The Air Force has selected 1st Lt. Cody Clark as one of the first pilots who could be flying the F-22A Raptor without any prior operational fighter experience. Clark is the sole first-assignment instructor pilot among eight specialized undergraduate pilot training graduates selected to attend introduction to fighter fundamentals—the top four of these nine airmen will go straight into F-22 training, while the other five will go to F-15C training. The service decided to put one FAIP into the mix to see if the IP experience will provide a “quicker learning curve,” explains Col. Doug Troyer, commander of the 71st Operations Group, Vance AFB, Okla. Of Clark, the ops boss, says he is one of those pilots who “have an innate ability to process what’s going on around them just a little faster than their peers.”
Unmanned aerial vehicles and autonomous aircraft may provide a solution to operating in heavily contested domains such as the Taiwan Straits, according to a panel of expert who suggested operationalizing artificial intelligence for such purposes sooner rather than later. The group gathered virtually to help launch the Mitchell Institute for…