Includes Dedicated Career Paths For Airmen To Fly Unmanned
Aircraft
Air Force leaders are taking a two-pronged approach to address
the increasing need for pilots of unmanned aircraft systems in
Afghanistan and Iraq, an Air Force official said recently.
The first approach will use a small percentage of undergraduate
pilot training graduates for the short term. The second will
examine the potential for a distinct career path for Airmen to fly
unmanned aircraft.
"The UPT approach will happen quickly," said Col. Pete Lee,
chief of the operational training division in Air Staff
Operations.
In the next couple of weeks, Air Force officials will select
approximately 10 percent of UPT graduates to begin UAS training
when they graduate in October. Their UAS training will be at Creech
Air Force Base, Nevada. After completing a standard UAS tour, UPT
Airmen will receive a follow-on assignment to a manned aircraft,
Colonel Lee added.
In January 2009, the Air Force will begin the second approach, a
small-group testing of a program to train approximately 10
active-duty officers to specifically fly unmanned aircraft. Colonel
Lee said the lessons learned from the first group will be used to
train a second group of 10. Initial training will begin in Pueblo,
CO where the Air Force conducts introductory flight screening.
UAS-specific training will follow with full major weapons system
qualification completed at Creech.
"The plan is to develop and validate training programs that
prepare non-UPT pilots for wartime UAS duty," Colonel Lee said. "We
will continue to uphold the highest levels of Air Force flight
safety standards."
The colonel said this is a historic time for the Air Force.
"Pilots flying unmanned aircraft today and Airmen selected for the
new UAS training program are charting ground-breaking paths for the
Air Force," Colonel Lee said. "They are truly trailblazers."
The Air Force general in charge of oversight of air, nuclear,
space, cyber and weather operations for the Air Staff said the
demand for UAS in theater is critical.
"The combat contributions of unmanned aircraft systems in
today's fight have surpassed all expectations and have taken a
crucial role in our ongoing operations in Iraq and Afghanistan,"
said Lt. Gen. Daniel Darnell, Air Force deputy chief of staff for
operations, plans and requirements.
"The surveillance-only role of UAS has rapidly expanded to
include strike, force protection, and additional intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance missions," the general added.
Colonel Lee said unmanned aircraft are the tip of the spear for
Air Force combat operations in Afghanistan and Iraq because of
"their ability to identify, track and engage our enemies."
From January to August of this year, MQ-1 Predators and MQ-9
Reapers flew more than 4,400 sorties, logging over 81,800 combat
flight hours. They also engaged more than 9,900 ISR targets and
were an integral asset during more than 300 incidents of troops in
contact with the enemy and more than 1,000 raids.
(Aero-News salutes Master Sgt. Russell P. Petcoff, Secretary
of the Air Force Public Affairs)