I would like to point out that nations have spent almost a trillion dollars on having top dogfighters. Vectored thrust is a development that has cost billions for additions to aircraft which are mostly applicable to dog fights. The billions spent on the advanced training courses in Nevada at the weapons schools is not for "morale" or "good fun", they are for saving lives. There are environments where guns might be your only option. They make sidewinders for a reason. Jamming, ECM and EMP are making leaps and bounds and sometimes force us to rely on our skill rather than our technology. As stated ROEs dictate that the target must be IDed or you get another KAL 007 or Vincennes incident. With today’s high levels of commercial traffic even in a stated war zone ID is still a standard ROE. It was the case in A-stan and Iraq, we did not have a free hot zone to shoot down anything we wished. Our camera pods are only conclusive in good weather to a distance for any kind of BVR. If there is so much as any poor visibility it becomes useless.
@Big-E I had intended to post another sentence followed by a smiley, but failed to copy it from the word file.
The points I was attempting to make were: -
1 As you state. It is necessary to get in close to ID a target before attacking (this can be assisted by modern optical equipment).
2. Dog-fighting has become a smaller portion of war fighting than in the past.
3. For much of the time training for the long-range attacks using missiles etc is carried out by simulating attacks. Pilots rarely have the opportunity to fire real missiles.
4. Practicing Dog-fighting and also firing guns helps focus the mind of the fighter pilot on what is important about being a fighter pilot. (It is also fun and good for moral).
5. Maybe this should have been first. Although not the largest portion of the total war-fighting role Dog-fighting is the most demanding of the pilots skill and fitness. It also has to be practiced to remain sharp and ahead of the game with regard to current tactics.
Your comments on ACM training being for “saving lives”, is “as read” in my book, my comments relate rather to additional benefits where this form of training allows fighter pilots to demonstrate their flying skills, much more than in other areas of training, feeling like a “real fighter pilot” rather than a “button-pusher”.
Optical devices used for target recognition have lagged somewhat behind other equipments. I think that this has been remiss of the system developers, because getting a good ID is essential before attacking. Some of the newer targeting pods (and similar internally mounted equipment) have A to A modes, using visible and IR wavelengths to see targets in poor visibility. In particular, techniques similar to NCTI for radar signatures are being developed to enable IR signatures to be recognised where the actual image cannot be resolved to identify the target.
In the UK there have been studies on the possibility of modifying ROEs to permit attacks based on “signature recognition” rather than on visual ID.
Chris