Predator Eulogy

Had the following article sent to me from Kevin. Sorry, but could not resist attaching it to the Predator Eulogy! Thanks for forwarding this Kevin.
Tuesday, Jul 10, 2012 03:54 PM CDT
The Pentagon considers awarding war medals to those who operate America's death-delivering video games
The effort to depict drone warfare as some sort of courageous and noble act is intensifying:
The Pentagon is considering awarding a Distinguished Warfare Medal to drone pilots who work on military bases often far removed from the battlefield. . . .
[Army Institute of Heraldry chief Charles] Mugno said most combat decorations require “boots on the ground” in a combat zone, but he noted that “emerging technologies” such as drones and cyber combat missions are now handled by troops far removed from combat.
The Pentagon has not formally endorsed the medal, but Mugno’s institute has completed six alternate designs for commission approval. . . .
The proposed medal would rank between the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Soldier’s Medal for exceptional conduct outside a combat zone.
So medals would be awarded for sitting safely ensconced in a bunker on U.S. soil and launching bombs with a video joystick at human beings thousands of miles away. Justifying drone warfare requires pretending that the act entails some sort of bravery, so the U.S. military is increasingly taking steps to create the facade of warrior courage for drone pilots:
The Air Force has been working to bridge the divide between these two groups of fliers. First off, drone operators are called pilots, and they wear the same green flight suits as fighter pilots, even though they never get in a plane. Their operating stations look like dashboards in a cockpit.
And drone pilots themselves are propagating boasts of their own bravery more and more:
Luther (Trey) Turner III, a retired colonel who flew combat missions during the gulf war before he switched to flying Predators in 2003, said that he doesn’t view his combat experience flying drones as “valorous.” “My understanding of the term is that you are faced with danger. And, when I am sitting in a ground-control station thousands of miles away from the battlefield, that’s just not the case.” But, he said, “I firmly believe it takes bravery to fly a U.A.V.” — unmanned aerial vehicle — “particularly when you’re called upon to take someone’s life. In some cases, you are watching it play out live and in color.” As more than one pilot at Holloman told me, a bit defensively, “We’re not just playing video games here.”
Predator Eulogy
By Dos Gringos
They shot down the predator
That's one less slot for me
They shot down the predator and it fills my heart with glee
I had a smile when I logged on to AFPC
They shot down the predator
That's one less slot for me.
They shot down the predator
I say let's send some more
Let's fly 'em over Baghdad and then see what's in store
'Cause I heard that the Air Force wants another 24
They shot down the predator
I say let's send some more
They shot down the predator
I wonder how that feels
For that operator who lost his set of wheels
It must feel so defenseless
Like clubbing baby seals
They shot down the predator
I wonder how that feels
Repeat 1st verse
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Comments:
I had a 19 year old marine give me the most sincere hand-shake and Thank You I have ever recieved in my life. He was in Fallujah, he said he lost many friends in that fight and that he owed his life and that of many more friends to people like me who flew the Predator and that he couldn't wait to get back to his Unit and tell his biuddies that he met someone who flew the Predator.
The Predator...for what it is, what it's worth and for those who fly it...has a futuristic job and mission, one that only few may currently understand...but no one can stand up to it...I'd love to go "toe-to-toe" with anyone who might question or challenge the credibitlity of anyone who flies it. Medals or not...I don't care, I have saved many freindly lives, I've watched them and that's what counts.
"The Predator...for what it is, what it's worth and for those who fly it...has a futuristic job and mission, one that only few may currently understand...but no one can stand up to it...I'd love to go "toe-to-toe" with anyone who might question or challenge the credibitlity of anyone who flies it."
Are we going "toe-to-toe" in the air? Fox 2.
I think preds/reapers are great for ISR and air support, but man the RPA community has a pretty big chip on its shoulder of late. I give some slack because you guys were a leper colony for so long and some good airmen worked hard to build your street cred, but comments like "[its] a futuristic job...one that only a few may currently understand..." comes of as a little whiny nowadays. I've been around long enough to hear the "you wouldn't understand," "its cosmic," "its secret squirrel" argument a few times before. Airmen who take airpower and air support seriously do understand. You run the risk of overselling yourself (i.e. limiting your credibility) when you use language like this.









