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Bad News: The Taliban Captured The Air Force America Built For Afghanistan
19FortyFive ^ | 08/23/2021 | Sebastian Roblin

Posted on 08/21/2021 9:31:05 PM PDT by elfman2

With the surrender of the Afghan government in Kabul, the Taliban is poised to inherit a substantial fraction of the Afghan Air Force (AAF) the United States spent over $8 billion dollars rebuilding since 2008.

Photographs posted on social media and compiled by the Oryx Blog confirm that the Taliban has already captured intact at least twenty-four helicopters, seven Boeing ScanEagle drones, and two airplanes as of Thursday according to a count

U.S. intelligence claims the full number may be closer to thirty to forty. But given the 211 aircraft in the AAF inventory, at least 167 of which were deemed to be in flyable condition as of June 2021, the final count may be considerably higher. Also to be considered are dozens of helicopters and aircraft operated by the Afghan’s military Special Missions Wing and seven State Department CH-46E helicopters used to evacuate the U.S. embassy, which have been abandoned, though supposedly left in inoperable condition.

Flight of the Afghan Air Force

To be sure, not all AAF aircraft are falling into Taliban hands. AAF pilots and ground crews, many of whom were trained in the United States, arguably hold greater than average animus towards the Taliban, who sought to assassinate AAF pilots and threatened to murder their families if they continued flying combat missions or undergo flight training.

On August 14–15, reportedly 22 AAF airplanes and 24 helicopters carrying 585 persons between them fled over the border to Uzbekistan, where they landed at Termez airbase, or force landed short of there due to lack of fuel.

Although the exact mix of aircraft types isn’t definitively established, Joe Trevithick at The Drive estimated satellite photos of Termez showed six Super Tucanos attack planes, five Cessna 208B Caravans, and eleven Pilatus PC-12 signals intelligence/light transport planes, as well as nineteen Mi-17 and seven Black Hawk helicopters.

The Uzbek government reported (and later denied) that one A-29 Super Tucano attack plane collided with an escorting Uzbek MiG-29 fighter, with the Uzbek and Afghan pilots both successfully ejecting and being treated for injuries. There is also an unconfirmed report that Uzbek air defenses shot down an Afghan light utility/transport aircraft or Super Tucano.

Meanwhile, on August 16 two helicopters and three more airplanes (likely including one or more of the four C-130 Hercules transports operated by the AAF) transporting 143 passengers landed in Bokhtar, Tajikistan. It’s also possible some helicopters flew to the Panjshir valley, where an anti-Taliban army is organizing.

The fate of the rest of the AFF’s Super Tucanos, C-130 transport planes, and forty-five Black Hawk helicopters is unclear. However, the withdrawal of foreign contractors earlier in 2021 caused the serviceability of U.S.-built aircraft to sharply decline, so some may not have been flyable on short notice when the decision was made to flee.

Taliban Air Power?

In fact, the Taliban may get a second air force, as the group deployed an air arm between 1995 and 2001 that significantly impacted the Afghan civil war.

After the fall of the Soviet-backed Afghan government in 1992, warlords commanding various factions (notably Abdul Dostum, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, and Ahmad Shah Massoud) soon turned against each other, each forming their own air arms composed of the left-overs of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan Air Force.

In 1994, Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence and Saudi financiers organized and armed an Islamic fundamentalist faction recruited from Afghan refugee camp madrasas (religious schools) in Pakistan: the Taliban. When the group seized the southern city of Kandahar from Dostum’s forces, it captured MiG-21 supersonic fighters and Mi-17 helicopters, soon joined by Su-22 supersonic bombers. With extensive Pakistani assistance, the Taliban began building its own air forces later renamed the Islamic Emirates of Afghanistan Air Force (IEAAF).

Taliban MiGs destroyed two Mi-17 helicopters delivering supplies to Massoud’s forces in June 1995, one with gunfire, the other a maneuver kill. In another incident, a Taliban MiG-21 fighter forced down a Russian Airstan Il-76 cargo plane transporting supplies to a rival faction. The Taliban held the crew hostage for a year before the Russian managed to overpower their guards during a lunch break and escaped with their Il-76.

Later that year, in October, the Taliban used its MiG and Sukhoi jets to hammer the forces of the warlord Massoud. Six were shot down over Maydan Shah, Kabul, and Kandahar, including one Su-20 downed by a Northern Coalition MiG-21. But by the end of the year, both Massoud’s and Dostum’s fighter forces were completely spent and the Taliban managed to take Kabul and Bagram Air Base supported by strikes from Su-22s.

