by Randy Roughton
Air Force News Service
3/1/2013 - FORT MEADE, Md. (AFNS) -- After
Col. Jeannie Leavitt finished pilot training at the top of her class in
1992, she was given her first choice of aircraft, with a few
restrictions. Her first choice, the F-15 Strike Eagle, wasn't yet an
option for female pilots.
"I was told you finished No. 1, but you cannot pick a fighter," Leavitt
said. "You cannot pick a bomber. You cannot pick a special ops aircraft.
There was a whole list of aircraft I couldn't fly, and I was directed
to choose among the other aircraft."
Fortunately for Leavitt and all female Airmen with similar aspirations,
the following year then-Defense Department Secretary Les Aspin ordered
all service branches to drop restrictions on women flying combat
missions. Leavitt became the Air Force's first female fighter pilot and
later the service's first woman to graduate from the Air Force Weapons
School at Nellis Air Force Base, Nev. Almost two decades later, she's
been the nation's first female fighter wing commander since she assumed
command of the 4th Fighter Wing at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, N.C.,
in 2012.
While she recognizes her place in Air Force history, Leavitt prefers
emphasizing her role as an officer and commander. When she learned she
would be flying the F-15 while she was in the middle of T-38 Talon pilot
instructor training at Randolph Air Force Base, Texas, Leavitt didn't
care about publicity or the chance to make history. She just wanted to
fly in fighters.
"When we first discussed it, the individual from headquarters I was
talking to mentioned there would be a lot of publicity since I would be
the first (woman)," she said. "What I told him was I didn't want the
publicity, but I really want to fly fighters. The thing was, I wanted to
be a fighter pilot. It was part of who I was and what I wanted to do.
The notoriety and publicity wasn't what I wanted, but it came due to the
timing."
Not everyone was happy about the defense secretary's decision, and
Leavitt had to prove herself to those who questioned her abilities
because of her gender.
"A lot of times people were resistant because it was change, and a lot
of times people don't like change," she said. "Some people weren't in
favor of the change that happened and didn't want women flying fighters.
In many cases when I'd show up, once they saw I was competent, and I
was a skilled pilot, and I wasn't trying to change their whole world,
they became much more accepting of me."
Leavitt flew more than 2,500 hours in the F-15, including 300 combat
hours, mostly in Afghanistan and Iraq. Maj. Gen. Lawrence L. Wells, 9th
Air Force commander, flew the F-16 Fighting Falcon as an operations
officer with Leavitt during Operation Southern Watch in 1996.
He recalls surprise when he first saw her at a mass pre-mission briefing
because he didn't know any women were deployed in the area of
responsibility at that time. But the surprise soon turned into
admiration as he observed Leavitt, especially during a mission
supporting a Royal Air Force Tornado GR1 during a threat of an Iraqi
Roland surface-to-air missile. He could sense her professionalism and
skill as he listened to tapes of her radio calls during the de-briefing
after the mission.
"I remember thinking how cool and calm she sounded during the entire
time," Wells said. "It was all just a very professional, well-run
response to a potential threat, and I remember thinking at that time,
'This female fighter pilot is going to go far in our Air Force.'"
He also described the young F-15 pilot as "a great wingman," a trait he thinks will serve her well as a commander.
"We value in our young officers the ability to be in the right place at
the right time," Wells said. "That's what a real wingman does. At the
time, she was a great wingman, which in my view, makes her a better
leader. Because you really have to know how to follow before you can
lead. You have to understand what Airmen are thinking and how your
Airmen are dealing with issues and what your young Airmen are focused
on. Now having been a great wingman, she can be a great commander."
When Wells introduced Leavitt at her change of command ceremony at
Seymour Johnson AFB in June, he chose his words carefully. Despite the
historical significance of her career, Leavitt prefers recognition as an
Air Force officer and commander. Wells chose remarks that would strike
the same tone.
"I had some very specific things I wanted to say about her, and how I
had seen her, not only in combat during Southern Watch, but also from
kind of following her career," Wells said. "What I did not want to do in
my speech was to highlight the fact that she was the first female
commander. I was very sensitive to say the Air Force actually picked the
right person to be in the right job at the right time, which I think
speaks more for her as a professional Air Force officer, who, oh, by the
way, just happens to be a female."
Leavitt now commands one of only three Air Force units with the Strike
Eagle, along with 5,000 active-duty members and 12,000 civilians.
Looking back on the progress women have made in her 20 years in the Air
Force, the biggest difference she's seen is women in fighter squadrons
are no longer unusual as she was in 1993.
"One thing that's changed is women are no longer a novelty," Leavitt
said. "When I started flying fighters in 1993, there were no other
women. So there were no female instructor pilots, no flight commanders
and no squadron commanders. So it was quite a novelty to have a female
in the fighter squadron. The good news is this opportunity opened up,
and quite a few women followed in my path."
Saturday, March 02, 2013
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