1、 CRS INSIGHT Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress INSIGHTINSIGHTi i Contracting the Adversary name redacted Specialist in Military Aviation November 16, 2017 With the military services looking to alleviate shortages of pilots and publicly admitting shortages in readiness, the Navy and Air
2、 Force have begun to look to contracting out some kinds of pilot trainingspecifically the live simulation of enemy aircraft. Before the Vietnam War, American air forces trained internally, with pilots flying against others in similar aircraft using the same tactics. During that war, however, the Uni
3、ted States learned a great deal about modern adversary tactics and the capabilities of the (mainly Soviet) aircraft employed in that war, which often differed markedly from what had been experienced in prewar training. To spread those lessons and train pilots more realistically, the U.S. Air Force a
4、nd Navy began formal programs of Dissimilar Air Combat Training, or DACT. DACT pilots were trained in adversary tactics of the time, and flew U.S. aircraft that most resembled expected adversaries in performance, painted in foreign camouflage to provide a more realistic image. Under then-classified