With aid from Pakistan, the Taliban revitalized its dilapidated aircraft and mounted new offensives in 1998 and 2000-2001 to capture territories still held by the Northern Alliance. During these operations, fighter bombers sorties peaked at 160 strikes, interdiction, and close air support sorties a week in. This came at the cost of eight MiG-21 and Su-22 jets shot down by man-portable Strela-3 surface-to-air missiles.

Separately, the Taliban operated an “airline” with jetliners and Antonov transport which proved vital for ferrying in weapons and volunteer jihadis from the Middle East, and shuffling troops to the frontline in Afghanistan.

By 9/11 in 2001, the IEAAF counted around seven hundred personnel with major bases at Jalalabad, Kabul, Kandahar, and Shindand, and disposed of twenty-one MiG-21s and seventeen Su-22s, though only eight of each were estimated to be in flyable conditions revealing the difficulties the Taliban’s pariah state in maintaining its aircraft. The Taliban had in effect used its airpower intensely, but unsustainably. There were also five L-29s, and four Hind helicopter gunships, and eleven Mi-17s.

All of the Taliban warplanes were destroyed in the initial week of U.S. bombing, without a single aircraft even attempting to make it off the ground.

Taliban Air Force 2.0

Unlike in the 1990s, the Taliban today lacks access to supersonic fighters with serious air-to-air capability, though the Super Tucano may be usable against light aircraft and helicopters.

Overall its air force will be primarily useful for fighting domestic adversaries rather than foreign militaries by facilitating rapid deployment of ground troops, performing surveillance/reconnaissance missions, and striking anti-Taliban insurgents within Afghanistan.

Captured aircraft may also be sold for profit to foreign buyers interested in studying and duplicating U.S.-built sensors installed in aircraft like the AC-208 Combat Caravan, A-29 Super Tucano, UH-60 Black Hawk, and Pilatus PC-12, even if they aren’t exactly cutting edge airplanes.

Helicopters

The Taliban’s biggest confirmed air asset currently are eleven Russian-built Mil Mi-17 utility helicopters which fulfill general purpose roles such as transporting troops, supplies, and critical personnel to remote locations and providing scouting/fire support in a pinch. Afghan mechanics are highly familiar with the Mil Mi-17, and spare parts should be relatively easy to come by.

At least four higher performance but lower capacity U.S.-built UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters have also been captured, but these may prove difficult to maintain. After all, the AAF struggled to do so with U.S. support.

The AAF also had fifty MD-530F Cayuse Warriors scout/light attack choppers remaining by the end of June; Taliban photos appear to confirm the capture of at least eight. A modernized variant of the OH-6 Cayuse “flying egg” scout helicopter introduced in the 1960s, the MD-530Fs can mount two .50 caliber machine guns or 70-millimeter rocket pods on its wing stubs, and has a range of 235 miles.

However, Afghan pilots found the type highly unsatisfactory due to its lack of armor and gunsights, and underpowered engines incapable of flying over tall Afghan mountain ranges.

The Taliban has also captured at least one of the AAF’s five to eight Mi-35 Hind gunship helicopters (specifically, one donated by India). Armored, heavily armed, and not overly complicated, Hinds could prove a practical air support asset. The Taliban may be able to acquire some training and spare parts from Pakistan, which operates a small number of Mi-35M attack helicopters.

Light Airplanes and Drones

The AAF operated two-dozen Cessna 208B Grand Caravan light utility planes for surveillance and reconnaissance missions and light transport duties, as well as ten AC-208 Combat Caravan variants capable of carrying out strikes with laser-guided rockets.

The Special Operations Wing also had twenty-three Swiss-built Pilatus PC-12 aircraft refitted by Sierra-Nevada for $218 million with signals-intelligence gear to spy on communications. So far, imagery confirms the capture of just one Caravan and no Pilatus PC-12 airplanes.

These aircraft have low operating costs and can operate from rugged landings strips, meaning they could be convenient for the Taliban’s purposes, though only one Cessna 208 is known to have been captured.

However, the Taliban did snatch at least seven out of over one hundred catapult-launched ScanEagle surveillance drones bequeathed by the United States for $174 million. Given the reportedly major difficulties the United States had training Afghan personnel to operate the Scan Eagles, they may prove difficult for the Taliban to exploit.

