AFSOC seeks best, brightest pilots

  • Published
  • By John Ingle
  • 82nd Training Wing Public Affairs
Wanted: individuals able to think on their feet; adapt quickly when needed; have a love for flying; and want to get in the fight now. 

That was the message from Maj. Gen. Kurt Cichowski, vice commander of the U.S. Air Force Special Operations Command, March 6 to members of the 80th Flying Training Wing's Euro-NATO Joint Jet Pilot Training Program. 

"We're growing," the general said of the command and the need for special operators. "We need the top people to fly. We want the young; the best hands; the best pilots to come to AFSOC." 

General Cichowski, the commander of the 80th FTW from 1999-2001, said ENJJPT was known as the undergraduate pilot training program to go to if someone wanted to fly fighters. Now it has morphed to a program that means combat aircraft, ranging from fighters to bombers to unmanned aircraft systems to special operations platforms. 

ENJJPT isn't the only organization going through changes, the general said. An increased operations tempo for AFSOC missions in the Global War on Terror is also changing the way the Air Force gets in the fight and engages the enemy. 

"Special operations is completely changing the way we are looking at warfare," General Cichowski said. "We are taking on an enemy that is no longer wanting to meet the United States Air Force force-on-force, big-on-big." 

To adapt, the Air Force is looking at how to fight the enemy in their backyard within the guidelines of the conduct of war, he said. It's going to take a non-traditional approach that requires non-standard aircraft and sharp Airmen. 

"We're doubling in size in the next five years," he said. "In order to get the quality people that we have to have to do our mission, we are out there, quite frankly, recruiting." 

To illustrate how AFSOC is more involved in operations now, General Cichowski shared a story about a first lieutenant currently flying special operations missions. The general said it occurred during Chief of Staff of the Air Force Gen. Norman A. Schwartz's visit a couple weeks ago. 

"On that visit, we had an individual who had been with us for a year-and-a-half," he said. "He had 1,000 hours in the airplane, which is unheard of for most regular planes. Normal is 300-500 in a two-year tour. 

"Of those 1,000 hours, 800 were combat. That first lieutenant had five Air Medals. That is unheard of for a first lieutenant." 

Capt. Joe Bozarth IV, a recent graduate of ENJJPT and now training in the PC-12, an aircraft used by AFSOC, said his assignment as a special operations pilot is providing an immediate track to get into the fight and support people on the ground. He said he has the opportunity to fly combat missions six to eight months after graduation from ENJJPT. His colleagues, who were assigned fighters, he said, will be in training for at least another year before they see action. 

Regardless of what airframe the students are assigned coming out of ENJJPT, Captain Bozarth said each pilot should remember one thing: it's all about the Air Force. 

"I think that you just have to realize that it's the needs of the Air Force that matters," he said. "Yes, they might be disappointed on assignment night that they didn't get a fighter. The next morning, they need to wake up with a smile on their face." 

Col. Daniel Torweihe, vice commander of the 80th FTW, said the wing is in lock step with the cultural change of the Air Force. He said demand is changing on the traditional fighter pilot and moving toward the need for AFSOC and unmanned aircraft system pilots. 

The colonel said this transformation wasn't met with open arms by ENJJPT students. But, he added, it wasn't because they were placing themselves before service. 

"The trouble is, people didn't have the facts," he said. "But now that we have guys who can come in (such as General Cichowski) who've been there and have done that and can tell factual information, you're going to find students who really understand." 

The general said he's not lauding one airframe or mission over the other because they are all needed to fight in today's environment. He said he's merely encouraging pilots to place AFSOC aircraft as their first or second selection on their dream sheet.