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so the new pilots with the degrees are doing well now?
http://www.defensedaily.com July 8, 2005 Israel Air Force Receives New Breed of Pilots HAZERIM, Israel--Israelis revere their air force (IAF) pilots perhaps more than any other popular figures, and while citizens and officials here last week honored graduating pilots much the same way as they always have--with much pomp and ceremony--these graduates have toed a different and longer line than their predecessors. For the first time, new IAF pilots are graduating from flight school with a bachelor's degree, having spent three years studying and flying, instead of the two years that had been the norm for completing the first stage of pilot training. "This is something we've borrowed from the United States and other air forces," Lt. "O," a 21-year old graduate entering the IAF's fighter pipeline, told Defense Daily International last week. "It has taught us how to study and how to use our heads a lot more...in different ways." Though the overall service commitment for the graduates increased by a year, keeping them in the IAF for nine years instead of eight, the time required after graduation held steady at six years. "This is not a general retention program...it was not devised for this," Capt. "A," an IAF pilot and instructor for the trainee's ground portion of the school, told Defense Daily International. Rather, it is a reflection of the school adjusting as it always had to what the IAF squadrons say they need, Capt. A said. "The squadrons said they needed new pilots with better avionics training, and they're getting that with the new A-4 avionics upgrades. They also said they needed better junior officers 'work-wise' in terms of paperwork and projects...and computers, and they are getting that too." Remarkably, very few IAF pilots--regarded worldwide as part of the top- tier of combat pilots from any nation--have begun their service with any kind of higher education degree. At ages much younger than pilots in most countries, they have already started racking up operational experience, and here that eventually means combat hours. "This was an amazing opportunity," Lt. O said. He never completed the national exams most students take to finish out high school. "Now, here I am at 21 a pilot...with a degree." That is not to imply that the pilot selection process is anything but the most difficult of its type in Israel. Careful screening was done for all candidates at different points throughout the country's general draft process; Israel requires mandatory service. "It is a completely voluntary course," Capt. A said. There are some candidates who transfer laterally from other Israel Defense Force (IDF) branches, but most come by way of prior arrangement as a special result of the draft selection process, he added. And that is just to get into the program. The officers and other IDF spokespersons were unable to say how many students typically begin a class, but one said the completion rate was only about 15 percent. Capt. A said that the program was designed to keep the squadrons supplied with exactly as many new pilots as it needed. From this graduating class, of which there are two per year, the IAF is getting several dozen. The IAF expects that the new program will also help it become more professional and gain a better balance of regular versus reserve officers. "For a while we've been relying on [greater input from the] reserves...this will help keep people in their jobs longer and increase the [active duty presence]," Capt. A said. The program now has four degree tracks, from mathematics and computers, to economics and management, political science and information technology. The cadets spent one day a week at nearby Ben Gurion University, with the rest of the classes taught by the university's faculty at flight school facilities, Lt. O said. Current national education standards and regulations preclude the IAF from designating the program as an 'air force academy,' Capt. A said. But that is essentially what the service has created for itself. "Everyone is happy with the results; I am sure it will continue," Lt. O said. But it was also a grind, with nearly every waking moment spent either studying or flying or studying about flying, he added. This is also the last class that will be getting its first taste of flying aboard Piper Super Cubs, which are being phased out, Lt. O said. The French Fuga Magister and then-McDonnell Douglas, now Boeing [BA] A-4 Skyhawk trainers, remain stalwart platforms for the program. "As a student, the A-4 was of course the most exciting," Lt. O said. "But from a pure flying [standpoint], the Piper was also incredible...and if I could own just one aircraft, that might be it." This, of course, is coming from a young man soon headed for a day job at an IAF squadron equipped with either Boeing F-15 or Lockheed Martin [LMT] F-16 jet fighters. |
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