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Russia's Lethal Yak-130 Fighter: The Tiny Terror NATO Should Fear

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Russia's Lethal Yak-130 Fighter: The Tiny Terror NATO Should Fear
Yak-130_-_FIA_2012.jpg

Thomas Newdick
September 5, 2015


In the world of Russian jet fighters, Moscow’s finest — such as the Flanker and the fifth-generation Sukhoi T-50 — tend to grab the most headlines.

But the Yakovlev Yak-130, a comparatively non-glamorous twin-seat jet trainer, is quietly turning heads … because it’s obviously more than just a trainer. The twin-engine jet dubbed “Mitten” by Western intelligence is now showing its credentials as a genuine multi-role fighter.


When an air force wants to maximize its combat potential, a trainer — even a jet-powered one — might not be the most obvious choice of aircraft.

But today’s multi-role combat trainers are a viable and comparatively low-cost alternative to conventional fighters — even one that originates from behind the former Iron Curtain.

Like many post-Soviet military projects, it took a long time before any pilots got their hands on the Yak-130. But now the aircraft is showing up at the Russian air force’s advanced flight training schools.

Further, the Kremlin has begun deliveries to Belarus, a close military ally of Moscow. Previously, the Kremlin delivered Yak-130s to Algeria, another established customer of Russian-made warplanes.

The Yak-130 has three hard-points under each wing. That means it can carry up to three tons of air-to-air missiles, air-to-surface missiles, precision-guided bombs, free-fall bombs, rockets, gun pods and external fuel tanks.

Another two stations at the wingtips can carry air-to-air missiles or decoy launchers to spoof enemy heat-seeking missiles. That’s not at all. Under its belly, the plane can carry a hard-hitting 23-millimeter cannon.

Recent photographs reveal the next stage in the Yak-130’s maturation to a combat aircraft. In the photos, a Yak wearing the latest Russian military markings has a characteristic “bump” in front of the cockpit. This could house the LD-130 laser rangefinder and TV camera for identifying targets and improving the accuracy of its weapons.

Another option for a future upgrade is a flight refueling probe, which would expand the jet’s range for offensive missions.

A fully armed and fueled Yak-130 tips the scales at 22,700 pounds. That’s only a little more than half the weight of a fully-loaded F-16 Fighting Falcon, the primary multi-role fighter of the U.S. Air Force and many of its allies.

Hang two 500-pound bombs, a gun pod and a pair of fuel tanks on a Yak-130 and it will have a maximum operational radius of 367 nautical miles. That’s fairly respectable compared to the F-16, which will haul two 2,000-pound bombs, two AIM-9 Sidewinders and a pair of external fuel tanks over a radius of 740 nautical miles.

The subsonic Yak-130 belongs to a class of aircraft known as lead-in fighter trainers — or LIFTs. For a modern-day air force, LIFTs allow student pilots to familiarize themselves with the advanced technology they’ll encounter once strapped into a front-line fighter’s cockpit.

For its part, the U.S. Air Force is currently looking to buy 350 copies of a new LIFT to replace its hopelessly outdated T-38 Talon jet trainers. The Air Force calls the multi-billion-dollar program T-X.

But beyond the LIFT role, jet trainers such as the Yak-130 can fly genuine combat missions, too.

For smaller air forces — such as Belarus — the Yak-130 is a low-cost way of flying missions that would otherwise require an expensive multi-role fighter. After retiring its Su-27 fighters due to cost reasons and disposing of its Su-24 strike aircraft, Belarus badly needed to bolster its air combat fleet.

Small and agile, but able to pack a punch, the Yak-130 is also useful in counter-insurgency and asymmetric warfare.

Since the Vietnam War, jet trainers have found a place in counter-insurgency operations. Algeria is very interested in counter-insurgency operations because the nation has been waging a long-running campaign against Islamic extremists.

The Algerian air force’s Yak-130s complement heavier Sukhoi jets and operate alongside upgraded Mi-24 helicopter gunships.

Russian manufacturer Yakovlev — once the country’s preeminent fighter designer — designed the Yak-130. Irkut Corporation bought out Yakovlev in 2008, and shifted its production to Russia’s far east.

