The following is a
summary taken from reports produced for Lockheed Martin's defense related news
service. And in a previous article, the US made what sounds to me to be an
outrageous statement: that an experienced MiG-29 pilot would need a year to
learn how to fly an F-15 or -16. Doesn't sound even
remotely correct, and surprise: the Ukrainians ALREADY HAVE some A-10 pilots
and guys qualified on “fourth generation” – 15's and 16's – fighters. As for
taking a year…hmmm. I can fly a Cessna 172, and I am absolutely certain that
given a year I could not only fly the F-15 but dogfight, do ground attack, Immelmanns,
barrel rolls, whatever. And the Ukrainians responded with their assessment for
getting some of their best MiG-29 pilots up to speed: three weeks. I would say
four or five, but there will still be a war then. And for all of the bravado
and Elon Musk sized numbers the US has been throwing around, only now are some things
that aren't pretty straightforward small arms with a leavening of cannons
arriving. So I read this and wept.
I can see it, because I am here, and I guarantee that if the US simply made
actions and words agree, it would end at some reasonable point. How much sense
does it make to take the 21 A-10C's the USAF is dying to get rid of so that
they can spend incredible amounts of money on semi-spacecraft, practically, and
mothball them in Arizona, when they are desperately, desperately needed here?
AND there are guys to fly them. Come on, Biden. Get back
on your bike, and get it done. And for all of the people who are blocking him,
if that is indeed going on, come with me later this week, and then tell me what
you think, after imagining your son's face replacing that of an eighteen year
old kid from Ivano Franka who has never had a girlfriend going to the front,
while yours is safely tucked away at New Hampshire State, or Boston College. Or something.
AFA AIR WARFARE
SYMPOSIUM: Despite calls from former US defense officials for the Air Force to
transfer some of its A-10 Warthog attack
aircraft to
Ukraine, there are no current plans for the service to give up its tank-busting
planes, the Air Force's top leaders said today. “I'm not aware of any
current plan, or even any discussion of a current plan to field or provide
A-10s to the Ukrainians,” Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall said during a
roundtable with reporters today at the Air Force Association's Air Warfare
Symposium. Asked during a later
roundtable, Air Force Chief of Staff
Gen. CQ Brown gave a similar answer. Going where no
unmanned aerial systems have gone before. Learn more. “I'm not aware of any
discussions or plans inside the United States Air Force to provide A-10s to
Ukraine,” he said. Although he did not speak specifically about Ukraine's
ability to absorb the A-10, he added that for any air force receiving new
capabilities, it would take time to “train and get ready to do” a mission. As a long line of Russian
tanks and other vehicles push into Ukraine and drive toward Kyiv and other
major cities, Ukraine has used everything at its disposal — fighter aircraft,
drones and ground-launched missiles, among other capabilities — to try to take
out the convoys. This morning, several outlets published op-eds by former US
officials advocated for the US Air Force to supply Ukraine with unwanted A-10s
for just that purpose. Philip Breedlove, a
former Air Force general and head of US European Command, and Kurt Volker, the
US Special Representative for Ukraine Negotiations from 2017 to 2019, wrote
that the Air Force could transfer any A-10s it plans to mothball to Ukraine as
excess defense articles. “Thanks to prior military
exchange programs, Ukraine already has a small number of pilots trained to fly
the A-10,” Breedlove and Volker wrote in an op-ed published by the
Center for European Policy Analysis. “If spare parts and maintenance are
required, use part of the US $1 billion funding to allow Ukraine to hire
private contractors, rather than involving US personnel directly.” Everett Pyatt, a former
assistant secretary of the US Navy for shipbuilding and logistics in the late
1980s, argued in a Defense News op-ed that the Air Force
should give up the three A-10 squadrons it had hoped to divest in fiscal 2022. “This aircraft and its
gun system were designed to counter an armored assault in Europe,” wrote Pyatt.
“They proved effective in Desert Storm's target-rich environment, quite similar
to the current advancing Russian force. They also became the infantry's friend
in close-air support missions.” One obvious problem with
the idea of the Air Force transferring its A-10s to Ukraine is that it is
required by law to retain all 281 Warthogs currently in its inventory. Although
the service had hoped to send 42 A-10s to the boneyard this fiscal year, the
FY22 NDAA late last year included language that prohibited any reductions. Even if the US went ahead
with transferring A-10s to Ukraine, it might be too late to have an impact in a
war against Russia, said Richard Aboulafia, an aerospace expert with
AeroDynamic Advisory. “Many people,
understandably, see that Russian column heading to Kiev and hear that
distinctive A-10 BRRRT noise,” he told Breaking Defense. “But training crews
isn't a two-hour or two-day process. Making them proficient, and therefore
helping them survive against targets that will be shooting back, takes weeks,
and more likely months.”
“And if the Russians actually get serious
about committing their air force, and achieve total air superiority, these
A-10s would simply be destroyed not long after they took off,” he said. The writer is a former military man, now researching and writing about the Ukrainian Conflict. Questions can be sent directly to lhaesten@gmail.com.
(0) COMMENTSWelcome to the discussion.
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