Helt uenig i dette. Å skyte ned droner som ikke kan skyte tilbake blir kalt "Turkey Shoot" over there. Og det er det det er. (Red.)
So does the Air Force have new aces now?
The math involved in
recent shootdowns of Iranian drones suggests yes.
BY NICHOLAS SLAYTON | PUBLISHED APR 27, 2024 11:40 AM EDT
· NEWS
An F-15E with the 494th Fighter Squadron in October 2023. (photo by
Airman 1st Class Josephine Pepin/U.S. Air Force).
The U.S. Air Force defines an “ace” as any
pilot that has more than five combat kills. It’s been decades since American
pilots reached that status, but that might have changed this month.
On April 13, Iran and its
partners in Syria and Yemen fired more than 300 munitions — more than 150
drones as well as dozens of ballistic missiles and several cruise missiles —
toward Israel. Elements of the British, French, Jordanian and American
militaries helped Israel intercept 99% of those munitions. Among that, F-15E
fighter jets from the U.S. Air Force’s 494th Fighter Squadron and 335th Fighter
Squadron shot down more than 80
Iranian drones before they could reach their target.
There’s a fair chance at
least one pilot from the two squadrons now fits the criteria for an ace. The
two squadrons, as well as U.S. Air Forces Central, have not released details on
how many F-15Es from the two squadrons participated in the mission, what
weapons were used or how many drones were shot down per plane, but the math at
play suggests there are some new aces. Task & Purpose contacted the
squadrons and command for more information, but was only told that AFCENT is
reviewing the operation.
The 335th operates 24
F-15E fighter jets; a spokesperson for the 494th would not say how many F-15Es
are currently in the squadron. Squadrons do not always put every fighter into
the skies for a mission, keeping some in reserve, depending on the nature of
the mission. The F-15E is a fighter jet meant for both air-to-air and
air-to-ground missions and as such can carry eight missiles alongside its
internally mounted gun. The exact missile loadout depends on the mission, but
the armament capacity makes each jet capable of getting five or more
kills.
So back to the math. Even
if every jet in each squadron was put into the sky — which again is highly
unlikely and AFCENT has not specified how many were involved — there’s no
guarantee that each F-15E got a kill or that the total kills were evenly
distributed. With more than 80 drones shot down by pilots from the two
squadrons in what U.S. officials described as “dozens of engagements,” the math
suggests that it’s likely that at least one if not more Air Force pilots earned
the more than five kills needed to count as an ace two weekends ago.
The Air Force hasn’t had a
new flying ace since the Vietnam War, in part because of how dogfights have
faded from importance in modern combat. With the rise of aerial drones, that
might change.
There might be the
question of whether or not an aerial drone counts as a kill toward ace status.
After all, they’re uncrewed aerial vehicles. It’s not as if pilots are getting
into dogfights with them. And the size of the drone might matter too. Iranian Shahed-136
and Shahed-131 drones are maneuverable, they’re not just rockets, and they’re
certainly bigger than, say, off the shelf commercial quadcopters used by
Ukranian ground troops. The answer might go back eight decades. In World War
II, the U.K.’s Royal Air Force counted shot down German V-1 rockets as kills
toward a pilot’s record. If that counts, the U.S. Air Force might count the
downed Shahed drones.
This month’s mission over
the Middle East isn’t the first time U.S. fighter jets shot down drones over
the Middle East. Since the start of the Israel-Gaza war in October, American
aircraft have been busy shooting down drones and missiles fired by the Houthi
movement in Yemen, either midair or destroying them before they could be
launched. They’ve also been involved in wider airstrike operations in Yemen.
After several months, those shootdowns are racking up. This month the U.S.
Navy released photos of some of the F-18s
with the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower Carrier Strike Group, and at least one
sported “kill markings” showing two drones and several missiles. It’s not clear
if that’s the only F-18 with those markings, or if any of the Navy aviators
have achieved ace status.
Meanwhile on the ground,
Army Spc. Dylan Green, a soldier with the 10th Mountain’s 2nd Brigade Combat
Team, has earned the nickname the “Ace of Syria” after five confirmed
shootdowns of drones, but not with any fighter jet.
If any Air Force pilot did
make ace two weekends ago, so far no images or news have made it online or on
social media platforms. The Air Force’s own regulations say that any such
marking needs to be “a 6-inch green star with a 1/2-inch black border located
just below and centered on the pilot’s name block.” The type of aircraft downed
would be put inside the star. So keep an eye out for an F-15E with some newly
stenciled art, just in case.
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