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Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making -- Solution

You turn around, increasing the distance between you and the enemy plane to avoid confrontation.

You turn around and head back to your base camp. While the instinct to avoid confrontation is a good one, you may have exposed yourself to danger by turning back. You are no longer in an offensive capability position. In other words, you can't fire first.

Fighter pilots must be excellent decision-makers. That's because they have to handle multiple tasks, often within split seconds. They have to react quickly to changing circumstances, and if they cannot do that, they will put themselves and others in jeopardy.

"You can't be indecisive, and if you are indecisive you are never going to make it," says Jack Redmond, a retired fighter pilot. The consequences of a mistake can be far-reaching and serious. It can undermine mission objectives, cost many lives and result in great physical damage and loss.