First of all, and perhaps I chose my words poorly, but I do not mean an all robotic force when I use the term "unmanned." Perhaps the correct term is RPA. Next, I am not an engineer, but I don't need to be Elon Musk to see that technology is advancing far faster than at any time in human history. Lastly, I absolutely agree that UAV's are very limited and my premise is not that we simply remove the pilot from the F-35, but that we field thousands of RPAs that will allow us to absorb losses faster than any enemy can knock them down. Faster and fewer is not the future, deadly and replaceable is.
In the end all I can say is that I sit at a desk. I am not an operational guy and I am not in the test or procurement fields. If you guys say "that won't be ready until 2020," I won't argue...you know better.
But when you say it will take 50 years to field a technology that exists today...well...all I can add is that up one level from my area I can ask the USAF and they tell me that RPA flight hours current exceed manned flight hours 7 to 1 and they don't expect that to change. Around the corner the Army tells me they are looking at unmanned systems to operate their future THAAD program. Keep going and the Navy tells me one of SecNavs primary goals is, and I quote, "Joint and Coalition forces will encounter contested and denied environments that preclude the use of manned assets for SEAD/DEAD, Strike, SUW, and AAW missions By physically moving the human out of the strike platform, these missions can be completed without endangering the human and gains in endurance, maneuverability, and lethality can be realized."
I did not write that, someone senior to all of us did.