The thing is he barely remembers the training for dreaming. Even if he did, it doesn't mean he become a super soldier due the training, he learns how to cope with a situation which he did just fine with in the level 1 dream.XiaNaphryz said:As I mentioned above, the fact that he's been trained at all means he's likely taken these precautions as part of a general defense training program on corporate espionage. Which would entail knowing who your major rivals are. Just receiving training on this one aspect and not any other possibility doesn't seem plausible.
Sure, Eames had pulled a gun on him in the taxi, but Saito also did directly in front of him. It wouldn't be out of the question to expect him to try and at least get a good look at the faces of his captors so he can give proper descriptions to law enforcement later.
I can almost guarentee his training would not include the CEO of a rival company being the the the actual suspect. That would be like Obama being cautious around Putin for fear Putin would shoot him. Why he didn't take a private jet I get as a plot hole (not really sincde they explained it but still...), but Fischer is painted as a guy who is not qualified literally to replace his father so it's doubtful that immediately following his father's death, a tramatic time in any situation, he is going to turn into Jason Bourne and recognize all the dangers around him.
He was getting good looks but he was thinking it was real. However, it didn't matter whether he saw Saito and remembered him or not (Something tough to do in a dream) because part of the plan was always to get him to realize he was in a dream (I think). His training would have told him that Saito could have been a part of his subconscious.
Now Saito shouldn't have been there because out of everyone besides Cobb, he was messing up the plans since he was untrained, but Fischer recognizing on the plane and on the level 1 dream wasn't the reason it was a bad idea to me.