A-29 Super Tucano Attack Plane

The biggest question mark remains the fate of the fleet of twenty-three or so A-29 Super Tucano two-seat attack planes. Photos show the Taliban captured one A-29 Super Tucano, which by itself isn’t that useful, but when factoring in the six to seven A-29 Super Tucanos that flew into Uzbek airspace seeking asylum, that still leaves around fifteen unaccounted for.

The turboprop-engine Super Tucanos, built by Brazil’s Embraer and U.S. company Sierra Nevada, superficially resemble World War II fighter planes with their .50 caliber machine guns and thirty-four-hundred-pound bomb load. But they incorporate relatively modern navigation and targeting systems, possess the endurance for eight-hour patrols and in theory are cheap to operate, if less so in practice.

Realistically, if the Taliban can get the A-29 Super Tucano in the air, lack of training and servicing will use the aircraft’s more advanced capabilities, though of course, they could still perform strikes with unguided weapons. Finding necessary spare parts could also prove difficult, though neighboring Turkmenistan operates A-29 Super Tucanos. Turkmenistan historically doesn’t like the Taliban, but spare parts might be acquired via corruption and smugglers.

What Next?

The Taliban will likely have its hands full maintaining control of Afghanistan. The deposed vice president is attempting to organize an anti-Taliban resistance force in the Panjshir Valley, and the Taliban may continue to combat Islamic State elements too. Thus, the Taliban will likely seek to wield air power against these adversaries, just as the AAF did against the Taliban. If the Taliban can acquire the large cargo planes, then these could also give it airlift capability with which to transport volunteers, supplies, and weapons from abroad.

However, finding or training new pilots and mechanics will be a huge challenge, as will acquiring spare parts, fuel, and munitions needed to keep aircraft flying over the long term. Thus, the fate of the Taliban’s aviation will depend on how generous aid is from its patrons Pakistan and Qatar, its success in striking deals with hesitant but profit-minded countries like China, Russia, and Turkey, and ability to coerce or convert skilled Afghan pilots and mechanics to enter its service.

Sébastien Roblin holds a Master’s Degree in Conflict Resolution from Georgetown University and served as a university instructor for the Peace Corps in China. He has also worked in education, editing, and refugee resettlement in France and the United States.


TOPICS: Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: afghanairforce; afghannationalarmy; airforce; aviation; military; taliban
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This is probably the best assessment to date of US military air assets left behind, as well as a discretion of those left behind by by the USSR. The story on 19FourtyFive is well sourced with inline hyperlinks.
1 posted on 08/21/2021 9:31:05 PM PDT by elfman2
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To: elfman2

worse news, we surrendered it to them


2 posted on 08/21/2021 9:33:42 PM PDT by Bob434
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To: elfman2

Good news. Many Taliban can’t count or read/write. The capability to fly military aircraft, let alone maintain such weaponry is beyond their skill level

Bad news- I am sure the Chinese will be happy to set up a site to disassemble and reverse engineer and steal whatever technology is available. And the Chinese will have no problem at all learning and maintain these aircraft


3 posted on 08/21/2021 9:38:10 PM PDT by Hodar (A man can fail many times, but he isn't a failure until he begins to blame somebody else.- Burroughs)
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To: Bob434

We surrendered it to them.

___________________________________

Yes, indeed we did. But why? Anybody who honestly believes this happened based upon Joe Biden’s decision is a f*cking idiot. We all know Joe is completely out of his mind and not in control. He is a meat puppet that is lucky if he remembers to put his depends on before putting on his pants.

The question is “Who among his advisors/donors/controllers made this happen? Who benefits from this disaster?”


4 posted on 08/21/2021 9:41:48 PM PDT by Qui is (Biden spews and Harris swallows)
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To: Qui is

The thing to ty to understand is WHY.

Because TeamTrump had identified about 100k deserving Afghan patriots to evacuate [+ all the Americans, obviously]. But TeamBiden didn’t want a hundredK of patriotic, Trump-grateful, freedom fighting nationalists at the front of the line. So they scrapped the plan, knowing that chaos would ensue, and are now leaking the list of patriots such that the folks getting evacuation are the top of the heap of whiners, guvmint-dependent, “peaceful muzzie”, misunderstood, mediotic, elitist [bribe paying], future democraps. From their perspective this is a brilliant plan.


5 posted on 08/21/2021 9:50:05 PM PDT by Kevmo ( 600 political prisoners in Washington, DC. You cannot comply your way out of tyranny.)
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To: elfman2

The Taliban got American technology, American buildings, American money, and worst of all, Americans to use as hostages.


