Air Force Training More Drone Pilots Than New Fighter and Bomber Pilots

September 20th, 2009

Via: Newsweek:

In 2007, the year before Schwartz became chief, UAVs were performing 21 combat air patrols at any one time, for a total of just over 100,000 hours. By 2011, they’ll reach 54 patrols and almost 350,000 hours. For now, the joystick pilots have to be certified fighter pilots as well.

But Schwartz says this requirement will be dropped, mainly because there aren’t enough fighter pilots to fill the growing demand for UAV crews. “There’s no need for them to be pilots,” one senior Pentagon official says. “It’s sort of like a union regulation.”

This year, the Air Force will train more joystick pilots than new fighter and bomber pilots. “If you want to be in the center of the action, this is the place to be,” Schwartz says. “It’s not a temporary phenomenon…It’s a sustainable career path. I’ve made that very clear.” Lt. Col. Travis Burdine, a Predator pilot-from-afar, has gotten the message: “We all joined the Air Force to go flying, but word on the street is that job satisfaction is very high [manning a joystick]. Every day we’re doing this, we’re in the thick of the fight. We fly 36 [combat air patrols] a day. Where they’re happening, the hottest 36 things are going on.”

It’s not hard now to imagine a time when the dominant combat leaders of the Air Force have no physical contact with airplanes. “We’re opening an aperture,” Schwartz says. “How do we define a warrior-airman? The definition is expanding.” Whatever happens, he says, “the trend lines are inescapable: we increasingly will become less of a manned aviation force.” C. R. Anderegg, the Air Force historian, says that just as the generals of the 1950s and ’60s were predominantly bomber pilots, and the generals of the 1970s and ’80s were mainly fighter pilots, so a lot of the generals in the coming decades may be UAV joystick pilots. “It’s going to be pretty hard for a promotion board, picking the next one-star generals, to pick a colonel who hasn’t commanded a UAV wing over a colonel who has. The UAV commander has the experience, and he has a larger, less insular view of the battlefield than, say, an F-22 pilot at Langley.”

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