35 AoA, your first post, the second on this thread, assumed the B1 was a badly crippled bird, for this crash to happen. No, in clear hindsight, it had a fatally crippled crew. The final report makes that clear.
This is a rant.
As far as over 90 to know of LeMay as a commanding officer, the Geezer served when Eisenhower was in my chain of command. No officer that I even saw in service was a bloated over 200 pounds. His commanding officer had to know that man was beyond physically fit for piloting a B1 but retained him, with disastrous results. This and the other retention of pilots who were not ready for combat cost an incredible amount of money, and weakened the strength of the USA.
For those that claim that you cannot stay qualified without flying sorties, That is why simulators were created, to assure pilots were familiar with every aspect of flying their assigned equipment.
As a lowly Private Pilot, Instrument rating, when I am about to do a flight that MAY include instrument conditions, and had any doubt that I was prepared. I either flew with an instructor, or did simulator time to get personally satisfied that I could "Fly the mission".
Before the FAA invented the Biennial Flight Review, the small club that I was a member of had Annual requalification, with designated instructors, to assure that our members stayed skilled. Failing the review grounded you until you had enough retraining to pass the list of required performances. If the club members felt that you were not retaining your training from year to year, you were invited to resign. Only one resisted the request.
The Airforce should be similar, if a man is not keeping up to his duty requirements, he should be employed elsewhere. If he feels that the miitary is not giving him enough flight time, go to the airlines, they offer loads of flight time, and good pay to boot. If you are in fact skilled, and trainable.
RE chain of command, my first Sargent in basic training was George Jones, in Signal school was Stroud, overseas, Eiceman.
This week, I trashed my notes from my time in service. It had no names in it, just what we needed to know to be effective soldiers, and stay alive. small stuff, like what the colors on grenades meant, which canister on the gas mask for each gas, and the identifying smell or color of each one. Field adapted camo, using dirt, coffee, tea, shoe polish, and vegetation. Steps to field strip the M1 rifle, and BMG 50 cal. Page after page in that little 2X5 inch spiral notebook. We were less than hour from the nearest Communist airport, 6 hours from the border by tank, and had atomic capable missiles to draw early enemy fire.
I was sufficiently skilled that not only the Company Exec tried to keep me in, but the Major who headed the Missile Command Signal Office personally attempted to get me to stay, as I assisted him in his most difficult technical duties.
Back to flying, I have no problem with them landing on a fog covered runway, I have done that, but I made my decision of divert or land based on my personally known skills at that time, and familiarity with the terrain around the runway. I do not think that I ever made an ILS approach where the fly up by more than 2 dots occurred.
I realize that requesting a lot of extra simulator time to remain in my comfort zone for my flight safety might be career slowing, but that is not the only goal in the military. For Mr. 265#, what if the ejection seat had failed to get him clear of the B1? Bluntly, he would have burned to death.
This was posted after reading the pertinent points of the Final Report, and a resulting poorly slept night. That B1 base scares me.
Rant over.