Thanks! I get all that. What you state also supports why drones will be heavily used by the navy in both surface and sub-surface warfare by the end of the decade. Drones can be used to detect and flesh-out enemy combatants cheaply and over a larger area, compared to the number of expensive ships to accomplish the same task. They also make great decoys and surveillance platforms.
What I would like to understand. Could a sufficiently developed fighter drone with a well trained and experienced remote pilot be able to reliably and regularly win against a (for example) F22 figher with an equally well trained and experienced pilot? I've read alot on this topic and have seen quite a few TV shows - the vast majority of credible sources say no - although a drone would be able to out-fly a piloted aircraft, a drone pilot simply doesn't have the needed combat situational awareness - i.e. the 3-D "feeling" for relative speed, direction, angle, etc. that can only come from being there. Fighter pilots imply it's like a 4th sense, a good pilot "knows in his mind" what is happening and what he needs to do to make the kill shot. Short of putting a drone pilot in a simulator with 3-D projection, appropriate noise and gees, the drone pilot simply can't make as effective use of this 4th sense. The articles argue that the very nature of the drone interface - monitors, flight-sticks and keyboards - drone flying is almost 2-D as perceived by the human brain. Therefore drones are more suited to surveillance, ground attack and ground-directed close support where the hight is used to provide visibility, but the actual shooting is 2 dimensional.