According to Byford, cited by The Times, the UK air force wants women and ethnic minorities to make up 40% and 20%, respectively, of new employees by 2030. Therefore, the military official asked the air force training center to suspend recruitment before next month's discussion of the new principles of admission by the UK Air Force Board.
Beford also denied claims that changes in recruitment could affect the UK air force's operational requirements.
“I want the best people. So I need the best people to join to achieve the best they can during their service career and we get... what we need from an operational capability perspective," Byford said in an interview. "And if I can include more women and more people from different backgrounds in that, I think I have a better service in the long run. We are unashamed about doing that because I think that is a good thing.”
Earlier in the week, media reported that the UK air force ceased to recruit white male recruits in order to achieve goals on ethnic and gender diversity in the army, but the country's Defense Ministry denied the reports.