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6 - It Is War at a Very Intimate Level

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2014

Drone Pilot
Affiliation:
Nellis Air Force Base, Las Vegas, NV*
Peter L. Bergen
Affiliation:
New America Foundation
Daniel Rothenberg
Affiliation:
Arizona State University
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Summary

There’s an insatiable appetite for RPAs [Remotely Piloted Aircraft] right now. When RPAs were first deployed they were so new that the leadership did not realize how popular and successful they would become. Initially, RPAs did not draw in a cadre of fighter pilots. But then things began to change and you saw fighter pilots, bomber pilots, and others who brought with them a lot of experience flying RPAs. Now we’re at the point where RPA pilots are getting the most combat experience of anyone. In my opinion, a lot of the most significant work is being done in the RPA community and that is drawing in the top-tier guys. There is pride associated with flying RPAs.

The important thing for me is the twenty-year-old with the rifle on the ground, sleeping in a ditch. That is why we do this job. If I can be more successful supporting that soldier, then that is what I want to do, day in and day out. Would I like to be flying an F-22 around and doing loops and rolls and things? Sure, absolutely. But I find what I do now to be more meaningful than anything else I could think of.

Type
Chapter
Information
Drone Wars
Transforming Conflict, Law, and Policy
, pp. 113 - 117
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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