Work on a new trainer for the Russian air force — then the Soviet air force — began in 1990, and by the middle of that decade the Yak-130 competed against the much more conventional Mikoyan MiG-AT. A prototype Yak-130 began flight testing in April 1996, but it wasn’t until 2002 that the Kremlin finally selected the trainer instead of the MiG.

During the first decade of the new century, Russia produced four prototype Yak-130s.

The Russia air force placed its first order in 2005 for 12 aircraft, and began receiving the planes in early 2010. The following year, the air force signed a further order for 55 aircraft.


Manufacturers have since delivered all the jets, which are in service with training units at two airfields. Yakovlev is also delivering another dozen aircraft in a “stripped-down” configuration for an aerial demonstration team.

The next customer could be the Russian navy, which would use the Yak-130 to prepare pilots for its carrier air wing at a newly constructed shore-based training facility. The future of the Yak-130 in Russia looks bright — the defense ministry wants at least another 150 examples up to 2020.


The plane’s AI-222–25 turbofan engine comes from Russia — but is the result of a cooperative technology agreement with the Ukrainian company Progress. Ukraine banned military cooperation with the Kremlin after Russia invaded Crimea in February 2014.

It’s unclear if this will affect the engine’s production.

But Irkut has busily courted foreign customers. The first of these was Algeria. Advanced fighter sales between the two countries went through a turbulent period in the 2000s — because Moscow promised much newer fighters than it actually delivered. But the Yaks proved to be a far more successful purchase.

The first of 16 aircraft arrived in Algeria in late 2011. Like Algeria’s Sukhoi Su-30MKAs, the diminutive Yak-130s have customized Western cockpit instrumentation.

A bid to sell the trainer to Libya fell through after that country erupted into civil war, and another war killed a projected sale to Syria. However, as relations between Moscow and the West continued to deteriorate, the Kremlin stated that the Syrian transfer could resume.

Belarus bought four Yak-130s in late 2012, and deliveries began in April 2015. Irkut is hopeful that Bangladesh will be next to receive the “Mitten,” with deliveries of a planned 16 aircraft expected to commence next year.

Bangladesh has no shortage of jet trainers in its inventory, and the Yak-130 could fulfill a counter-insurgency role — or at least serve in a dual-role purpose.

Most of the other nations that have looked at the Yak-130 have counter-insurgency or other light combat requirements, on top of any training role. These countries include Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nicaragua, Uruguay and Vietnam.

The Yak-130 is a proven lead-in fighter-trainer with combat capability that can also serve in the kind of counter-insurgency war that the U.S. Air Force has found itself fighting in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria.
 
Very capable aircraft of its kind, but certainly not any terror NATO should fear, not even a tiny one. That's journalistic exaggeration.
As a low cost counter-insurgency aircraft and LIFT, PAF should evaluate YAK-130. Mass production of twin seater JF-17 is yet nowhere to seen for years.
 
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I never understood what's special about jet trainers, are they going to defeat F-22 Raptors?

Is this suppose to train pilots before transferring to T-50 or new planes? That's all, right?
 
Very capable aircraft of its kind, but certainly not any terror NATO should fear, not even a tiny one. That's journalistic exaggeration.




Yes I agree with you wholeheartedly.

However, in its class as a LIFT Trainer , it is making its mark as many Top Notch Air Forces are opting for it as a cheap way to Train Pilots for expensive 4.5 Generation Fighters.

Once we have a dual Seat JF-17 Blk III , we would be able to accomplish the same objective.

Although a Squadron of these would be great to have if we can find some extra money lying around...;)

At $ 15,000,000 a piece the price is not too steep.

I never understood what's special about jet trainers, are they going to defeat F-22 Raptors?

Is this suppose to train pilots before transferring to T-50 or new planes? That's all, right?


A LIFT Trainer is not designed to fight a 5th Generation Fighter.

Its main purpose is to train and prepare pilots for flying more advanced 4.5+ Gen. fighters....
 
Yes I agree with you wholeheartedly.

However, in its class as a LIFT Trainer , it is making its mark as many Top Notch Air Forces are opting for it as a cheap way to Train Pilots for expensive 4.5 Generation Fighters.

Once we have a dual Seat JF-17 Blk III , we would be able to accomplish the same objective.

Although a Squadron of these would be great to have if we can find some extra money lying around...;)

At $ 15,000,000 a piece the price is not too steep.




