pilot training schools run by the military..................
Navy, army, the US pilots and the FBI
Navy. We'll take anybody.
not likely...............
There are quit a few pilots in the US Army, of course most of which are helicopter pilots, if I had to put a number on it I would say approximately 10,000
There will be a list somewhere in the US military.
Yes. We still had the strongest, and most combat experienced military, from fighting the Vietnam War. Other than North Vietnamese jet fighter pilots, no nation on earth had the combat experienced jet fighter pilots and heavy bomber crews that America had. That is so wrong I can't even begin to tell youThe United States was never the most powerful nation in the world. It was definitly up there in terms of military power, but the belief that they are the most powreful nation in the world is a groundless lie they came up with. And if they had such great pilots and crews, why did South Vietnam lose?
Nope. Sorry MateImproved Answer:Hell yeah!! I'm a girl and I totally dig pilots! Especially US Air Force Fighter Pilots!! There like the awesomest people ever!! Girls just go to an air show and talk to Military Fighter Pilots! (USAF Thunderbirds or US Navy Blue Angels) THERE SO HOT AND COOL!!
US Airline Pilots Association was created in 2007.
Yes, the US Army, Marine Corp, Air Force, Navy, and Coast Guard. Higher qualified specialty mechanics in the US army are typically Warrant Officers, and enlisted men (albeit NCO's typically) can be pilots in all US military branches.
Tank crewman, infantrymen, sailors, artillerymen, etc. can be trained in 8 to 16 weeks. It takes years to train top notch military pilots. The Battle of Midway took away the "cream of the crop" of their combat pilots and air crewmen (fighter pilots, dive bomber pilots and rear gunners, torpedo bomber pilots and gunners and torpedomen). Japan should have trained more pilots than it did. But apparently, Japan did not think that they would lose so many pilots during the war. From Midway afterwards, for the most part, inexperienced (naval) pilots would be fighting against the US and it's allies.
During WW2 & and possibly Korea, the US military utilized some ENLISTED MEN as pilots. By Vietnam, all US Military pilots were officers. Therefore: approximately 6,600 US Military officers were killed in the war. The USAF lost about 2,584 men and the USN lost about 2,555 men. The USAF and USN together lost well over 2,000 fixed wing aircraft. The US Army lost well over 8,000 rotor-wing aircraft. Approximately 2,000 US UH-1 Iroquois (Huey) helicopter crewmen died in the war. Figuring 10,000 plus shot down aircraft/6600 dead officers/subtracting the ground officers (US Army/US Marine Corps/US Navy Riverine Forces/etc)...an educated calculation of US military pilots killed in the Vietnam War would be between 2,000 and 3,000 Airmen.
The Beretta M9 replaced the M1911 as the standard service pistol of the US Military. However, Glocks were used by Air Force pilots, although they're supposed to have since been phased out for the FN 5.7.