I'm not an admiral, so maybe I don't understand these things, but seems to me that if you're going to shoot some poor bastard for the encouragement of the others, your message better be clear and unambiguous. I'm not sure what lesson breaking this guy and trying to court-martial him is supposed to send to the rest of the Coast Guard...deviate even slightly outside the rules and we will fucking bury you? Fuck up once and you're done?
Pickle, sorry, but I strongly disagree with your argument as I understand it. The argument that fucking up in an airplane indicates you're an unfit officer and should be thrown overboard seems to me exactly the "zero defects" mentality everyone bemoans. Since this guy's culpability in this mishap is debatable, and I've seen nothing to indicate he had a history of reckless or irresponsible or incompetent flying, what exactly is the rationale for drumming him out of the service? Keep this guy around, and you'd have a pilot in your ready room who is your strongest advocate for good CRM and lookout doctrine, obstacle clearance, etc. Maybe most importantly, the pilot who gets the newer guys' attention when it comes to discussing these things.
Pickle, sorry, but I strongly disagree with your argument as I understand it. The argument that fucking up in an airplane indicates you're an unfit officer and should be thrown overboard seems to me exactly the "zero defects" mentality everyone bemoans. Since this guy's culpability in this mishap is debatable, and I've seen nothing to indicate he had a history of reckless or irresponsible or incompetent flying, what exactly is the rationale for drumming him out of the service? Keep this guy around, and you'd have a pilot in your ready room who is your strongest advocate for good CRM and lookout doctrine, obstacle clearance, etc. Maybe most importantly, the pilot who gets the newer guys' attention when it comes to discussing these things.