By Secretary of the Air Force Public Affairs, / Published
December 17, 2015
WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- Air Force officials announced a new
initiative Dec. 17 to enhance the Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance
mission by integrating enlisted remotely piloted aircraft pilots into the
force.
Air Force officials stated a dynamic threat environment
calls for innovative approaches to high-demand missions. After careful
consideration and with an eye toward potential future force needs, service
officials plan to deliberately integrate the enlisted force into flying
operations, starting with the RQ-4 Global Hawk.
“Our enlisted force is the best in the world and I am
completely confident they will be able to do the job and do it well,” said
Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee James. “The RPA enterprise is doing
incredibly important work and this is the right decision to ensure the Air
Force is positioned to support the future threat environment. Emerging
requirements and combatant commander demands will only increase; therefore, we
will position the service to provide warfighters and our nation the capability
they deserve today and in the future.”
The secretary and chief directed Air Combat Command to
develop an implementation plan over the next six months to address items like
entry requirements, training plans, career path development, delineation of
duties, compensation details and an appropriate force mix. Implementation is
focused on the Global Hawk community, not the MQ-1 Predator and MQ-9 Reaper
force.
“This action will make the most of the capabilities of our
superb enlisted force in order to increase agility in addressing the ISR needs
of the warfighter,” James said. “Just as we integrated officer and enlisted
crew positions in the space mission set, we will deliberately integrate enlisted
pilots into the Global Hawk ISR community.”
In the space mission arena, the Air Force took a deliberate
approach to incorporate enlisted personnel into satellite operations. During
the space mission transition, the Air Force ensured enlisted Airmen were prepared
to successfully assume these new responsibilities. Phasing the conversion also
allowed squadrons to build expertise and transition officers into other areas
that faced shortages, officials said. As a result, the Air Force grew
leadership opportunities and normalized operations, posturing for a more
congested and contested environment in space.
“We are taking action now to address future ISR needs,” said
Chief of Staff of the Air Force Gen. Mark A. Welsh III. “Not too long ago, we
took the best of both officer and enlisted development tracks to lead the space
mission. A similar model can be applied to our Global Hawk operations.”
This initiative to incorporate enlisted pilots is the first
step to developing future operating concepts within the multi-domain ISR
enterprise. The Global Hawk is the most stable RPA community and presents an
ability to integrate new capabilities in an effort to better posture the force
for the dynamic future operating environment.
“The Global Hawk mission is a strategically vital mission,”
Welsh said. “The transition to enlisted pilots will be managed with minimum
impact on current Global Hawk pilots. As always, we will continue to assess and
balance our force to meet warfighter needs while ensuring appropriate force development.”
The service plans to be deliberate in its approach, ensuring
learning occurs along the way.
“What we learn from
flying Global Hawks with enlisted pilots under the supervision of rated
officers will inform whether we apply a similar approach to other weapon
systems,” Welsh said. “It is too soon to speculate on any expansion of enlisted
aircrew beyond the Global Hawk program.”
Air Force officials
are confident this decision will enable flexibility heading into the future.
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