Philippines confirms T/A-50 purchase
MICHAEL COHEN
JDW Correspondent
Manila
The Philippine Department of National
Defense (DND) has chosen the Korean Aerospace Industries (KAI) T/A-50
to fulfill the Philippine Air Force's (PAF's) requirement for a light
attack Trainer.
Philippine officials said they would like to have two of 12 T/A-50s in country immediately to begin pilot training. |
The Philippines has announced the acquisition of 12 KAI T/A-50 light attack/ lead-in-fighter trainers in its first fast jet procurement in years
Manila is also in negotiations to buy second-hand Italian Navy frigates and corvettes and utility/light attack helicopters from France and Italy
The government has requested the
delivery of 12 aircraft from KAI, the DND said in an announcement on 1
August in Manila. It also announced that negotiations had almost
finished for the purchase of two Maestrale-class frigates from the
Italian Navy and released details of plans to procure four Eurocopter AS
550 Fennecs for the PAF, with an option for a further six.
Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin said the Philippines would request the immediate delivery of two T/A-50s to expedite training.
"We plan to negotiate so we can get the
immediate delivery of two airframes to start the long-overdue process
for training so that when the rest of the 10 arrive, our pilots get out
there and start training,"Gazmin said.
The T/A-50 is an armed version of the
T-50 Golden Eagle lead-in fighter trainer.It is equipped with a General
Dynamics M197 20mm three-barrel Gatling-type internal cannon and an ELTA
EL/M-2032 fire control radar, and has achieved weapons certification
for the Raytheon AGM-65 Maverick air-to-ground and AIM-9 Sidewinder
air-to-air missiles.
The terms of the deal were not
announced. However, Indonesia signed a contract for 16 T/A-50s in May
2011 valued at approximately USD400 million.
Gazmin said the Maestrale-class frigates
to be retired by Italy will boost Manila's ability to defend its
territorial waters, particularly the South China Sea (West Philippine
Sea). The two Italian vessels, which would be the Philippines's first
missile-armed and modern anti-submarine warfare (ASW)-capable ships, are
expected to be part of the government-to-government agreement that is
now being finalized. Gazmin said the frigates could arrive in the
country after being refurbished in late 2013.
Officials are waiting for the enactment
of the PHP75 billion (USD1.7 billion) Armed Forces of the Philippines
(AFP) modernization law - which has already been passed by both houses
of Congress and is now awaiting specific stem selection, Which Gazmin
said is expected by the end of 2012 - to continue negotiations with
Italy. Along with the two frigates, which are worth PHP 11.7 billion,
negotiations are under way for two Minerva- class corvettes or other
offshore patrol craft, which the Italians are also offering to Manila.
Employees work on a TA-50 trainer jet on the production line of the Korea Aerospace Industries Ltd. plant in Sacheon, South Gyeongsang Province. (Bloomberg) |
IHS Jane's has also learnt that the
Philippine Navy is evaluating Oto Melara's advanced 76mm smart
munitions, such as the DART (Driven Ammunition Reduced Time of Flight)
guided projectile, for its fleet of former UK Royal Navy Peacock-class
patrol vessels and its ex-US Coast Guard Hamilton-class cutter.
DND spokesman and Assistant Secretary of
Defense Paul Galvez said that due to availability issues with the
preferred option - the AW109E Power Attack Helicopter - Manila had
chosen to procure four AS 550 Fennecs this year. The Fennecs are
reportedly part of a cancelled or reduced order from an unspecified
Middle Eastern Country that IHS Jane's believes could be Libya. In 2007
Paris said it was in negotiations to sell 10 Fennecs to Tripoli as part
of a EUR4 billion (USD4.8 billion) package that also included 14
Dassault Rafale multirole fighters, eight Eurocopter Tiger combat
helicopters and 15 EC 725 transport helicopters.
Galvez said the Fennecs were needed
urgently to provide air cover for Philippine forces conducting
counter-terrorism and insurgency operations while the PAF's McDonnell
Douglas MD530 Defender light attack helicopters are upgraded under a
service-life extension programme (SLEP).
The commander of the PAF said the AW109s would be procured at a later date and would be operated by the Philippine Marines/Navy.
Gazmin
said that 60 per cent of 140 contracts negotiated under the AFP's
recapitalization programme have been agreed, with the rest dependent on
the enactment of the AFP modernization law. According to the spokesman,
by the end of 2012 Manila also expects the delivery of 21 refurbished
UH-1H helicopters, "two to four"attack helicopters and two multipurpose
assault craft.
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