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.
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