Now, since the statute of limitations is probably over, I will say that back in my young Air Force days, there were times that I (and many others) probably broke the 12-hour rule. I'm not going to throw any current military guys under the bus, and I'm sure the culture has changed for the better these days, and military pilots adhere to the 12-hour rule. But, you get a bunch of 20-somethings in charge of other 20-somethings (and younger), put them in England (or Vegas, or Germany) at a pub, and things tend to get carried away. The next day's flight was always a "who's feeling the best? It's your leg then" kinda thing. I'm not proud of it, but it happened.
*TL;DR warning*
*disclaimer to .civ-only readers, .mil acronym heavy, I'll try to remember to [translate]*
It has got slightly better, a bit milder compared to when I was in their shoes. And I still work with said 20-somethings, so I'm plugged in as a career AETC [training command] critter. I do envy them, I wish I was 25 again, large paycut and all. The specter of this last promotion really hit home for me on that front. Digressing.
In fairness, they're (FAIPS, students et al) [first assignment instructor pilot] less aggressive about it than the MWS [major weapon system] guys, since they still want to get their "fighter", and they know of people burned for messing up during their FAIP tour and derailing their follow-on assignment prospects. Not that there's any guarantee their career will suffer from bad timing on its own anyways, ask me how I know type of thing. The MAF [mobility air force] guys tend to be more rowdy, they feel they have less to lose. This is all anecdotal of course, I don't have statistics on the number of article 15s [type of non-judicial punishment] as a breakdown of fighter vs heavy, nor for all the AETC bases.
Now, the MWS guys for sure still push it up way more on TDY[temporary duty, travel usually]. Hell, when
my statute of limitation comes up, I'll tell you how I met my current wife. As to not being proud of being young, well that goes both ways. Here's a story of a tanker 'boy scout,' who I met after the fact when he came to my squadron at the time, while I was still instructing in T6s:
Stationed in Kadena at the time, they go booze it up in that almost-tropical paradise, go inside the 12 hour threshold for their scheduled TO time. What does/would everyone do on the regular? Well according to you and my past experience, they "push through it". Bad right? Well, this young aircraft commander decides to do right by the regulation, and out of an abundance of caution call up and delay his step to the legitimate 12 hour mark of his last consumption, in order to be legal.... Sq/cc Q3s him for-cause. I'm sure the self-important richard probably thought he was saving the war effort by hanging some young O-3.....wait, what war!? It was PACAF [Air Forces Pacific] in the late 00s. I would know, I was ordered there to wither on the vine a little southeast of where our tanker boy scout was; proud lack of cOmBaT time and $3.50 a day joke per diem in a de facto Japanese tourist trap I can vouch for the fact there was the square root of eff all going on. As I've said gentlemen, Tumon Bay was
my Vietnam....
At any rate, for the non-military in the crowd, Q3s are the equivalent of being failed on an FAA checkride or 121 evaluation....except in this case the sq/cc decides to mark the persons FEF [flight evaluation folder, FAA eval record equivalent] with one of these things over a
non-flying event not even involving training or flight duties other than not being able to report for the original takeoff time. Almost the equivalent of a DPE sitting on the lobby pink slipping you for illegally parking at the FBO and rush inside because you were late to a non-evaluation training flight with your CFI. Something clearly "worse" than say, attempt to operate the flight hung over inside of 12 hours? Latter which we know does occur, by stipulation.
At any rate, ridiculousness of an action which was meant to be
civilian-career-punitive in the first place, when simply NJP [non-judicial punishment] would suffice (LOA, LOR, or even article 15 if the sq/cc was that much of a self-important tightwad), without marking the guy's livelihood for life after the .mil.
So no, it doesn't pay to have integrity; not when your adjudicators are on a political ladder-climbing race. So then, people "push through", and we all lie to our flight doctors....until it's time to collect that VA rating that is. Some safety culture eh? Turns out "
rules for thee, not for me" is not an adequate inducement for people to do "the right thing", even in the military. Shocker. Aaaand digressing.
Good news for our tanker guy, today he is a DEN NB CA (has been one for a couple years now) for that airline that just can't get off the news's radar this spring. He even left a military (reserve) retirement on the table by separating early (didn't have to, but was done emotionally with the .mil concept of justice, don't blame him) to move back to CO and start his new life. A big flex, I still think he was being impulsive, but I don't blame him, lord knows he'll live and die a much richer man than me. I'm sure he still laughs at the time when the AF tried to sink him for doing the right thing wrt reporting requirements, over behavior "everyone" was guilty of when they were a young O-2/O-3.
My point being that stories like his are common as day in the military, especially in the heavy command where Q3s are doled out like candy. A culture of Peter principle run amok and toxic leadership, but I'm steering away from the original topic so I'll digress again.
In closing, am I condoning a culture of operating under the influence? Hell no. My criticism of the dynamic is more macro, specifically the command influence double standards, and how it corrupts down the line from a strictly occupational safety angle, which is what I am ultimately interested in. Ditto for archaic fraternization rules, and all matters of admin ancestor worship we incur in the military for ZERO added-value to our combat projection capability or overall readiness. But I'm showing my rebellious Billy Mitchell old man side now, and we know that guy wouldn't have made it past the rank of O-2 in today's military, so digressing for the third time. *
mumbles '3 more, just 3 more years....' *. Now get off my lawn.