Attack of the Drones

Wednesday, June 1st, 2005

Attack of the Drones explains how UAVs are upsetting military hierarchies:

Private Joel Clark doesn’t have any macho dogfight stories. He doesn’t have a cool call sign or the swagger of a guy who has pulled 9 gs. In fact, Clark has never held a throttle. He did, however, flunk high school English. And that’s how the milky-pale 19-year-old became one of America’s newest pilots.

Clark had planned to join the Army as a Blackhawk helicopter mechanic. But that F kept him from graduating on time, forcing him to reapply. The second time around, his recruiter suggested he try instead to be a ’96 Uniform’ — Army-speak for a UAV operator. Clark had never considered becoming a pilot. But the idea of running a robot spy plane sounded pretty rad. Now he’s one of 225 soldiers, reservists, and National Guardsmen training on a lonely airstrip at Fort Huachuca, Arizona, a 125-year-old outpost 10 miles from the Mexican border.

In a sense, Clark has been prepping for the job since he was a kid: He plays videogames. A lot of videogames. Back in the barracks he spends downtime with an Xbox and a PlayStation. When he first slid behind the controls of a Shadow UAV, the point and click operation turned out to work much the same way. ‘You watch the screen. You tell it to roll left, it rolls left. It’s pretty simple,’ Clark says. But this is real life. ‘So you have to take it more seriously. If you crash one of these, you have to bleed and piss’ — in other words, take a drug test.

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