Report: Afghans Not Ready
for $800M in Aircraft
Illiteracy, inability to maintain equipment among gov't watchdog's concerns
SIGAR recommends the Pentagon
suspend its agreement to issue these aircraft to the Afghan military.
The Afghans will not be able to
fly - and perhaps more importantly maintain - their new fleet of Russian
helicopters and Swiss planes after the U.S. drawdown next year, according to a
new report from a Pentagon watchdog.
The Department of Defense plans
to spend almost $554 million on 30 Russian-made Mi-17 helicopters and $218
million for 18 PC-12 planes for the Afghan Special Mission Wing, according to
the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction. Defense
contractors currently perform half of the maintenance and repair on these
aircraft, and 70 percent of the key maintenance and logistics management.
The Pentagon does not yet have a
plan for transferring this capability to the Afghan government, the report
states.
"The Afghans lack the capacity -
in both personnel numbers and expertise - to operate and maintain the existing
and planned SMW fleets," according to the report.
SIGAR recommends the Pentagon
suspend its agreement to issue these aircraft to the Afghan military until it
can agree on a plan with Kabul.
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