A LIFT Trainer is not designed to fight a 5th Generation Fighter.

Its main purpose is to train and prepare pilots for flying more advanced 4.5+ Gen. fighters....

Squeeze big corrupt crocs and you will find a lot of money. :)
Only Zardari's Swiss accounts are enough for huge purchases.
 
So NATO should fear the YAK 130, eh?
Well, in that case, Russia should fear the Alenia Aermacchi M-346 Master.
After all, that is an Italian FURTHER development of the co-developed Yak-130

What a poorly informed author....

In 1993, Aermacchi signed an agreement to partner with Yakovlev on the new trainer the firm had been developing since 1991 for the Russian Air Force. The resulting aircraft first flew in 1996 and was brought to Italy the following year to replace the aging MB-339. At the time, the aircraft was marketed as the Yak/AEM-130, however, by 2000, differences in priorities between the two firms had brought about an end to the partnership, with each developing the aircraft independently; Yakovlev received US$77 million for technical documents of the aircraft. Yakovlev would be able to sell the aircraft to countries such those in the Commonwealth of Independent States, India, Slovakia and Algeria. Aeromacchi would be able to sell to NATO countries, among others. A Russian version is also being pursued by Yakovlev and Sokol, under a different time schedule.
The M-346 is a highly modified version of the aircraft the joint venture produced, and uses equipment exclusively from Western manufacturers. The first prototype rolled out on 7 June 2003 and flew for the first time on 15 July 2004.
Alenia Aermacchi M-346 Master - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Alenia Aermacchi M-346 is the most advanced trainer aircraft available on the market today and the only one specifically designed to prepare pilots for high performance new generation aircraft. The M-346 entered service in 2013 with both the Italian Air Force and Republic of Singapore Air Force. It has been ordered by Israel, which will receive the first M-346 in 2014, and Poland, under a contract signed in February 2014. The type has also been selected by the UAE. A team comprising General Dynamics and Alenia Aermacchi will offer the T-100 variant for the United States Air Force T-X requirement, which aims to replace the obsolete Northrop T-38 fleet.
Request Rejected

Helmet Mounted Display, vocal control inputs, in-flight refueling probe, 2x3 wing pylons and a centreline harpoint as well as wingtip rails allow for up to 3,000 kilos of external loads. Optionally available equipment includes electronic warfare and data link systems, radar signature reduction kits, and a multi-mode radar.

Yak 130
582_irkut_yak-130-3.jpg

M-346
M-346-LAVI_617-1.jpg


Yak-130
299460.jpg


M-346
11354845314_97fa153067_b.jpg


China developed a very similar LIFT with the help of Yakovlev: the Hongdu JL-15. The M-346 is a derivative of the Yak-130, while the JL-15 resembles the Russian aircraft because it was developed with help from Yakovlev.

l-15-advanced-jet-trainer-ajt.jpg


1675658.jpg
 
Russia's Lethal Yak-130 Fighter: The Tiny Terror NATO Should Fear
Yak-130_-_FIA_2012.jpg

Thomas Newdick
September 5, 2015


In the world of Russian jet fighters, Moscow’s finest — such as the Flanker and the fifth-generation Sukhoi T-50 — tend to grab the most headlines.

But the Yakovlev Yak-130, a comparatively non-glamorous twin-seat jet trainer, is quietly turning heads … because it’s obviously more than just a trainer. The twin-engine jet dubbed “Mitten” by Western intelligence is now showing its credentials as a genuine multi-role fighter.


When an air force wants to maximize its combat potential, a trainer — even a jet-powered one — might not be the most obvious choice of aircraft.

But today’s multi-role combat trainers are a viable and comparatively low-cost alternative to conventional fighters — even one that originates from behind the former Iron Curtain.

Like many post-Soviet military projects, it took a long time before any pilots got their hands on the Yak-130. But now the aircraft is showing up at the Russian air force’s advanced flight training schools.

Further, the Kremlin has begun deliveries to Belarus, a close military ally of Moscow. Previously, the Kremlin delivered Yak-130s to Algeria, another established customer of Russian-made warplanes.

The Yak-130 has three hard-points under each wing. That means it can carry up to three tons of air-to-air missiles, air-to-surface missiles, precision-guided bombs, free-fall bombs, rockets, gun pods and external fuel tanks.

