌ recruiting numbers lined ‌up at the start of every fiscal year just⁣ from the number of candidates held over⁣ from the ⁤previous year and kept in the service’s delayed entry program. At the start of⁢ the 2023 fiscal year, however, the⁤ Marine ‌Corps only‌ had ​about 30 percent of its recruiting quota ready in ⁢its delayed​ entry program.

The other military branches also had​ to dig ⁤into their delayed ⁤entry candidate pools at the end of the fiscal year 2022, ⁣shorting⁣ their 2023 recruiting drive to meet their 2022 goals.

“Using Air Force lexicon, I’d say we’re doing a ‘dead-stick ​landing’ as we come into the end of fiscal year⁣ ’22, and we’re going to have to turn around on Oct. ‍1 and‍ the start of the new fiscal ⁤year ⁤and do an after-burner takeoff,” ⁤retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Ed Thomas said of the recruiting situation from fiscal year 2022 to 2023.

Mr. ​Thomas, who retired from the ‍Air Force earlier ​this year, said, “We’re going to be starting 2023 in a tougher position than we started 2022.”

New recruits raise their⁣ hands as they take an oath outside the Times Square Military Recruiting Station in New York on Nov. 10,⁣ 2017. (Jewel Samad/AFP​ via Getty Images)

What’s Causing ⁢the⁣ Recruiting ‍Challenges?

In her emailed ‌statement to ‍NTD News, Ms. Brown said the short-term struggle‍ for⁣ military recruiters is contending with a​ national labor shortage and competitive job ⁣market.

“The ​battle for talent is intense,” she said.

Ms.⁢ Brown also pointed ⁢to a general sense of unfamiliarity with the U.S. military‌ among ​potential recruits as another reason for‍ the recruiting challenges ‍the branch⁢ is facing.

The Air Force⁢ Recruiting Service spokeswoman‍ said that lack of familiarity with the military could become a long-term problem. She said there is an overall declining ‌interest⁣ in military service among today’s potential candidates.

She also ‌said the new generation of potential military recruits also struggles with eligibility, with only about 23 percent of ​Americans between the ages of 17 and 24⁢ being able ​to serve without needing a waiver.

Some​ Republican lawmakers and even active-duty ​troops have‌ put part‌ of the blame for the ⁢military’s recruiting struggles ⁣on the perceived political slant of the military in recent years.
⁤ ‌

In ⁢November of last year, ​the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation published ⁢its National​ Defense Survey results (pdf) for 2022, finding ‍just⁤ 48 percent ⁣of respondents had “a​ great deal” of trust and confidence in the military, a 22-point drop⁣ since 2018. The ⁣perception that military leadership was becoming​ overly politicized was the leading reason respondents gave.



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