[The elaborately staged ceremony at Kandahar Air Base marked the formal launch of an ambitious plan to modernize and expand the Afghan air force over the next five years. A variety of U.S. military aircraft including 159 UH-60 Black Hawks are being supplied by the United States, and a new cohort of Afghan combat pilots are being trained — or retrained after years of flying Soviet-era choppers — by American military and civilian advisers.]
By
Pamela Constable
Afghanistan
President Ashraf Ghan, second right stands with U.S.
Army Gen. John W.
Nicholson, right,
during Saturday’s ceremony
at Kandahar Air Field. (Massoud Hossaini/AP)
|
KANDAHAR,
Afghanistan — With a
just-delivered Black Hawk helicopter sitting on a military runway behind him,
Gen. John W. Nicholson Jr., the top U.S. military commander in Afghanistan,
vowed Saturday that “a tidal wave of air power is on the horizon” in the war
against Taliban insurgents and that “this is the beginning of the end for the
Taliban.”
Moments later, a second new Black Hawk
descended and hovered over the runway as Afghan President Ashraf Ghani praised
the nation’s air force pilots as “the real champions” of the 16-year conflict.
Now that a new Afghan-U. S. military effort will triple the country’s air force
capacity and double its special operations forces, he declared, “terrorists
will not triumph here.”
The elaborately staged ceremony at Kandahar
Air Base marked the formal launch of an ambitious plan to modernize and expand
the Afghan air force over the next five years. A variety of U.S. military
aircraft including 159 UH-60 Black Hawks are being supplied by the United
States, and a new cohort of Afghan combat pilots are being trained — or
retrained after years of flying Soviet-era choppers — by American military and
civilian advisers.
The event was also aimed at reinforcing
public support for the ongoing U.S. and NATO military mission here, following
President Trump’s announcement in August of a new, open-ended policy that would
add several thousand U.S. troops, focus on ending the war rather than
nation-building, and follow the plan designed by Ghani and Nicholson to enable
Afghanistan to defend itself within the next five years.
“We are with you in this fight, and we will
stay with you,” Nicholson said, calling the war against terrorism “the most
important fight in the world.” Brig. Gen. Phillip A. Stewart, commander of the
U.S. air advisory mission, called the Black Hawks and other U.S.-supplied
military aircraft on display “a physical manifestation”of international
commitment to the war.
But the deployment of the iconic helicopters
will be gradual, with only six expected to be in full use with Afghan pilots by
the end of next year. Meanwhile, the war continues to rage, with Taliban
fighters active in many areas of the country, and military commanders across
the country have said that increased air combat support is their most urgent
need.
Pilots need several years of training to fly
the Black Hawks, a process that is just beginning, and repairs must be made by
American contractors for now. Afghan pilots who currently fly other U.S.
military aircraft, such as A-29 small fighter planes and MD-530 attack
helicopters, have received several years of training at bases in the United
States.
American air instructors at the event said
that they have confidence in the skills and experience of the Afghan pilots
they are guiding and that they do not expect the transition to piloting new
aircraft to be especially difficult. “I have been supremely impressed with the
Afghan pilots,” said Lt. Col. Trent Alexander, a senior air trainer. “They are
absolutely up for this challenge.”
All of the Black Hawks being supplied to
Afghanistan are from excess U.S. Army stocks, refurbished and updated before
being sent here. The total average cost involved, one U.S. official said, is
between $7 million and $8 million per aircraft. Of the 159 total, more than 50
will have machine guns and other equipment to provide air cover in combat.
The Afghan air force currently uses about 40
Soviet-made Mi-17 helicopters, which are larger and less agile, on missions to
evacuate wounded or dead soldiers, deliver supplies to conflict zones and
provide air cover.
Before the ceremony, several Afghan pilots
said they were looking forward to the change. They described the Black Hawks as
more modern, more stable and smoother to handle than the Mi-17s.
“They are more reliable and they fly easier,”
said Capt. Mohammed Saquib, 32, a helicopter pilot with four years’ experience.
“We have a young generation that is ready to learn these skills. But what we
want is to see this conflict finish in our country.”
Afghan and American officials are relying
heavily on expanding the air force and special operations forces because they
are among the best educated and most professional members of the Afghan defense
forces. The regular army and police have been plagued by a variety of problems,
including illiteracy, corruption, high attrition rates and poor leadership,
which have made them less effective fighting forces and more resistant to
reform efforts.
In a new report on lessons learned from
rebuilding the Afghan defense forces, the U.S. Special Inspector General for
Afghanistan Reconstruction concluded that those efforts had been hampered by
numerous major problems, including failure to understand and address
“intangible factors, such as corruption and the will to fight,” overestimating
the capabilities of regular government forces, and neglecting “critical
capabilities” that take time to develop, including air force and special
operations forces.
The
five-year plan developed by Ghani and Nicholson, in addition to bolstering
these two elite areas of defense, will send advisers to work more closely with
individual army and police units, and will continue improving military
leadership by replacing ineffective or corrupt officials. Ghani has recently
replaced a number of senior military officials, with some facing prosecution for
corruption and others fired after several devastating insurgent attacks.
Alexander said Saturday that in addition to
respecting the Afghan pilots he is training, he has also been impressed by the
dedication of some of their superior officers. He described a recent situation
when a group of Mi-17 pilots were out on a late-night combat mission, and their
Afghan squadron commander waited up anxiously for them to come back.
“He
was really invested in the mission, and in the men,” Alexander said.
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