Another two stations at the wingtips can carry air-to-air missiles or decoy launchers to spoof enemy heat-seeking missiles. That’s not at all. Under its belly, the plane can carry a hard-hitting 23-millimeter cannon.

Recent photographs reveal the next stage in the Yak-130’s maturation to a combat aircraft. In the photos, a Yak wearing the latest Russian military markings has a characteristic “bump” in front of the cockpit. This could house the LD-130 laser rangefinder and TV camera for identifying targets and improving the accuracy of its weapons.

Another option for a future upgrade is a flight refueling probe, which would expand the jet’s range for offensive missions.

A fully armed and fueled Yak-130 tips the scales at 22,700 pounds. That’s only a little more than half the weight of a fully-loaded F-16 Fighting Falcon, the primary multi-role fighter of the U.S. Air Force and many of its allies.

Hang two 500-pound bombs, a gun pod and a pair of fuel tanks on a Yak-130 and it will have a maximum operational radius of 367 nautical miles. That’s fairly respectable compared to the F-16, which will haul two 2,000-pound bombs, two AIM-9 Sidewinders and a pair of external fuel tanks over a radius of 740 nautical miles.

The subsonic Yak-130 belongs to a class of aircraft known as lead-in fighter trainers — or LIFTs. For a modern-day air force, LIFTs allow student pilots to familiarize themselves with the advanced technology they’ll encounter once strapped into a front-line fighter’s cockpit.

For its part, the U.S. Air Force is currently looking to buy 350 copies of a new LIFT to replace its hopelessly outdated T-38 Talon jet trainers. The Air Force calls the multi-billion-dollar program T-X.

But beyond the LIFT role, jet trainers such as the Yak-130 can fly genuine combat missions, too.

For smaller air forces — such as Belarus — the Yak-130 is a low-cost way of flying missions that would otherwise require an expensive multi-role fighter. After retiring its Su-27 fighters due to cost reasons and disposing of its Su-24 strike aircraft, Belarus badly needed to bolster its air combat fleet.

Small and agile, but able to pack a punch, the Yak-130 is also useful in counter-insurgency and asymmetric warfare.

Since the Vietnam War, jet trainers have found a place in counter-insurgency operations. Algeria is very interested in counter-insurgency operations because the nation has been waging a long-running campaign against Islamic extremists.

The Algerian air force’s Yak-130s complement heavier Sukhoi jets and operate alongside upgraded Mi-24 helicopter gunships.

Russian manufacturer Yakovlev — once the country’s preeminent fighter designer — designed the Yak-130. Irkut Corporation bought out Yakovlev in 2008, and shifted its production to Russia’s far east.

Work on a new trainer for the Russian air force — then the Soviet air force — began in 1990, and by the middle of that decade the Yak-130 competed against the much more conventional Mikoyan MiG-AT. A prototype Yak-130 began flight testing in April 1996, but it wasn’t until 2002 that the Kremlin finally selected the trainer instead of the MiG.

During the first decade of the new century, Russia produced four prototype Yak-130s.

The Russia air force placed its first order in 2005 for 12 aircraft, and began receiving the planes in early 2010. The following year, the air force signed a further order for 55 aircraft.


Manufacturers have since delivered all the jets, which are in service with training units at two airfields. Yakovlev is also delivering another dozen aircraft in a “stripped-down” configuration for an aerial demonstration team.

The next customer could be the Russian navy, which would use the Yak-130 to prepare pilots for its carrier air wing at a newly constructed shore-based training facility. The future of the Yak-130 in Russia looks bright — the defense ministry wants at least another 150 examples up to 2020.


The plane’s AI-222–25 turbofan engine comes from Russia — but is the result of a cooperative technology agreement with the Ukrainian company Progress. Ukraine banned military cooperation with the Kremlin after Russia invaded Crimea in February 2014.

It’s unclear if this will affect the engine’s production.

But Irkut has busily courted foreign customers. The first of these was Algeria. Advanced fighter sales between the two countries went through a turbulent period in the 2000s — because Moscow promised much newer fighters than it actually delivered. But the Yaks proved to be a far more successful purchase.

