Ukrainian pilots expected to start
F-16 training in Arizona next week
News comes after Washington announced it will lead
a coalition of countries training Ukrainian pilots.
The pilots will first learn the basics of operating the F-16 in the
classroom and in simulators before moving on to flying the actual jets, as is
typical for any Air Force pilot training program. | Czarek Sokolowski/AP Photo
10/13/2023 02:00 PM EDT
Ukrainian pilots are expected to begin
training to fly the F-16 fighter jet at an Air National Guard base in Tuscon,
Ariz., next week, according to four U.S. officials.
A small number of pilots, who arrived
in the United States last month to participate in an English language course at
Lackland Air Force Base in Texas, have passed their first test for English
proficiency and are headed to Morris Air National Guard Base in Arizona,
according to one of the officials, who like the others were granted anonymity
to speak ahead of an announcement. There, they will train with the 162nd Wing,
the main F-16 training hub for the Air Force, two of the officials said.
The pilots will first learn the basics of
operating the F-16 in the classroom and in simulators before moving on to
flying the actual jets, as is typical for any Air Force pilot training program.
However, the course may be accelerated due to the urgent need to get them back
to the battlefield, the first official said.
The group of Ukrainian pilots has been
participating in an English language program at the Defense Language Institute
English Language Center at Lackland, said Air Force spokesperson Rose Riley.
“Testing will determine their next
courses and when the pilots would be able to commence F-16 training. Training
location options are still being considered at this time,” Riley said.
The news comes as the U.S. announced
on Wednesday that it will head up a
coalition of countries training Ukrainian pilots and crew to operate and
maintain the F-16s, alongside the Netherlands and Denmark. So far, 11 countries
have signed up to help with the training, while the Netherlands, Denmark and Belgium
will donate aircraft.
During a press conference in Brussels
earlier this week, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said the F-16s would arrive
on the battlefield next spring at the earliest.
The training begins amid concerns that
the Pentagon is running out of money to continue sending military aid to
Ukraine, after lawmakers passed a last-minute spending bill to avert a
government shutdown that did not include funding for Kyiv. And it comes days
after Hamas militants launched a surprise attack on Israel, sparking a conflict
that has rocked the region.
Officials in Kyiv have been pushing to
get modern fighter aircraft to the battlefield for more than a year. The
Ukrainian military, working with DOD, has managed to integrate Western
air-launched missiles with its Soviet-era fighter jets, according to one of the
U.S. officials, an effort Politico reported was
ongoing in March. However, Ukrainian officials say modern fighter jets will
give them an advantage.
President Joe Biden finally approved
an international effort to train Ukrainian pilots to fly F-16s in May, but the
coalition took months to straighten out the details of the program. Initially,
officials said the pilots and maintainers would train in Europe; the Pentagon
announced last month that some of the training would take place in the U.S.
A group of Ukrainian pilots training in Europe are
already learning on F-16 flight simulators, Ukrainian Air Force
spokesperson Yurii Ihnat said earlier
this month. The next stage is “flights with an instructor in real jets,” he
said.
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