Letter to Ashton Carter, Secretary of Defense - Standardized Training for UAS Pilots

Letter

Date: May 27, 2015
Location: Washington, DC

Dear Secretary Carter,

We are all aware that unmanned aerial systems (UAS) are an essential element in America's warfighting arsenal. However, a recent GAO report highlights insufficient training, inconsistent standards, and critical manning shortfalls in this critical mission area. Despite years of effort to expand the Air Force's unmanned combat air patrol capacity, the service has continually fallen short of its own manpower projections. The Air Force currently estimates a shortfall of nearly 400 MQ-1/9 aircraft pilots to sustain the regular Air Force requirement of 1,200 pilots. That "shortfall" may in fact be somewhat misleading as there is a distinct possibility the Air Force requirement may be understated. These pilot shortages have constrained training and placed extreme strain on the existing community of pilots and sensor operators. The Army has attempted to mitigate similar shortages by lowering training standards to increase availability of instructors in the field. This action, coupled with pulling enlisted UAS pilots off-task to perform unrelated additional duties, has resulted in UAS pilots receiving insufficient flying training and causing negative impacts on UAS unit readiness levels.

We are disturbed that the Department of Defense has no standardized training program for UAS pilots and personnel. The continued lack of consistent and uniform training standards is simply unacceptable. In addition to collecting critical intelligence, the Department's UAS programs carry out sensitive strike missions that should require high standards and specialized training. We urge you to focus senior leaders in the Department on these issues, and develop and implement a coherent UAS organizational, manpower, and training strategy to ensure our combatant commanders get the highly trained and proficient operators of these systems they need to protect our warfighters and defeat our adversaries. We look forward to your response.

We thank you for your cooperation in this matter and for your continued service to the Department and our Nation.

Sincerely,

John McCain

Chairman

Senate Armed Services Committee

Jack Reed

Ranking Member

Senate Armed Services Committee


Source
arrow_upward