The first of 16 aircraft arrived in Algeria in late 2011. Like Algeria’s Sukhoi Su-30MKAs, the diminutive Yak-130s have customized Western cockpit instrumentation.

A bid to sell the trainer to Libya fell through after that country erupted into civil war, and another war killed a projected sale to Syria. However, as relations between Moscow and the West continued to deteriorate, the Kremlin stated that the Syrian transfer could resume.

Belarus bought four Yak-130s in late 2012, and deliveries began in April 2015. Irkut is hopeful that Bangladesh will be next to receive the “Mitten,” with deliveries of a planned 16 aircraft expected to commence next year.

Bangladesh has no shortage of jet trainers in its inventory, and the Yak-130 could fulfill a counter-insurgency role — or at least serve in a dual-role purpose.

Most of the other nations that have looked at the Yak-130 have counter-insurgency or other light combat requirements, on top of any training role. These countries include Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nicaragua, Uruguay and Vietnam.

The Yak-130 is a proven lead-in fighter-trainer with combat capability that can also serve in the kind of counter-insurgency war that the U.S. Air Force has found itself fighting in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria.
I think it can be good option for Anti insurgency and Anti Armor roles.
 
Best thing is that it can serve as light attack aircraft and advance trainer......... it carry more hard points then JFT....... A sqd of it will look awesome in PAF colors.......
 
I would not use even vs. ISIS. Too vulnerable.
 
Russia's Lethal Yak-130 Fighter: The Tiny Terror NATO Should Fear
Yak-130_-_FIA_2012.jpg

Thomas Newdick
September 5, 2015


In the world of Russian jet fighters, Moscow’s finest — such as the Flanker and the fifth-generation Sukhoi T-50 — tend to grab the most headlines.

But the Yakovlev Yak-130, a comparatively non-glamorous twin-seat jet trainer, is quietly turning heads … because it’s obviously more than just a trainer. The twin-engine jet dubbed “Mitten” by Western intelligence is now showing its credentials as a genuine multi-role fighter.


When an air force wants to maximize its combat potential, a trainer — even a jet-powered one — might not be the most obvious choice of aircraft.

But today’s multi-role combat trainers are a viable and comparatively low-cost alternative to conventional fighters — even one that originates from behind the former Iron Curtain.

Like many post-Soviet military projects, it took a long time before any pilots got their hands on the Yak-130. But now the aircraft is showing up at the Russian air force’s advanced flight training schools.

Further, the Kremlin has begun deliveries to Belarus, a close military ally of Moscow. Previously, the Kremlin delivered Yak-130s to Algeria, another established customer of Russian-made warplanes.

The Yak-130 has three hard-points under each wing. That means it can carry up to three tons of air-to-air missiles, air-to-surface missiles, precision-guided bombs, free-fall bombs, rockets, gun pods and external fuel tanks.

Another two stations at the wingtips can carry air-to-air missiles or decoy launchers to spoof enemy heat-seeking missiles. That’s not at all. Under its belly, the plane can carry a hard-hitting 23-millimeter cannon.

Recent photographs reveal the next stage in the Yak-130’s maturation to a combat aircraft. In the photos, a Yak wearing the latest Russian military markings has a characteristic “bump” in front of the cockpit. This could house the LD-130 laser rangefinder and TV camera for identifying targets and improving the accuracy of its weapons.

Another option for a future upgrade is a flight refueling probe, which would expand the jet’s range for offensive missions.

A fully armed and fueled Yak-130 tips the scales at 22,700 pounds. That’s only a little more than half the weight of a fully-loaded F-16 Fighting Falcon, the primary multi-role fighter of the U.S. Air Force and many of its allies.

Hang two 500-pound bombs, a gun pod and a pair of fuel tanks on a Yak-130 and it will have a maximum operational radius of 367 nautical miles. That’s fairly respectable compared to the F-16, which will haul two 2,000-pound bombs, two AIM-9 Sidewinders and a pair of external fuel tanks over a radius of 740 nautical miles.

The subsonic Yak-130 belongs to a class of aircraft known as lead-in fighter trainers — or LIFTs. For a modern-day air force, LIFTs allow student pilots to familiarize themselves with the advanced technology they’ll encounter once strapped into a front-line fighter’s cockpit.

