*Pilot Not Included
Military aviation prepares for the inevitable.
- By Michael Milstein
- Air & Space magazine, July 2011
Northrop Grumman’s portrait of the future for naval aviation: the X-47B on the runway in Palmdale, California.
Courtesy Northrop Grumman
(Page 2 of 4)
Former Navy pilot Steve “Scaggs” Bos recalls that flying fighters off carriers was “the most fun you could have with your clothes on.” He logged more than 4,000 hours in A-7s and F/A-18s, and made some 700 carrier landings. Now he works at Northrop Grumman on the X-47B. “At first, the thought that a machine could do it as good or better than you all the time was a little bit alien,” says Bos, who handles the logistics of managing the UCAV on the carrier deck. He knows that pilots will probably hold the rookie robot to a higher standard than they do one another. “It will be hard to accept it into the club until that robot does something phenomenal for you,” he says. “Maybe it gives you critical targeting information. Or meets you on a bingo profile [almost out of fuel] and gives you 500 pounds of fuel,” where a pilot might otherwise have to ditch in the ocean when his tanks run dry. “Until we go out there and prove it,” he adds, “Northrop Grumman will be perceived as just blowing smoke.”
The X-47B is a bit smaller than an F/A-18, with a bay that can hold intelligence sensors, guided weapons, or tanks to refuel other airplanes. Though manned fighters look sleek, they produce more drag than the X-47B’s flying-wing design, which offers more than 2,000 miles in range, almost twice that of an F/A-18.
“As a young man, I would have said, ‘Gosh, they’re trying to take my job,’ ” says Hubbard, who has flown more than 26 years as a Navy pilot. As a commander of more than 500 pilots, he now takes a longer view. “The unique thing in the future is I won’t have to put my blood and treasure forward to do the nation’s business. I think that is a brilliant concept in itself. But there will always need to be men in the loop to make those decisions that are critical.”
He imagines UAVs as force-multiplying wingmen. “They’re more agile, they’re more survivable, they have smaller signatures,” he says. “I can send them out there and distribute them as part of my total strike package. I have one man with potentially three, four, [even] eight UAVs on my wing. I know it’s kind of outlandish to think about, but I think that is potentially the future.”
Plenty of minds agree. Britain’s BAE Systems is developing an unmanned stealth aircraft, Taranis, with intercontinental range. Boeing’s Phantom Works is funding development of a UCAV called the Phantom Ray. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is looking for an unmanned version of the A-10 “Warthog.”
Pilots know that the kinds of advances that brought head-up displays, radar improvements, and precision weapons will extend to UAVs, making carriers “much more lethal and powerful,” says Captain Sterling Gilliam, an EA-6B Prowler pilot who commanded a Navy air wing in Afghanistan and Iraq. Like Hubbard, Gilliam thinks UCAVs and piloted aircraft will creatively coexist. “I don’t believe the last naval aviator has been born,” he says. “But if he has, I just hope he’s not in grade school yet.”
“When the human is a detriment to the mission, then it’s time to look at unmanned,” says Craig Brown, a former Air Force F-16 flight instructor who now manages the Phantom Ray program for Boeing. Piloted airplanes carry heavy ejection seats, oxygen, and other support equipment, requiring either more fuel or less airtime due to weight. Removing people and their baggage frees capacity for more sensors, weapons, and fuel, and longer flight times than humans could stand. Brown asks: “How many humans can stay in the air for 24 hours over the same piece of geography and stay awake, let alone remain effective?”
Retired Air Force Lieutenant General David Deptula, a former F-15 pilot, was a powerful proponent of flying aircraft remotely. Today, he questions what he calls “excessive exuberance” for unmanning all sorts of aircraft. He points out that UAVs (or the Air Force’s preferred RPVs, for “remotely piloted vehicles”—the service avoids the term “unmanned”) often require more manpower than conventional aircraft because the video and other data streaming in from their ever-expanding array of sensors must be analyzed. Just because an airplane can operate remotely, Deptula says, doesn’t mean it should. “The essence of conflict warfare is a very human activity,” he says. “If it was a science, we could turn it over to machine-to-machine, and whoever had the best algorithms would win.” He recalls fighting computer simulators that were plenty tough. But, he says: “I won.”
General Ronald Fogleman was the Air Force chief of staff in the mid-1990s when he created the first air wing dedicated to UAVs. The light bulb went on for him about the importance of UAVs as he saw support building right up through the ranks to Congress. He wanted the Air Force to lead on UAVs and wanted trained pilots to fly them. “Early on, this thing was such a novelty, I really don’t think rated pilots saw it as much of a threat,” he says.
