Our Newest Air Force: Readying for War in Cyberspace

By Chris Bronk, on , Briefing

In the asymmetric wars that have characterized the post-9/11 conflict horizon, our adversaries have been unable to challenge U.S. control of the skies. Now used primarily for close air support and the hauling of gear and supplies for ground troops, the U.S. Air Force has been left to wonder whether its pilots will ever again be called upon to perform their most prestigious of missions -- air-to-air combat.

As a result, the Air Force has been actively looking for new missions. It has bought hundreds of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), machines that have proven invaluable to ground forces fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, providing constant, real-time surveillance of an unconventional battlefield where enemy combatants camouflage themselves in the human terrain of the general population. These UAVs, the Predator being the most well-known, have been armed -- first by the CIA, and later by the Air Force -- with laser-guided weapons that may be aimed and fired by operators half a world away. This is the ultimate expression of the "Nintendo war," and the side of it most envisioned following the 1991 Gulf War. ...

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