For its part, the U.S. Air Force is currently looking to buy 350 copies of a new LIFT to replace its hopelessly outdated T-38 Talon jet trainers. The Air Force calls the multi-billion-dollar program T-X.

But beyond the LIFT role, jet trainers such as the Yak-130 can fly genuine combat missions, too.

For smaller air forces — such as Belarus — the Yak-130 is a low-cost way of flying missions that would otherwise require an expensive multi-role fighter. After retiring its Su-27 fighters due to cost reasons and disposing of its Su-24 strike aircraft, Belarus badly needed to bolster its air combat fleet.

Small and agile, but able to pack a punch, the Yak-130 is also useful in counter-insurgency and asymmetric warfare.

Since the Vietnam War, jet trainers have found a place in counter-insurgency operations. Algeria is very interested in counter-insurgency operations because the nation has been waging a long-running campaign against Islamic extremists.

The Algerian air force’s Yak-130s complement heavier Sukhoi jets and operate alongside upgraded Mi-24 helicopter gunships.

Russian manufacturer Yakovlev — once the country’s preeminent fighter designer — designed the Yak-130. Irkut Corporation bought out Yakovlev in 2008, and shifted its production to Russia’s far east.

Work on a new trainer for the Russian air force — then the Soviet air force — began in 1990, and by the middle of that decade the Yak-130 competed against the much more conventional Mikoyan MiG-AT. A prototype Yak-130 began flight testing in April 1996, but it wasn’t until 2002 that the Kremlin finally selected the trainer instead of the MiG.

During the first decade of the new century, Russia produced four prototype Yak-130s.

The Russia air force placed its first order in 2005 for 12 aircraft, and began receiving the planes in early 2010. The following year, the air force signed a further order for 55 aircraft.


Manufacturers have since delivered all the jets, which are in service with training units at two airfields. Yakovlev is also delivering another dozen aircraft in a “stripped-down” configuration for an aerial demonstration team.

The next customer could be the Russian navy, which would use the Yak-130 to prepare pilots for its carrier air wing at a newly constructed shore-based training facility. The future of the Yak-130 in Russia looks bright — the defense ministry wants at least another 150 examples up to 2020.


The plane’s AI-222–25 turbofan engine comes from Russia — but is the result of a cooperative technology agreement with the Ukrainian company Progress. Ukraine banned military cooperation with the Kremlin after Russia invaded Crimea in February 2014.

It’s unclear if this will affect the engine’s production.

But Irkut has busily courted foreign customers. The first of these was Algeria. Advanced fighter sales between the two countries went through a turbulent period in the 2000s — because Moscow promised much newer fighters than it actually delivered. But the Yaks proved to be a far more successful purchase.

The first of 16 aircraft arrived in Algeria in late 2011. Like Algeria’s Sukhoi Su-30MKAs, the diminutive Yak-130s have customized Western cockpit instrumentation.

A bid to sell the trainer to Libya fell through after that country erupted into civil war, and another war killed a projected sale to Syria. However, as relations between Moscow and the West continued to deteriorate, the Kremlin stated that the Syrian transfer could resume.

Belarus bought four Yak-130s in late 2012, and deliveries began in April 2015. Irkut is hopeful that Bangladesh will be next to receive the “Mitten,” with deliveries of a planned 16 aircraft expected to commence next year.

Bangladesh has no shortage of jet trainers in its inventory, and the Yak-130 could fulfill a counter-insurgency role — or at least serve in a dual-role purpose.

Most of the other nations that have looked at the Yak-130 have counter-insurgency or other light combat requirements, on top of any training role. These countries include Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nicaragua, Uruguay and Vietnam.

The Yak-130 is a proven lead-in fighter-trainer with combat capability that can also serve in the kind of counter-insurgency war that the U.S. Air Force has found itself fighting in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria.

Even the Yak-130 is being drive from an Italian design which is front runner member of the NATO countries.

I think NATO has an edge over any other country or force in the world in every terms.
 
These trainer aircraft fly at relatively low speed compared to jets. Their speed ranges from 500km/h to 800km/h and it would be sitting ducks for missiles.
But they are only to use as trainers and in counter-insurgency/terrorism operations. Not against professional armies.
They are perfect in their role, for which they are built.
Pak Army is using AH-1 Cobra helis against TTP, having top speed of 277km/h.
 
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