Armchair pilots striking Afghanistan by remote control
From a desert outpost northwest of Las Vegas, elite fighter pilots journey to a war zone in Afghanistan, some 7,500 miles away.
It might be the world's longest commute, except that these armchair pilots at Creech Air Force Base in Nevada never leave the air-conditioned comfort of their command center.
Air Force pilots are employing remotely controlled fighter-bomber aircraft -- known in military parlance as unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs -- to fly combat missions over Afghanistan, hunting for insurgents bent on undermining Afghan President Hamid Karzai's fragile government.
Read more
Related Content






1 comments:
Any person who directs a bomb or a bullet from a remote location, without seeing the whites of the eyes of his intended vicitim, is
nothing short of a COWARD!!!
Post a Comment