Actually if you re-read my posts I said not only ADAF, but also AFROTC.
Like I stated earlier, are you intending to be a CRO or jump ALO or is this a fun thing to do because once ADAF it won't happen?
I ask this especially when you are @9-10 months shy of commissioning. What will happen if you break a leg, arm, shoulder because you landed poorly over the summer? How long will you be out of commission? Will it impact your commissioning physical...DQ?
It might be that many decide not to go this route because commissioning means more than free falling out of a perfectly good airplane. It is not that they aren't offering it per se, but the risk is not worth it.
Again unless their AFSC is CRO or ALO, the fact is why should the AF send them? Why should the Army take up a slot for a cadet that won't use it?
It is not the AF doesn't believe in additional training. I.E. when Bullet was with the 82nd, he sent his AF enlisted members to Ranger school with the Army. This was their career field not for 1 assignment, but their entire career, thus it made sense in every way. For officers they send them to schools tied to their AFSC, not because it sounds cool.
NonDucor is saying they are not going rated. It is just that simple, it would be a waste of dollars since they will never jump out of a perfectly good airplane again, but the CRO or ALO, or even a cadet wanting to go rated would have a much higher chance of jumping out of a plane in their future. Why risk injuring the cadet if it has absolute no impact on doing their job in the future? Why spend the money?
To me it is just business sense. If you want to make a comparison, it would be like the Army sending any AROTC cadet to go to a fighter base and spend the summer taking rides in the back of a 16 or the AFA to do gliders. They would never use that experience once commissioned.
The Army has their mission, and the AF has theirs, it doesn't mean one branch doesn't believe in additional training, it may just means their branch doesn't need to have the same type of training.