6 posted on 08/21/2021 9:51:20 PM PDT by Arcadian Empire
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To: Qui is

the left do this crap all the time- they love for our enemies to be armed to the hilt- They are traitors to the country- plain and simple-

Why? Likely $$ is my guess- Most traitors do it for the $$- Also because they are in league with the Evil One- Their actions are seriously Demon inspired- The Demon Driven left aiding and abetting the Demon Driven radicals i n the middle east-

Joe and ilk sent over literal boatloads of war machines knowing full well he was gonna order withdrawal in just months, and leave it all for the taliban to get- This betrayal of the US and afghanistan was planned-


7 posted on 08/21/2021 9:53:34 PM PDT by Bob434
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To: Qui is

“But why?”

Obama and other Islamic-inclined advisors/handlers are presumably delighted to see Afghanistan become an outright Islamic state practically overnight (after 20 years of pushing otherwise).

Biden’s apparent financial connections presumably remain lucrative, or increase, as Russia gets to buy a rich supply of US assets, for disassembly and analysis and replication and exploitation.

Numerous Democrats apparently being paid off handsomely continue to benefit as China drives the US out of their bordering western region. Not a direct change of involvement, but destabilization of longstanding US influence in the region.

And much of the Left’s base has long called for “end war”, now delighted that Joe did - with the costs of $ and lives delighting them. Donations will flow accordingly.

And Joe gets extra pudding.


8 posted on 08/21/2021 9:55:06 PM PDT by ctdonath2 (All worry about monsters that'll eat our face, but it's our job to ask WHY it wants to eat our face.)
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To: elfman2

Bttt


9 posted on 08/21/2021 9:58:52 PM PDT by Eagles6 (Welcome to the Matrix circa 1984.)
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To: elfman2

Without the US or private contractors to keep them running, they’re not going to do the Taliban as much good as many thing. But they will get help because Xiden will allow it.


10 posted on 08/21/2021 10:03:47 PM PDT by bigbob
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To: Qui is

Perhaps no specific people in the administration made it happen. Maybe most are just struggling to promote their own interests or get by without being blamed for any career limiting event in the absence of any real presidential direction. I don’t know.


11 posted on 08/21/2021 10:05:58 PM PDT by elfman2
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To: elfman2

What a cluster f’ck.


12 posted on 08/21/2021 10:07:35 PM PDT by wgmalabama (We will find out if the Vac or virus risk was the correct choice - can we put truth above narrative)
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To: elfman2

agree. This is a very informative article and answers some questions I had about the Tucanos, Hinds, etc.

However, the author briefly mentioned the Soviet Strela AAC missile that was used in the previous Afghan wars, esp. against the Soviets.

Now my question is, does the Northern Alliance still have any US Stinger missiles, and if so, are they or can they be made operational? These are the key to taking out Soviet and other aircraft of all kinds.

But, we must not forget that British Blowpipe anti-AAC missiles were also used against the Soviet in Afghanistan with some success (less sophisticated than the Stingers).

If the US still has any supply routes still open/controlled by friendlies in No. Alliance province and other friendly held areas, then we might be able to neutralize any Taliban/Al Qaeda/Pak Taliban/Isis air assets.

The next question is do our allies have anti tanks missiles, esp. long range anti-tank missiles (ex. TOWS, AT-4s) that can be used against enemy aircraft, guard towers/posts, land vehicles (yes for this ability), etc.?

If so, this is also a battlefield equalizer.

Let’s not overlook the very deadly RGP’s that were used with deadly results against US, allied, and ARVN forces in Vietnam, as well as Cambodia and Laos. Everybody and their mother seems to have one in Afghanistan and neighboring countries.

Red China and Russia will be trying to sell (or even donate some) of these weapons to the Taliban in exchange for minerals, transportation routes around the area, a looko-see at captured US electronic equipments/files, etc (shades of David Snepp’s failures to destroy such US intel materials and data in the US Embassy in So. Vietnam during the final days there (he admitted it happened though I don’t think I would blame him for everything that wasn’t done). I believe his book is entitled “Indecent Interval” about his service in VN).

A lot depends on our undependable ally the Pakistani who are engaged in a violent dispute with Indian over Kashmir and other border areas, and who are more pro-Red China than US (they also have a corrupt intelligence (ISI) who is funneling supplies and money to the Afghani Taliban, possibly in order to get them to stop the domestic Pak Taliban from their insurrection).

