General discusses operational perspective

by Maj. Sean Kern
KMC Armed Forces Communications Electronics Publicity Committee

More than 100 Kaiserslautern business and military professionals gathered recently to hear Lt. Gen. Stephen P. Mueller’s perspective on Air Force operations and what it means as Air Force communications and information Airmen transition from a support role to an operational cyberspace role.

General Mueller, U.S. Air Forces in Europe vice commander, discussed the value of diversity in developing an operational perspective at a recent monthly Kaiserslautern chapter of the Armed Forces Communications Electronics Association meeting. He shared his experience as a member of the Air Force Diversity Senior Working Group, highlighting that diversity is about “enhancing our collective perspective” and adding that cyber professionals are the bridge to further diversifying the Air Force’s operational perspective.

The general noted that transitioning from support to operations is a challenge that must be overcome. A result of how the Air Force develops the operations and support career fields is that traditional operators have little technical expertise in the new cyberspace domain, and that not all communicators have the operational perspective of operators. Operators start out as technicians, but eventually branch out, gaining a complex understanding of Air Force capabilities and their roles in the battlespace. Support Airmen start as technicians and, in most cases, remain within their domains throughout their careers.

General Mueller stressed the impact of having an operational perspective and said 70 percent of the general officer corps is rated, while only 35 percent of the entire Air Force is rated. The general said this is because of their “operational perspective.”

General Mueller offered a few suggestions to aid in the transition of new cyber operations Airmen from support to operations.

First, he told them to understand that technical skill sets and the knowledge to operationally integrate Air Force capabilities are distinct, yet both are vital. Cyber professionals must strive to grow operational expertise.

Second, cyber professionals must work at communicating cyber capabilities to operators outside the cyber operations community. He encouraged cyber professionals to cleanse their vocabulary of acronyms and to speak in terms of capabilities and effects.

“Cyber is too important to be isolated,” he said. “We must integrate cyber operations into the overall Air Force operational concept.”

The general addressed the future of cyber staff organization noting that he anticipates the A6 function will become more focused on chief information officer duties and that other elements will be operationalized. He observed that many combatant command J6 staffs are already operationally focused. The major command A6 staffs, however, remain mostly technically focused.

“The Air Force has unique service requirements that will keep us blue-suited in many ways, but we cannot afford to do everything on our own,” General Mueller said while addressing the future of jointness in cyberspace operations. “We must leverage sister-service capabilities where possible.”

Chapter 158 of the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association holds luncheons on the second Thursday of every month. Visit www.

kmcafcea.org for more information.