Air Force to Train More Computer Pilots than Aircraft Pilots

Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Creech Air Force Base

Having graduated its first class of “drone pilots” only this year, the U.S. Air Force is now saying that the growing demand for unmanned aircraft missions is so great that it will have to train more of these new breed of “aces” who never leave the ground than actual cockpit pilots in 2009. The shift in relying on unmanned Predator and Reaper aircraft could even eliminate the need altogether for traditional bombers and fighters when it comes to carrying out aerial surveillance or dropping ordinances and firing air-to-surface missiles on enemy targets, according to Lieutenant General David Deptula, Air Force deputy chief of staff for ISR [intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance].

 
The Air Force currently is flying 35 round-the-clock missions involving Predators and Reapers in Afghanistan and Iraq combined, with a goal of expanding the number of 24-hour sorties to 50 by 2011. Currently, one drone pilot can operate a single Predator from his ground-based console in the United States, but new technology will soon allow that same pilot to “fly” as many as four unmanned aircraft at one time.
 
Drone pilots are presently based at one of six Air Force centers around the country, with the hub at Creech Air Force Base in Nevada. The other five centers are located in North Dakota, upstate New York, Arizona, Texas and California.
-Noel Brinkerhoff
 

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