http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/story.asp?id=333872FC-939F-
48B2-B7B7-FAF7832DF93D

Fatigue dogged U.S. pilots
Crews urged to use amphetamines days before Canadian troops killed
  
Glen McGregor  
Vancouver Sun 

Monday, June 03, 2002

OTTAWA -- Pilots from the U.S. fighter squadron that mistakenly bombed
Canadian troops in Afghanistan had told their commanders shortly before
the fatal accident that they were exhausted and needed more rest between
missions.

  The informal meeting between pilots of the 183rd Fighter Wing and
their commanding officers was convened after the unit misidentified a
bombing target during a previous mission over Iraq. The 183rd, an Air
National Guard unit currently stationed in Kuwait, was flying patrol
missions in the no-fly zone in Southern Iraq as well as sorties over
Afghanistan.

  In the meeting, held in the week before Canadian soldiers were shelled
by American bombs in Afghanistan, at least one F-16 pilot complained
that requirements for crew rest were not being observed and that many of
the pilots were overtired. The pilot was told, however, that further
questions about crew rest would not be looked on favourably by the wing
command.

  Instead, pilots were advised to speak to a flight surgeon about
so-called "go/no pills" -- amphetamines used to help stay awake on long
missions, and sedatives to help sleep.

  Then, on April 17, a fighter from the 183rd flying a patrol mission
accidentally bombed Canadian troops conducting a live-fire exercise
south of Kandahar. Four soldiers from the Princess Patricia's Canadian
Light Infantry were killed and eight injured.

  Pilots are supposed to get 12 hours of rest between missions, but that
can be changed when the unit is in a state of alert. The 183rd has been
flying missions in the no-fly zone since March. Although U.S. air force
rules allow flight surgeons to prescribe dextro-amphetamine
(dexe-drine), the drug is supposed to be used for long transoceanic
transport flights, not combat missions.

  "If they can't work around the scheduling, and people have to work
extended hours, then dextro-amphetamine is approved," said Betty-Anne
Mauger, a public affairs officer with the U.S. air force surgeon
general.

  The flight over Afghanistan that led to the bombing may have taken as
long as 10 hours, not including the three to eight hours of briefings
that are standard before combat missions. Most of the pilots in the
183rd Fighter Wing are part-time members who also work as commercial
airline pilots.

  Because of the strict requirements of civil aviation, they are acutely
aware of the importance of proper crew rest. Commercial pilots are not
allowed to use amphetamines.

  The Canadian and U.S. military have convened their own boards of
inquiry to find out why the F-16 dropped a laser guided-bomb on the
Canadians. Canada's board, led by retired General Maurice Baril, said in
a preliminary report last month that Canadian troops did nothing to
provoke the incident.

  It is still unclear whether Baril's board will be able to interview
the F-16 pilot, whose identity has not been publicly disclosed.

  The exact date of the 183rd's failed bombing mission in Iraq is not
known, but U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) in Tampa, Florida, confirmed
that U.S. fighters dropped bombs in the Southern no-fly zone just two
days before the Canadians soldiers were killed in Afghanistan.

  On the morning of April 15, two U.S. F-16s flying over Thi-Qar
province used laser-guided bombs to attack a radar installation after it
locked onto the aircraft. CENTCOM did not say if the attack was
successful, and there is no indication that Iraqi civilians or military
personnel were killed or injured.

  It was the first bombing of ground targets in Iraq since January,
according to CENTCOM.

  The Iraq News Agency reported that "civil and service installations"
were attacked by U.S. fighters flying from Kuwait that day. Iraqi
officials said that the coalition forces had flown 37 sorties in the
southern no-fly zone the morning of the bombing.

  Citing security concerns, CENTCOM will not say which U.S. unit was
involved in the Iraqi incident, nor will it confirm any subsequent
meeting between pilots and commanders in the 183rd Fighter Wing.

  There is no evidence that the pilots involved in either bombing had
taken any of the stimulants offered. But the use of amphetamines was
common among American fighter pilots in the Gulf War, according to
journalist Rick Atkinson, author of Crusade: The Untold Story of the
Persian Gulf War.

  "There was concern in some squadrons that the pilots were becoming
psychologically, if not physically, addicted to the pills," he told
PBS's Frontline last year.

  Atkinson estimates two-thirds of all pilots in Desert Storm used
dexedrine at least once. "Some commanders became concerned enough to ban
the flight surgeons from issuing further 'go' pills. It became
remarkably divisive within some squadrons."
______________________________ C Copyright 2002 Vancouver Sun
http://www.canada.com/vancouver/

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