Ukrainian pilots have begun training on F-16 aircraft, Ukraine’s Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov said, bringing Kyiv closer to obtaining a long-sought after piece of military hardware it says is essential to counter Russian air superiority.
“Training (on F-16) has begun,” Reznikov told Ukrainian media Saturday, adding that in addition to the pilots, a number of Ukrainian engineers and technicians are also training.
Reznikov said that he is not going to say when the last day of training will be but noted that “a minimal term of training is six months.”
He said the instructors would announce the completion of training when they were satisfied the pilots, engineers and technicians had mastered their new skills.
Trainees will also get English-language training in technical terminology, because “the basic level of English language is not enough,” he said.
Reznikov said it was important to determine what kind of weapons the aircraft would be carrying.
“After all, without radars, the plane cannot see, and without machine guns, missiles and shells, it is not a weapon, but only a carrier,” he added.
The F-16 training program is being supported by a coalition of 11 NATO countries and requires official US approval because the jets are American technology.
US commitment
On Friday a US official said the US had committed to approving the transfer of F-16 fighter jets for Ukraine as soon as training is complete.
Denmark and the Netherlands have taken the lead in preparing a program to train Ukrainian pilots on the American jet, but the US is still working with other countries to see who may provide F-16s to the Ukrainian Air Force.
On Friday, the US approved the transfer of F-16 instructional materials from Denmark to Ukraine, according to the US official and an administration official.
The transfer will allow the Danish defense ministry to move forward with “their effort to stand up pilot and maintenance training programs,” the administration official said. The approval includes training modules, documentation and classroom training materials, the official said, which contains information about sensitive US technology.
The approval of the third-party transfer request from Denmark was one of the critical steps before Ukrainian fighter pilots could begin training to fly the fourth-generation jets which Kyiv has requested for months. Denmark said Ukrainian pilots would begin training on F-16 jets later this month, part of a coalition of 11 countries that will be involved in the training program.
Even so, Ukraine said Wednesday that it didn’t expect to receive F-16s until sometime next year.
Archer training in Sweden
Ukrainian fighters have also been training in Sweden on the Archer artillery system, President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a nightly address on Saturday.
“Archer systems for our gunners… Our boys are already studying in Sweden,” Zelensky said. “The powerful system, the necessary system. We are working to have more of them in Ukraine.”
Zelensky has said that Ukrainian soldiers have been waiting on Archer systems to arrive since Sweden’s Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson visited Kyiv in February.
“Our soldiers are especially looking forward to the recently approved aid package – the brilliant Swedish Archers, one of the best artillery systems in the world,” Zelensky said during a press conference back in February.
Zelensky also said that since his visit to Sweden there had been accelerating supply and production of Swedish armored Combat Vehicle 90 in Ukraine. He spoke too of his hopes that Sweden’s Gripen fighter jets might soon “appear in our sky.”
“Everything powerful that serves us now, we must localize and produce,” he added, also noting that Ukraine had tried “very hard to increase the capabilities of military aviation,” calling it “one of the hardest tasks.”
Correction: A previous version of this article quoted Ukraine's Air Force Commander Mykola Oleshchuk out of context as saying F-16's were in Ukraine and Ukrainian pilots were training with US instructors. Oleshchuk was referring to when the US-made fighter jets had previously touched down on Ukraine's airfields, before Russia's full-scale invasion.
Additional reporting by Oren Liebermann and Natasha Bertrand