Army WO packet, advice

Ian J

No, wearing face paint is not authorized while crewing an Army aircraft.

Thanks for the update

Regarding pilots not being special. I beg to differ. My flight school roommate first assignment was B-52s back in the 70s. As a junior Capt, his responsible as an Aircraft Commander was to penetrate Russian airspace and deliver his crowd pleasers (nuclear weapons) to the targets specified. He had the power to destroy an industrial city. I call that special. Even a Ranger would have difficulty in that mission.

Talking about Rangers, are you permitted to wear the ranger tab if earned when conducting aerial flight as an aviator or crew member. If so, why not cloth wings?

Never have so many, owed so much, to so few. Winston Churchill regarding the RAF fighter pilots in the Battle of Britain.
 
MikeD, your last post was expertly crafted and it sounds like your perspective of Army aviation is absolutely spot-on. My hat is off to you, sir! :rawk: If our paths ever cross, beers are on me.

What we're seeing in this discussion is simply an interesting perspective from two opposite services. Ian's not at all wrong in what he's seeing or stating, as that how he was "bred" as an Army officer. In the same vein, I was "bred" as an AF officer in a different way and it's indeed interesting to see how two average commissioned officers of two different armed forces view something common to them, in this case airpower/aviation assets. If we reversed the conversation, I'm sure Ian (or other Army officers) might wonder why the AF focuses so much on its pilots only being pilots or officers of the staff/ air staff. And why they don't get or take more opportunities to be leaders of men at nearly anything non-aviation related. And that too would be an interesting discussion of yet more cultural differences between the two services. I mean, I'm not going to change Big Green anymore than he'll be able to change Big Blue with our discussions here, so really all we're doing here is chewing the fat over some doctrinal and officership ideas, and pretty much comparing notes on a macro level.

Thats why its an interesting discussion. I don't think there's really any "winner" here, per se.
 
MikeD

1. C-27s. The Army needs their own intratheatre airlift capability so they're not dependant on AF C-130s for every little small thing they need to carry. The Army used to have this capability with the C-7 Caribou back in the 1960s, but the AF took it away.

2. A-10s. Let the Army do their own CAS for their own troops, just like Marine Air does for the MAGTF. Won't have to bother with relying on the AF for it anymore. And since the AF doesn't really value CAS anyway, they can wash their hands of it and instead focus on air superiority, space, strategic/tactical airlift, bombers/tankers, and nuclear ops.

________________________________________________________________

Highly disagree. The AF needs to keep as many fixed wing assets as possible. The AF is downsizing the fighter community in the next several years, dumping several hundred pilots on the market. These pilots need to put their aeronautical skills to good use. Since the AF is now flying the MC-12W mission, perhaps the Army should release that mission as well.

The Army only has approx 250-275 fixed wing aircraft in their fleet. Perhaps the AF can take over the majority of their missions. Since the AF has agreed that the AF C-27J will be TACON to the Army Aviation Brigade Cmdr, it might be the time to take over the other Army fixed wing operations as well. The Army can use the released fixed wing aviation funds to bolster their helo fleet for the future.

It's a brand new day in the AF when they agreed in making the C-27J TACON to the Army. The Army has total control on dictating C-27J missions. Let's get the Army out of the fixed wing business. More pilot seats for AF 2d Lts and more funding for the Army helo community. Let the Army do what it does best, the tactical operations of helicopters.

The Army CoS has directed that all roles and missions dealing with the movement of cargo via fixed wing aircraft be handled by the AF. Perhaps he should go one step further and divest the remaining fixed wing assets. The AF can handle the missions and I bet there are more than a few AF pilots willing to fly these assets than sitting behind a RPA console.

Just thinking outside the box before they bury me in one.
 
Kind of sucks, since that's what makes the soldier/aviator far more a soldier than anything near an aviator. Again, if thats how the Army wants to roll, then that's their deal. But making aviation completely secondary explains alot on why so many Army aviators I come across find things like flying in IMC or entering a Class B airspace to be MAJOR things to have to deal with, and oftentimes things that are better left avoided. The lack of comfort with some of these things that many other service pilots find to be a daily walk in the park, is apparent often. And I suspect its not just the fault of aircraft not equipped for such, but moreso guys who's aviation background is dictated to be a grunt at 25' AGL, versus any sort of pilot. The Army way, I suppose. Not a slam, just a first-hand observation at how the Army sees things, as seen by me.

