Why This U.S. Air Force General Doesn't Want American Drones (AVAV, LMT, NOC)
ACC commander: Readiness key to America’s combat power > U.S. Air Force > Article Display
Speaking at an Air Force Association forum in Washington, D.C., this
week, outgoing Air Combat Command chief Gen. Mike Hostage blasted
America's obsession with drones as unrealistic and potentially
dangerous.
"There's a love affair out there in the aviation world with the
concept of unmanned [aerial vehicles], but I really need a human tightly
in the loop," Hostage argued.
As the general explained it, drones may be all well and good in an
environment like Afghanistan, where opposing forces lack an air force or
even air defenses more sophisticated than AK-47s and RPGs. But in any
"contested environment" in which America is asked to do battle against a
modern foe, Hostage argued forcefully for the need to field fighter
jets, electronic warfare aircraft, and top-notch surveillance aircraft
-- all with pilots in the cockpits.
Drones, which can be jammed by opposing electronic warfare
specialists or shot down by more powerful fighter aircraft, won't do the
trick, Hostage said. And to make sure there was no misunderstanding, he
spelled it out: "The kind of platform that [the U.S. needs] is not an
MQ-X, it's not a Predator, not a Reaper."
No comments:
Post a Comment