The United States Navy Strike Fighter Tactics Instructor program (SFTI program), more popularly known as Top Gun (stylized as TOPGUN), is a United States Navy training program that teaches air combat maneuvering tactics and techniques to selected naval aviators and naval flight officers, who return to their operating units as surrogate instructors.
The program began as the United States Navy Fighter Weapons School, established on 3 March 1969, at the former Naval Air Station Miramar in San Diego, California. In 1996, the school was merged into the Naval Strike and Air Warfare Center at Naval Air Station Fallon, Nevada.
thumb|"TOP GUN" text at the line shack of NAS Miramar, 1984
History
Origins
thumb|U.S. Navy [[Fleet Air Gunnery Unit Pacific aircraft from NAAS El Centro in the late 1950s In April 1957, Naval Air Weapons Meet 1957 was held at NAAS El Centro. Signage called it "Top Gun". 'Fleet Air Gunnery Unit Pacific' and 'Marine Training Groups' were closed, as an economy, and a doctrinal shift, brought on by advances in missile, radar, and fire control technology, contributing to the belief that the era of the classic dogfight was over, leading to their disestablishment and a serious decline in U.S. air-to-air combat proficiency that became apparent during the Vietnam War. The pilots who were part of the initial cadre of instructors at Top Gun had experience as students from FAGU. Operation Rolling Thunder, which lasted from 2 March 1965 to 1 November 1968, ultimately saw almost 1,000 U.S. aircraft losses in about one million sorties.
Royal Navy and South African Brigadier General Dick Lord along with others were sent to assist the US Military. He wrote the USN Air Combat Maneuvering Manual (ACM) and his training methods were instrumental in the creation of TOPGUN.
Fighter Weapons School
thumb|An [[F-16 Fighting Falcon and an F-14 Tomcat engaged in a mock dogfight as part of Top Gun training in 1989]]
The United States Navy Fighter Weapons School was established on 3 March 1969, at Naval Air Station Miramar, California. Placed under the control of the VF-121 "Pacemakers," an F-4 Phantom–equipped Replacement Air Group (RAG) unit, the new school received relatively scant funding and resources. Its staff consisted of eight F-4 Phantom II instructors from VF-121 and one intelligence officer hand-picked by the school's first officer-in-charge, Lieutenant Commander Dan Pedersen, USN. Together, F-4 aviators Darrell Gary, Mel Holmes, Jim Laing, John Nash, Jim Ruliffson, Jerry Sawatzky, J. C. Smith, Steve Smith, as well as Wayne Hildebrand, a naval intelligence officer, built the Naval Fighter Weapons School syllabus from scratch. To support their operations, they borrowed aircraft from its parent unit and other Miramar-based units, such as composite squadron VC-7 and Fighter Squadron VF-126. The school's first headquarters at Miramar was in a stolen modular trailer.
thumb|Mechanics at the flight line of NAS Miramar, 1984|left
According to the 1973 command history of the Navy Fighter Weapons School, the unit's purpose was to "train fighter air crews at the graduate level in all aspects of fighter weapons systems including tactics, techniques, procedures and doctrine. It serves to build a nucleus of eminently knowledgeable fighter crews to construct, guide, and enhance weapons training cycles and subsequent aircrew performance. This select group acts as the F-4 community's most operationally orientated weapons specialists. Top Gun's efforts are dedicated to the Navy's professional fighter crews, past, present and future."
Highly qualified instructors were an essential element of Top Gun's success. Mediocre instructors are unable to hold the attention of talented students. Top Gun instructors were knowledgeable fighter tacticians assigned to one or more specific fields of expertise, such as a particular weapon, threat, or tactic. Every instructor was required to become an expert in effective training techniques. All lectures were given without notes after being screened by a notorious "murder board" of evaluators who would point out ambiguities or flawed concepts in the draft presentation. The curriculum was in a constant state of flux based upon class critiques and integration of developing tactics to use new systems to combat emerging threats. Instructors often spent their first year on the staff learning to be an effective part of the training environment. A British newspaper, The Daily Telegraph, declared in a 2009 headline, "American Top Gun Fighter Pilot Academy Set Up by British." However, the British naval pilots mentioned in the article confirmed that the claim was false and that they had no role in creating the curriculum and no access to the classified programs that the Top Gun instructors participated in to refine it.
During the halt in the bombing campaign against North Vietnam (in force from 1968 until the early 1970s), Top Gun established itself as a center of excellence in fighter doctrine, tactics, and training. By the time aerial activity over the North resumed, most Navy squadrons had a Top Gun graduate. According to the Navy, the results were dramatic: the Navy kill-to-loss ratio against the North Vietnamese Air Force (NVAF) MiGs soared from 2.42:1 to 12.5:1. In contrast, the Air Force, which had not implemented a similar training program, saw its kill ratio worsen for a time after the resumption of bombing, according to Benjamin Lambeth's The Transformation of American Airpower. On 28 March 1970, Lieutenant Jerry Beaulier, a graduate of Top Gun's first class, scored the first kill of a North Vietnamese MiG since September 1968.
Transfer to NSAWC
In 1996, the transfer of NAS Miramar to the U.S. Marine Corps was coupled with the incorporation of Top Gun into the Naval Strike and Air Warfare Center (NSAWC) at NAS Fallon, Nevada. In 2016, NSAWC was rebranded as the Naval Aviation Warfighting Development Center (NAWDC), where Top Gun remains a department alongside graduate-level weapons schools for other naval aviation platforms.
In 2011, the Top Gun program was inducted into the International Air & Space Hall of Fame at the San Diego Air & Space Museum.
In popular culture
thumb|right|250px|A U.S. naval aviator acting as a [[stand-in during Top Gun filming at NAS Miramar, 5 July 1985]]
The school was made famous by the 1986 film Top Gun, starring Tom Cruise. Quoting Top Gun while at the school incurs an immediate $5 fine, as it is seen as conflicting with the institute's atmosphere of professionalism.
The 2022 sequel Top Gun: Maverick was also set at Top Gun, although in the film the school is based at Naval Air Station North Island in San Diego and not Nevada.
See also
- Carrier Airborne Early Warning Weapons School (CAEWWS)
- Combat Commanders' School (Pakistan)
- Exercise Red Flag
- Naval Strike and Air Warfare Center (USN)
- Qualified Weapons Instructor (United Kingdom)
- Tactics and Air Combat Defence Establishment (India)
- United States Air Force Weapons School
- Military–entertainment complex
References
Cited works
Citations
Further reading
- Dave Parsons and Derek Nelson (1993). Bandits – History of American Adversarial Aircraft, Motorbooks International.
- Dean Garner (1992). TOPGUN Miramar, Osprey Publishing, London,;
- George Hall (1986). TOPGUN – The Navy's Fighter Weapons School, Presidio Press.
- Lou Drendel (revised 1984) ...And Kill MiGs!, Squadron/Signal Publications
- Dan Pedersen (2019). Topgun - An American Story, Hachette Book Group, Inc.
- Brad Elward (2020). TOPGUN: The US Navy Fighter Weapons School Schiffer Publishing
- Brad Elward (2021). TOPGUN: The Legacy Schiffer Publishing
- Robert K. Wilcox (2005-reissue) Scream of Eagles, Pocketstar
- Dave "Bio" Baranek (2010). Topgun Days, Skyhorse Publishing.
- John R. Chesire. ' — Autobiography
- O'Connor, Michael. 2004. MiG Killers of Yankee Station. Friendship, WI: New Past Press
External links
- Faces of the Fleet United States Navy
- Dan Pedersen. — Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
