Dimsum said:
tomahawk6 said:
Warrants would be a good solution,but one that the USAF wont pursue.They will want to use aircrew to operate UAV's as there will be fewer planes for them to fly.
Fair, but I meant aircrew Warrants like the US Army. Or commission (warrant?) those "enlisted" folks into some RPA Warrant Officer stream. Problem solved.
A question, based on an observation ...
Back in the 1950s and into the 1960s both the Canadian Army and the RCAF believed that a high school graduate was ready to be trained to become a junior officer ~ troop/platoon commander, or a line pilot. Now, to be fair, we had much bigger forces ~ 20+ large (600 to 1,000+ soldiers), major units, and even more, smaller (100 to 400 soldiers) minor units
in the field force and many squadrons of fighters (four wings in Germany, flying F-86
Sabres and several squadrons in Canada flying the CF-100
Canucks) and other aircraft.
Turnover of these young line pilots in the RCAF was fairly high, some couldn't qualify, others decided, after a few years of flying, that "civvie street" offered more opportunities. The RCAF, back in the 1950s, was very honest with these young men (they were all men): they were told that the RCAF wanted them to fly and, in some cases to teach others to fly, but the more senior ranks were more or less reserved for a few with good educations and advanced flying, technical and staff training. (My cousin was one of those line pilots ~ after his short service engagement was up he left the RCAF, went back to university, thanks to a generous release benefit, and became a diplomat.)
The army was much the same but,
I think, opportunities for OCP (as the army's high school entry plan was called) officers were better and the army did offer some of its officers university educations when circumstances permitted.
We know that, well into the 1960s, the US Army accepted candidates into its Officer Candidate Schools (OCS) with just high school educations and the UK regarded A levels (Grade 12 equivalent) as fully acceptable for entry into officer training well into the and beyond the 1980s.
So,
my question, related to the notion that we have too many, too senior officers serving in too many
bloated HQs, is:
is a beneficial "split" possible, even desirable, between candidates for careers in the commissioned ranks (who must have university degrees, be bilingual, etc) and for a pool of "fighters," young men and women who will sail, serve in field units and fly for a few years and then leave the CF, perhaps being "forced" out after a short service engagement, because they have filled the roles for which they were needed and engaged? Might we decide that we can provide a short (say one year) post secondary academic programme to make our junior officers into the sorts of young
apprentice officers we want and then offer the best of that lot full degrees after they have served three to five years in the field? (the ones we keep and educated would then fill the (fewer) staff and command slots.) Could we not have "pilot officers" or even "pilot warrant officers," or
pilot sergeants in the cockpits of some of our helicopters, fighters and transports and in the "driver's seats" of our RPVs?