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posted by janrinok on Wednesday June 17 2015, @08:04PM   Printer-friendly
from the offer-to-deploy-them dept.

United States Air Force Needs a Few Hundred Good Drone Pilots

The military brass in charge of America's drones say that there's a shortage of pilots.

According to The New York Times, a "significant number" of the 1,200 United States Air Force pilots are "coming up for re-enlistment and are opting to leave, while a training program is producing only about half of the new pilots that the service needs."

Col. James Cluff, commander of the Air Force's 432nd Wing, invited the Times along with a few other media onto the decade-old nerve center of drone operations outside of Las Vegas on Tuesday. He told them that the Air Force has pulled instructors from schools to the "flight line." The agency now conducts 65 drone flights a day, a number that is expected to drop to 60 by fall 2015.

With the rise of the Islamic State and other global hotspots, there is increasing pressure on the Air Force to provide more drone flights. But while drone operators get to see their families at night and are half a globe away from their targets, it still takes a toll.

"Having our folks make that mental shift every day, driving into the gate and thinking, 'All right, I've got my war face on, and I'm going to the fight,' and then driving out of the gate and stopping at Wal-Mart to pick up a carton of milk or going to the soccer game on the way home—and the fact that you can't talk about most of what you do at home—all those stressors together are what is putting pressure on the family, putting pressure on the airman," Col. Cluff said.

Any takers?

USAF Cuts Drone Flights as Stress Drives Off Operators

The NYT reports that the US is being forced to cut back on drone flights as America's drone operators are burning out and the Air Force is losing more drone pilots than they can train. "We're at an inflection point right now," says Col. James Cluff, the commander of the Air Force's 432nd Wing. Drone missions increased tenfold in the past decade, relentlessly pushing the operators in an effort to meet the insatiable demand for streaming video of insurgent activities in Iraq, Afghanistan and other war zones, including Somalia, Libya and now Syria. The biggest problem is that a significant number of the 1,200 pilots are completing their obligation to the Air Force and are opting to leave. Colonel Cluff says that many feel "undermanned and overworked," sapped by alternating day and night shifts with little chance for academic breaks or promotion.

What had seemed to be a benefit of the job, the novel way that the crews could fly Predator and Reaper drones via satellite links while living safely in the United States with their families, has created new types of stresses as they constantly shift back and forth between war and family activities and become, in effect, perpetually deployed. The colonel says the stress on the operators belied a complaint by some critics that flying drones was like playing a video game or that pressing the missile fire button 7,000 miles from the battlefield made it psychologically easier for them to kill. "Everyone else thinks that the whole program or the people behind it are a joke," says Brandon Bryant, a former drone camera operator who worked at Nellis Air Force Base, "that we are video-game warriors, that we're Nintendo warriors."

 
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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by GreatAuntAnesthesia on Wednesday June 17 2015, @10:00PM

    by GreatAuntAnesthesia (3275) on Wednesday June 17 2015, @10:00PM (#197558) Journal

    Nice idea. In practise however I expect you'd be thrown out as soon as it became clear you aren't prepared to be the unquestioning murderer they want you to be. Either that, or they would succeed in turning you into one. I'll pass thanks.

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  • (Score: 2) by bradley13 on Thursday June 18 2015, @09:10AM

    by bradley13 (3053) on Thursday June 18 2015, @09:10AM (#197732) Homepage Journal

    This is a problem. Officers take an oath to uphold the Constitution. Part of officer training emphasizes the responsibility to disobey illegal orders.

    One might suppose that attacking and killing people on a regular basis, in a foreign country, would require something like a declaration of war. Loose criteria for determining targets. High errors rates, since terrorists are embedded in the civilian population. There are plenty of reasons why a discerning officer could consider the actions in the Middle East to be illegal.

    IIRC, a few years ago, one Lieutenant did refuse orders to deploy to Iraq, on the basis that the war there was illegal [wikipedia.org]. The story hit the media, then almost immediately disappeared. Disappointing - I really hoped that the story would gain some traction. He was ultimately discharged from the service, because the Court Martial said that it was unable to determine the legality of the orders.

    --
    Everyone is somebody else's weirdo.
    • (Score: 3, Insightful) by GreatAuntAnesthesia on Thursday June 18 2015, @01:31PM

      by GreatAuntAnesthesia (3275) on Thursday June 18 2015, @01:31PM (#197794) Journal

      You know, that ought to be far bigger news: A military court finds that it is unable to determine the legality of the war it's engaged in, and the same military just shrugs it off and continues fighting the war anyway..? Surely something is amiss here.