Flight International - 10Dec2019

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26 | Flight International | 10-16 December 2019 flightglobal.com

WORLD AIR FORCES
Cover story

CRAIG HOYLE LONDON Foreign policy clashes reshaped defence procurement in


2019 as international tension between the USA and Turkey


grew. Our annual review looks at military fleets worldwide


O

perations at home and inter-
nationally remained the key
focus for military air arms of all
sizes in 2019, while geopolitics
and seemingly shifting alliances also
prompted notable alterations to some of their
procurement plans.
In what was one of the biggest defence
developments of the year, a period of
brinkmanship between Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his counterpart
Donald Trump’s US administration came to a
spectacular conclusion in July.
Having repeatedly warned Ankara that it
would not tolerate a NATO ally purchasing
Almaz-Antey S-400 Triumf long-range air-de-
fence systems from Russia, Washington made
good with its threat and for the first time eject-
ed a partner nation from Lockheed Martin’s
F-35 programme.
With four examples having already been
handed over to the Turkish customer to sup-
port multinational training activities in the
USA, Ankara’s plans to field an eventual 100
conventional take-off and landing F-35As
were denied immediately after the first S-400
system elements arrived on Turkish soil.
In addition to blocking any future purchases
of its stealthy combat aircraft, this measure

also launched the formal process of removing
Turkish companies from Lockheed’s indust-
rial supply chain for the Lightning II.
Erdogan’s response was belligerent,
describing Ankara’s procurement decisions as
a wholly sovereign matter. His next move will
be of intrigue, but also could prove more dam-
aging to the country’s NATO credentials.
While Turkish Aerospace is working on its
own TF-X fighter design, Erdogan toured the
MAKS Moscow air show with Russian Presi-
dent Vladimir Putin in August, and was
offered co-operation on the Sukhoi Su-35 and
Su-57 fighters.
Russia, meanwhile, provided its own boost
to the Su-57 programme in June, by signing a
deal to acquire 76 production examples. It has
also accelerated its service plans for the
aircraft, which now call for three full
regiments to be operating the type by 2028.
Other notable developments in the combat
aircraft sphere during 2019 included China
flying upgraded Harbin H-6K strategic bomb-
ers during a show of strength above Beijing on
1  October to mark the 70th anniversary of

Communist Party rule. Its fleet of Chengdu
J-20 fighters also continues to grow, with
Cirium fleets data showing 15 as now in
active use.
Beyond ongoing campaigns over Iraq and
Syria and within Afghanistan, international
focus was placed on new tensions in the Mid-
dle East. These included a Saudi Arabian oil
refinery being attacked by unmanned air vehi-
cles in response to its continuing offensive in
Yemen, and Iran shooting down a US Navy
(USN) Northrop Grumman RQ-4C Triton over
the Persian Gulf.

F-35 ADVANCES
Despite its orders reversal with Turkey, the
F-35 programme had a good year, with Lock-
heed and the US Department of Defense
agreeing a multi-year contract worth $34 bil-
lion for up to 478 examples. The airframer
and its suppliers have made further progress
with driving down the fifth-generation type’s
acquisition costs, and the global operational
fleet is now only three shy of 400 units, in-
cluding 165 examples dedicated to training.

Political


powerplays


US Air Force

US inventory dominates our
World Air Forces listing,
with a 25% share of total
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