But commanders began assigning jet pilots to sit at consoles in Nevada and fly Predators and Reapers in Afghanistan via satellite, which rattled many in the pilot culture. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates complained in 2008 that getting the Air Force to field more UAVs more quickly was like “pulling teeth.” Later that year, Chief of Staff Norton Schwartz warned that Air Force culture must not treat UAV pilots as a “leper colony.” Many feel the Air Force stumbled by pushing pilots into a field they never signed up for. Today, however, says Fogleman, it is viewed as a new career field that will over time develop its own unique culture.
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Comments (6)
Re: MIT's Missy Cummings:
"As an example of when a pilot is needed on board, she points to the day in January 2009 when Chesley Sullenberger, a former Air Force fighter pilot, used his judgment to select the Hudson River to land his US Airways A320 after geese crippled his engines."
Really, and otherwise the pilots just sit there and look out the windows, is that it?
Missy Cummings is one of the more widely quoted proponents of the pilotless commercial planes concept. She may have a teaching position at MIT, but once again she proves that she has no idea what she is talking about.
Time and time again she reinforces the infuriating myth that modern commercial aircraft are so automated that they basically fly themselves, with the pilots on hand merely as a backup.
This is so untrue that it is hard for me, even as an airline pilot myself, to get my arms around it and begin to explain why and how.
Perhaps Ms. Cummings flew F-18s in the Navy, but she clearly has little or no grasp of what goes on in a commercial airline cockpit, and she ought to be ashamed of herself for perpetuating false notions of how commercial airplanes are flown, and what pilots actually do for a living.
Patrick Smith,
Boston
Posted by Patrick Smith on May 18,2011 | 07:56 PM
With all due respect for Mr. Smith, Professor Cummings, and M.I.T., as well as this writer of this august publication, what we are talking about here is more of an aspiration than a reality.
To suggest that creating an I phone app to pilot a robocopter is in anyway equialent to piloting an F-18 Tomcat is simply ridiculous. If not, then lets turn all the 12 years olds in the world into Navy Piltots tomorrow.
Clearly, the terms "remotely piloted" and "unmanned" are two vastly different notions. The error here is that they appear to have been used interchangably. The termiology is very poorly constructed. This article which should have been a historical piece and a situational survey has turned into an offensive picant article prickling to subjective human sensibilities.
An article which could inspire has turned into one that offends, or was that part of the overall objective?
Posted by Dean Ledbetter on May 25,2011 | 01:43 PM
..sounds like a "post Turtle" to me or- do NOT tear the fence down until you find out just why it was put up.... (not original with me- sorry)
Posted by David H. Stringfield on May 25,2011 | 03:05 PM
I hope that we don't get too overly reliant on UCAVs. The weak links in UCAVs are their data links and reliance on GPS, which can be jammed or destroyed. You can use terrain following radar even with a UCAV to attack a target, but if you lose GPS you are going to have an extremely hard time landing on a carrier. UCAvs will be a great tool in the combat toolbox in the right situations - when you don't want to lose a pilot.
Posted by Bill Wollard on May 26,2011 | 12:19 AM
While I can see why the presence of UCAVs could seem unsafe or threatening to some groups, the technology behind "computer vision", AI, GPS, pattern recognition, accelerometers and other electronics-based sensing is advancing so fast that a UCAV that pilots by itself even without GPS or data link is within the foreseeable future. A natural human tendency has always been to think that no machine can do their jobs and yet machines can take over a variety of tasks and scenarios ever more complex and challenging, more important are issues of accountability, since a machine as thouroughly tested as it can be, it is always subject to error (just like a human!) but we court-martial humans that don't accept orders or punish mistakes, but we cannot court-martial a UCAV for something, or for a missed target, so who will be acocuntable when the record-breaking AI-manned UCAV misses its mark and hits a civilian?
Posted by Bruce Kenobi on June 15,2011 | 06:51 PM
The author either has a clear misunderstanding of what UAVs do, or he is being intentionally misleading. I have to say that I'm disappointed in some of the statements made by former military officers. I know that they understand UAVs, which only leaves the intentionally misleading option. They are contractors trying to sell their wares. You don't have to lie guys. We all know that Remotely Piloted Vehicles are where it's at. But don't play down the importance of an experienced combat pilot sitting at the controls and making the tough decisions. You've left people with the impression that mindless robots are randomly firing missiles. What a terrible (and terribly untrue) concept. Shame on you all, and shame on Air and Space for printing this kind of sensationalist garbage.
Posted by James Hannibal on June 28,2011 | 02:21 PM