After years
of foot-dragging, the US state department has approved the sale of a
$593
million A-29 Super Tucano attack planes with associated parts, training,
facilities and weapons, to Nigeria.
The defence
security cooperation agency delivered their certification of the foreign
military sale to congress, as required by law, on August 2, according to United
Press International.
The twelve
A-29s, equipped with wing-mounted machine guns, weapons integration with
advanced surveillance… precision-guided bombs, and even air-to-air missiles”
are expected to be used by Nigeria to combat the Boko Haram insurgents
and other extremist groups.
They will
also serve to counter smuggling and trafficking in Nigeria and the Gulf of
Guinea.
The DSCA has
determined that US security interests are served by assisting Nigeria in its
counter-insurgency operations and that the A-29 sale will not significantly
alter the military balance of power in the region.
The contract
will require US government or private contractors to provide training and
support and will include instruction on rules of engagement and human rights to
help prevent civilian casualties.
The Embraer
A-29 Super Tucano is a turboprop light attack plane in service with countries
across the world. It is designed for counter-insurgency operations and
close-air support in areas lacking significant air defences. It is also widely
used as a training aircraft.
It is a contender
in the US air force’s OA-X light attack aircraft competition for a low-cost and
easy to operate and maintain air support platform.
Light planes
like the Tucano can fulfil air support and surveillance needs in low-risk
environments at a much lower operational cost than heavier jets like the A-10
or F-16 and require less flight and maintenance training.
The attack
planes will be a big boost for the military anti-terrorism campaign in the
north-east.
Past
attempts to procure the plane under the Obama administration was frustrated by
accusations of human rights abuses against Nigeria’s military.
According to
defence industry daily, the Super Tucano is known as the A-29 or ALX in
Brazil, but abroad, it’s the EMB 314 successor to Embraer’s widely-used EMB 312
Tucano trainer.
The plane
offers better flight performance than the EMB 312 Tucano, plus armouring and
wing-mounted machine guns, weapons integration with advanced surveillance and
targeting pods, precision-guided bombs, and even air-to-air missiles.
This makes
it an excellent territorial defence and close support plane for low-budget air
forces, as well as a surveillance asset with armed attack capability. Brazil
uses it this way, for instance, alongside very advanced EMB-145 airborne radar
and maritime patrol jet platforms.
In Africa,
Ghana, Angola, Burkina Faso, Angola, Mauritania, either have the Tucano in
their air forces, or they had placed orders for new supplies.
No comments:
Post a Comment