Afghanistan never was a united country. More like a collection of semi-independent provinces/kingdoms whose major exports were heroin and opium products.

If we want to even the odds against the Taliban for whatever they do to our people and even our friends, we should not threaten to bomb the crap out of them, but to use the “big-guys” on their fortifications, towns, air fields (as Trump did in Syria), even troop concentrations (I love MOAB/Daisy Cutter human pancakes aka “The Rachel Corrie Pancake mode”).

Of course, all this is contingent on our brain-damaged, always anti-American sociopathic president, Biden, his useless “Human Mattress” VP Kameltoe Harris, the fascist Mussolini=wannabe Nancy Pelosi, and the psychopathic Chucky Schumer who never passed up a chance to cripple America.

The time is now to organize protests, impeachment petitions (for their congressthings to read and answer), voter registration drives to get the sane back on our side, and to get American veterans of Iraq (including my son - OIF and son-in-law, Desert Storm) to go after our cowards/traitors in the White House, DOD, DOJ, DHS, and Congress.

The same for local and state elections from School Boards to teachers unions, the lying media, psycho govenors such as Newsom, Islee, Witless/Whitmore?, Pritzker, Murphy (NJ), Northam the Baby Killing advocate (he can’t run again but we need to get him out now in Virginia and keep the Clinton Mafia smear and hitman carpetbagger POS Terry McAuliffe out of any officer including dog-poop scrapper-upper.

Take the fight to our domestic enemies using “smarts”, graphics, photos, great slogans that make you think or make a point like a knife in the heart, etc.


13 posted on 08/21/2021 10:11:46 PM PDT by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
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To: ctdonath2

And Joe gets extra pudding.

________________________________

Well said, but that took me off guard and made me “fit” which is similar to a “vurp”. Thanks for that.

A vurp is a small scale vomit, and does not actually cause the person to spit up or expel anything from the mouth, it is simply a disgusting sensation that is not quite puke. ... It is an unpleasant sensation that leaves a gross taste in ones mouth. Etymology : Vurp is a blending and clipping of the words vomit and burp.

Thus Fit is a blending and clipping of the words “fart” and “shit”.


14 posted on 08/21/2021 10:12:37 PM PDT by Qui is (Biden spews and Harris swallows)
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To: elfman2
No biden gave it to them. Along with a billion dollars of military small arms.

Then you know biden/harris have also agreed to deliver a plane full of hush money. Shrink wrapped pallets of American cash and a couple pallets of gold coins also.

15 posted on 08/21/2021 10:22:52 PM PDT by precisionshootist
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To: elfman2

Is the present day military so incompetent that they don’t understand not to leave anything behind that can be used against you? Is THAT what we have in charge? One would think this basic principle would be something even a private would understand. Who are these boobs in charge? Why wasn’t all this stuff destroyed or rendered useless? What? They never heard about fire or explosives. But! I guess I should look on the bright side... the taxpayer is now on the hook to pay for transition surgery for any sick tranny that can get into the military. That should fix everything!


16 posted on 08/21/2021 10:44:05 PM PDT by The Right Edge (Staunch Trump Supporter AND PROUD to be!)
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To: elfman2

Would it have been too hard just to make a list of the aircraft instead of this jumbled mess of text?


17 posted on 08/21/2021 11:15:38 PM PDT by Sequoyah101 (Politicians are only marginally good at one thing, being politicians. Otherwise they are fools.)
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To: MadMax, the Grinning Reaper

> Let’s not overlook the very deadly RGP’s that were used with deadly results against US, allied, and ARVN forces in Vietnam, as well as Cambodia and Laos. Everybody and their mother seems to have one in Afghanistan and neighboring countries.

RPGs (not RGP’s) (rocket propelled grenades)?


18 posted on 08/21/2021 11:48:16 PM PDT by SteveH
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To: elfman2

Great article.


19 posted on 08/22/2021 12:13:24 AM PDT by Beowulf9
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To: Hodar
Exactly! Trashcanistan is a country where half the population is retarded, and half are deliberately kept illiterate (women). No way are they capable of maintaining, much less operating advanced military equipment.
The only thing we disagree on is the Chicoms needing to reverse engineer our military technology. There's several million Chicoms studying or working in our Universities that funneled that information years ago.
20 posted on 08/22/2021 2:36:30 AM PDT by End Times Sentinel (In the conflict between the stone and the stream, the stream will always prevail.)
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