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Afghan army to fly first unmanned aircraft in March, U.S. official says

RabzonKhan

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We should’ve given the these Drones and A-29 Super Tucano’s long before we handed them the security responsibilities, Oh well, better late than never.


Afghan army to fly first unmanned aircraft in March, U.S. official says


BY JOSH SMITH
2/18/2016


The Afghan military is expected to field its first specialized surveillance drones as soon as March, a U.S. commander in Kabul said on Thursday, as the Asian nation slowly expands its own air force.

The boost in military hardware comes as Afghan security forces, fighting largely alone since the withdrawal of most international forces in 2014, have struggled for months to hold back a Taliban insurgency.

The NATO-led military alliance will provide the remotely piloted ScanEagle aircraft, and will train Afghan soldiers to operate the system, said Major General Gordon Davis, commander of the unit that procures new equipment for the Afghans.


"We are just getting the first drones that will be deployed by the corps," Davis told Reuters in an interview. "We've been preparing sites. The pieces and parts are coming in now."

The first drones to be operated by the Afghan National Army will be rolled out in the country's north and south, which have seen some of the heaviest fighting in recent months, Davis said.

Afghan officials have asked the alliance for additional resources in air support and reconnaissance, both areas that remain heavily reliant on its aid.

An Afghan defense ministry spokesman confirmed the unmanned aircraft were on their way, with crews preparing for their deployment.

"Afghan army officers are currently being trained on drones in the United States," said Dawlat Waziri. "As soon as their training is complete, they will be able to fly them here."

He declined to comment on the numbers being trained, or when training will be completed.

Afghan crews will train at a base in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif, with equipment and parts being positioned ahead of the expected deployment late in March, Davis added.

International contractors will operate the initial aircraft alongside Afghan army mission commanders as well as help in the training for at least three years, the alliance says.

The army will receive eight "systems," each including six aircraft, that are planned to be eventually used in all of the most contested areas in the country.

Taliban operations in the northern provinces of Jowzjan, Kunduz and Baghlan, besides fighting in southern Helmand, have severely stretched government forces and caused heavy casualties in recent days.


The ScanEagle is an unarmed surveillance aircraft that costs about $100,000 apiece, with a stabilized turret to carry high-definition and infrared cameras with live video feeds, says its maker Insitu, owned by aviation giant Boeing.

ScanEagles use a pneumatic launcher to take off, and are recovered by a system of cables, letting them operate without an airfield. With a wingspan of about 3 m (10 ft), they can stay aloft up to 24 hours, at an altitude of 4,600 m (15,000 ft).



(Additional reporting by Hamid Shalizi; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
 
ScanEagles are better than nothing, but they need something a little bigger like....

Shadow

20150619104513559.jpg



armed with one or two Pyros
rtn_191811.jpg

 
Wait wait wait, hold on. I thought the ANA already flew drones, or am I wrong? I clearly remember a report mentioning that the ANA flew a limited amount of them, especially to help in major offensives against insurgents.

ScanEagles are better than nothing, but they need something a little bigger like....

Shadow

20150619104513559.jpg



armed with one or two Pyros
rtn_191811.jpg

Not gonna happen. Don't want that tech falling into foreign hands, now do we? I'll guarantee you that the scaneagles are also probably stripped down versions, made for basic long endurance surveillance.
 
Wait wait wait, hold on. I thought the ANA already flew drones, or am I wrong? I clearly remember a report mentioning that the ANA flew a limited amount of them, especially to help in major offensives against insurgents.


Not gonna happen. Don't want that tech falling into foreign hands, now do we? I'll guarantee you that the scaneagles are also probably stripped down versions, made for basic long endurance surveillance.

man we've lost so many drones so far including ScanEagles, Predators , to the high tech RQ-170, I doubt our enemies could gain anything more from the RQ-7 Shadow if landed in their lap.


the ANA needs a drone that can find rats and eliminate rats.

or maybe they should just buy systems from China or Iran :undecided:
 
Maybe the Afghan Army can buy something even better.....like the US military...oh, wait...

The Afghan army doesn't need more weapons; it needs to stop persecuting its native Pashtun majority.
 
man we've lost so many drones so far including ScanEagles, Predators , to the high tech RQ-170, I doubt our enemies could gain anything more from the RQ-7 Shadow if landed in their lap.


the ANA needs a drone that can find rats and eliminate rats.

or maybe they should just buy systems from China or Iran :undecided:
Honestly, I think Pakistan would be willing to give them to Afghanistan for free, if the Afghans asked for them. Pakistan does have a large surveillance drone industry, and the army and gov are still looking to build friendly ties with the Afghan gov, plus help Ghani.
 
Honestly, I think Pakistan would be willing to give them to Afghanistan for free, if the Afghans asked for them. Pakistan does have a large surveillance drone industry, and the army and gov are still looking to build friendly ties with the Afghan gov, plus help Ghani.

:lol: that would also allow the Pakistani jarnails to see exactly what the Afghan army was looking at on the ground...
 
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