By Army Sgt. 1st Class Tyrone C. Marshall Jr.
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Nov. 10, 2014 – The initial group of F-16
fighter jets purchased by Iraq will be delivered to Tucson, Arizona, for Iraqi
pilot training due to the security situation in Balad in Iraq, Defense
Department spokesman Army Col. Steven Warren said here today.
Speaking to Pentagon reporters, the colonel discussed plans
to send the aircraft to Arizona rather than Balad, where earlier this year
delivery was originally planned.
“We had talked earlier in the summer about F-16s that the
Iraqis had purchased,” Warren said. “They were due to go to Balad Air Base.”
The security situation still does not allow that, he said,
so the initial group of F-16s will now be delivered to Tucson where there are
Iraqi pilots currently in a training pipeline.
Security in Balad previously impacted the delivery of the
aircraft when advances by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant militants
triggered the evacuation from the air base of contractors who were part of the
transfer process.
Iraqis Will Train With Their Own Aircraft
Following delivery of the fighters, Warren said, the Iraqi
pilots in flight school in Arizona will begin to train on their own aircraft.
“We are going to deliver three F-16s to Tucson in December,”
he said. “And then one per month after that through May for a total of eight
F-16s.”
“We expect the Iraqi pilots will begin flying their own
aircraft for continuation training beginning in January,” Warren said. “All
maintenance for the F-16s will be provided by [contracted] logistic support.”
Warren said the Iraqi pilots have been using training
aircraft -- not their own purchased aircraft -- for this training program.
“So they’re continuing their training,” he said, “but
instead of training using U.S. training aircraft they will now use their own
aircraft in Tucson.”
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