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The news that a flying radar station had spotted a number of potentially hostile aircraft did not exactly thrill Stephane Morency.

Flying above the waters of the Adriatic Sea, Morency was sitting in a C-130 Hercules. Its mission was to enforce the weapons embargo the United Nations had imposed against all parties of the Bosnian civil war by searching for suspicious vessels that might have been trying to break the naval blockade.

And although a blockade does not qualify as a true combat situation, it can quickly turn into one since both sides like to play political games and assume postures that reaffirm their supposed and perceived rights.

So the appearance of MiG fighter jets was just another calculated move by the Yugoslav government in the grand game of Balkan diplomacy. But it was a move the other side could not and did not ignore.

Morency certainly did not because he and the rest of the flight crew were flying in a plane totally incapable of defending itself against a modern fighter jet, let alone against several. An aircraft carrier was nearby, and could have sent F-18 Hornets to the rescue.

But the captain of the Hercules was not willing to find out how long that might take, and the plane headed back to its base on Sicily. It was the first time Morency experienced anything close to real combat.

"It was kind of a weird feeling," he says.

He would experience it several more times during his time in Europe. Thanks to modern electronic warfare equipment, the crew knew the Yugoslav air defense forces were pointing surface-to-air missiles at them.

"So we [knew] that they were following us, and if we had gotten close, they could have shot at us," Morency says. "That's not the best feeling in the world."

Phil Rowe can relate to that. He is a retired colonel in the United States Air Force. A master navigator, Rowe was a navigator for more than two decades. And during that time, he flew 168 combat missions in Vietnam as part of a RF-4 Phantom fighter-bomber crew. He also served as a navigator with Strategic Air Command, flying on a B-52.

This put Rowe on the immediate frontline of the Cold War. His duty would have been to guide his plane deep into the territory of the former Soviet Union to drop off nuclear weapons in the case of war.

This was an immense responsibility. He says he experienced several periods of stress and anxiety, especially during moments of high international tension. And even when everything was relatively calm, the job had its unique pressures.

"The stress of meeting 100 percent of the Strategic Air Command standards was significant as well," he says. "Testing was frequent and the consequences of failure could be career-terminating."

Rowe began his career in the early 1950s. He first wanted to become a pilot, but couldn't pass the eye test. "When [they] offered navigator training instead, I jumped at the opportunity. I knew full well that it would lead to a commission and a similar opportunity to fly."

But flight navigators often have to deal with the perception they are not real pilots. "One of the biggest challenges of being a navigator, aside from the technical demands of the job, was accepting the reality that it is and always will be a pilot's air force," Rowe says.

"Pilots are often in charge, given the most important and responsible jobs. There are exceptions and I was one but some navigators grate under the perception of being second-class officers and crewmen."

They also face limited job prospects. In the past, it was not difficult to find air navigators in cockpits of commercial and military planes. They and their skills were once considered indispensable.

And Fred Noonan gave them a special place in the history books when he served as the navigator on Emily Earhart's famed and ill-fated try to fly around the world. It ended in tragedy and mystery over the South Pacific in 1937.

But those were the old days. Modern navigation computers now keep planes on course.

They have become so sophisticated over the years that they can pinpoint the exact latitude and longitude of an airport gate, and guide the plane towards it. The only real mistake air navigators can make today is punch in the wrong coordinates, jokes navigator Bob Hawgood.

This reality has nearly eliminated the need for flight navigators in commercial airplane cockpits. "I knew that it was not going be a job forever because I already knew what was up the pike," says Hawgood. He worked as a navigator for two commercial airlines during the 1960s and 1970s.

Today, the military is the only significant employer of flight navigators. They are still responsible for guiding planes from one point to another. But technology has changed their jobs so much that they spend little time actually navigating the plane.

"You know where you are in the air, so you just have to focus more on the mission," says Captain Nathalie Frigon. She is a tactical specialist. She decides when it is time to use weapons or drop large food parcels during humanitarian relief efforts.

So in a sense, flight navigators, and not pilots, are in charge.