Actually, planning an airline flight (which is 95% done by dispatchers) vs planning a fighter sortie are not at all the same thing. Planning a fighter sortie takes 2-3 hrs, followed by a 1 hr brief, a 1-2 hr flight, followed by. 2-4 hr debrief. The overhead in fighter ops is enormous because of the complexity. Fighter pilots currently get anywhere between 160 to 240 hrs per year.
While the medical exam is the same, the standards for single cockpit, high performance aircraft are a lot more strict.
F-18 sim vs B737 sim are two different beast. Mission set is not even comparable. We tried the two-tiered approach before and while having different mission sets for different squadrons work in the US, we simply don’t have the numbers to build efficiency in having two streams.
If you think the “old guard” protects anything, you’re actually wrong. The standard is looked at and changed every 6 months or so. And it does change substantially to build efficiencies in the training pipeline and the absorption at the Squadrons. What hasn’t changed are the roles imposed on us by the operational headquarters. If we’re told we need to be ready for X, we need to train to X (actually a bit beyond X). Until our core mission sets change, we cannot drastically change our training.
I suggest you stop talking about this. You clearly have 0 experience or knowledge of all the competing factors that go into building fighter syllabi, or fighter Ops for that matter.