Well, that's really true right there. I was always pretty disgusted about the general "fear" of IMC and class B flying from combat aviators. I remember planning training flights from Campbell in IMC down to BNA and back... I'd always get big push back. "We can't go to BNA... it's too busy!" I'd explain I was flying a C152 out of BNA on the weekends and they'd be shocked. AT a Guard interview recently they wanted to make sure I knew I'd be flying in three of the busiest Class B airspaces in the country... it was a big deal to them that I was okay with that. After explaining I flew piston twins into those airspaces and into the primary airports at times they were overly impressed.


You're missing what I'm saying. When I say aviator, I'm not talking sitting in the cockpit and pushing buttons, or the day to day basics of flying. I'm talking employing the aviation asset as the weapon its designed to be, as well as the tactics involved in multiple assets being employed in the 3rd dimension. That, as well as everything that goes with simply being qualed to fly and everything else, has a fair amount more complexity than what an infantry PL has to deal with, just in a different sense.

No, I understand. I just don't agree. I do agree it takes more to build an aviator as opposed to an Infantry officer, but the day-to-day ground fight is an incredibly complex thing. The myriad of tasks and split second decision making a leader on the ground has do do is incredible. And the "machines" they're operating is a lot more complex than our machines. Their machines are 30 individual soldiers in a fluid, dynamic environment.

Actually, I wouldn't say one job is more complex than the other - I'd say they are not even comparable.


Am talking all the BS details and additional duties that CAN be handled by a non-aviator, should be.

I'd be great to not have to do that stuff... I just don't know how this could practically be accomplished.


Ian, if you don't think there's anything different or more difficult with being an aviator and employing as-such, overall-speaking, than other types straight-leg soldiers, then you need to toss your wings. It's not a matter of special, its a matter of recognizing that an aviation asset is a little bit more complicated than driving a HMMWV around, or toting an M-4. There's a little bit more to it. Yes, the other skill sets of driving and infantry have their respective challenges and dangers, and I'm certainly not taking that away from them in any way.

But I'm not talking about driving or shooting vs. employing aviation assets. I'm talking about leading each. My task of flying a helicopter is much more complex than using an M4. My task of leading a single or multiship mission is comparable to leading a convoy or patrol. My tasks of managing the maintenance of the helicopters, taking care of my soldiers, and managing the logistics for the mission separate me from an AF pilot. :)


Oh man......I do need to mail out the Kool Aid quick. You sure you're not setting yourself up for some cushy O-6 staff gig somewhere with the corporate answers you're feeding me? :)

Ha! Seriously though, that's a very typical mindset for an AF officer. As a pilot you expect to fly. Some officers are of course going to have to lead your units and do staff work. There's a disconnect between command track and straight pilot types with the associated animosity.

In the Army I don't have a choice. I will lead a platoon, command a company, and serve on staff, as will all my peers. The only thing I can do to further my career is try to get the hardest commands and the hardest staff positions. I knew exactly what I was getting into when I signed up.

I often wonder why the Army wasted the money for ACUs, just as I wonder why the AF wasted the money for the ABUs, that are carbon-copies of the ACUs. Army already had the 2-piece woodland camo flightsuit as well as the 2-piece tan ones; all of which seemed to work fine.

Don't get me started. My "so what" comments on the uniform and the wings were a pragmatic view of that specific thing. My overall thoughts about the Army uniform process are different... no time for that now though.

Thats what I thought, as I've seen aircrews having to don/doff facepaint, LBE and helmets when taking part in ops briefings/debriefings before and after flying. More stupid Army BS of not wanting non-aviators to feel less than aviators (which is their own problem), and to make aviators have to endure more idiotic infantry suck for no other reason than "just because".

No... they don't do that stuff to stick it to the aviators. They do it because the Army believes in uniformity (not saying that's a good thing here) and when people come to briefings the boss wants them to be in the same uniform. Stupid, yes, but it isn't a case of trying to make aviators feel less so. They don't care if they are aviators are not. You see, as I've already explained, we're not special. ;)


Thats why its an interesting discussion. I don't think there's really any "winner" here, per se.

Agreed. Like I said, this conversation would be better over beers. There would be less facts, more ribbing, and probably some whale-tales. Oh, and there'd be beer.
 
I've discovered you have to already be in the guard to apply for the rotor wing warrant officer positions, you can't enlist into it...
 
I've discovered you have to already be in the guard to apply for the rotor wing warrant officer positions, you can't enlist into it...

I've heard of units that prefer to hire pilots from within their own ranks, but the vast majority of Guard units get their pilots from off the street. The best way to get info on the units that interest you is to give them a call and arrange a visit. Ask when they have WO/aviator boards, assemble a packet, and board on the next round. Don't let anybody talk you into enlisting first, if you want to be an aviator except nothing less.
 
I've heard of units that prefer to hire pilots from within their own ranks, but the vast majority of Guard units get their pilots from off the street. The best way to get info on the units that interest you is to give them a call and arrange a visit. Ask when they have WO/aviator boards, assemble a packet, and board on the next round. Don't let anybody talk you into enlisting first, if you want to be an aviator except nothing less.

Thanks. Nice avatar.
 
Ian J

Talking about Rangers, are you permitted to wear the ranger tab if earned when conducting aerial flight as an aviator or crew member. If so, why not cloth wings?

Yes you can wear your ranger tab.
And
No, you can't wear cloth wings because they are sew on. The only Army aviation units who are wearing sew on wings are maybe a few guard units violating the recent AR ammendment against the wearing of ABDU's
 
Yes you can wear your ranger tab.
And
No, you can't wear cloth wings because they are sew on. The only Army aviation units who are wearing sew on wings are maybe a few guard units violating the recent AR ammendment against the wearing of ABDU's

ABDUs can't be worn? You're talking the woodland ones?
 
I haven't even seen anybody wearing the tan ABDUs in a few years. It's sad, they issued me about eight sets of them, but I'm not allowed to wear them because they have the digital stuff out now and the finance clerks might get jealous that I look different. I'm dreading the day the Army figures out a way for me to fly wearing a kevlar, IBA, eye pro, ACUs, and a reflective belt... :whatever:
 
Yeah, I think ABDU's were out of regs in March 08

That sounds about like the right time frame. I may be wrong on this one but aren't one-piece flight suits still technically authorized in accordance with the regs? I've got about ten of those as well and I can't even fathom the hell I'd catch if I showed up to work in one.
 
That sounds about like the right time frame. I may be wrong on this one but aren't one-piece flight suits still technically authorized in accordance with the regs? I've got about ten of those as well and I can't even fathom the hell I'd catch if I showed up to work in one.

I believe picklesuits were out of regs 2 years before abdus.
 
There was some overlap in there somewhere. For a little while on any given duty day my last unit had people wearing every different generation and color of ABDU, tan and green pickle suits, and A2CU. I stopped rebelling years ago. These days I just wear what they tell me...
 
There was some overlap in there somewhere. For a little while on any given duty day my last unit had people wearing every different generation and color of ABDU, tan and green pickle suits, and A2CU. I stopped rebelling years ago. These days I just wear what they tell me...

That pretty much sums it up.
 
There was some overlap in there somewhere. For a little while on any given duty day my last unit had people wearing every different generation and color of ABDU, tan and green pickle suits, and A2CU. I stopped rebelling years ago. These days I just wear what they tell me...

No one in olive-green, slant pocket, Vietnam-era 2-piece flight fatigues? :)
 
Give me a thread bare tan ABDU. The A2CU's just don't seem wear out as quick and breath as well.

Never was a fan of the one piece. Too hot for me and making brownies in a port-a-john was way too much of an ordeal.

Lately I've seen velcro on wings on the A2CUs.
 
Yes you can wear your ranger tab.
And
No, you can't wear cloth wings because they are sew on. The only Army aviation units who are wearing sew on wings are maybe a few guard units violating the recent AR ammendment against the wearing of ABDU's


Well, that proves the point. Army Aviators aren't special but passing ranger school is. That's the Army mindset. If you're an Army aviator, just get use to your role as a soldier. Unless you want to cross over to the Big Blue and take your flying talents with you.
 
Back
Top