Well, everyone knows SloJoe has never really been in charge. This just confirms it.

US Announces Ukraine Will Get F-16 Fighters as Antony Blinken Takes Control of Policy

The United States will no longer stand in the way of NATO allies   transferring F-16 fighters to the Ukraine Air Force, and it will participate in training Ukrainian pilots in flight proficiency and tactical training but not in the US. On Friday, Joe Biden informed other G-7 leaders of the sudden volte-face in US policy at the G-7 summit in Japan. Other “senior administration officials,” by this I mean Antony, with no “h,” Blinken, confirmed the policy change just to let everyone know that the decision was real and it wasn’t a case of Joe slipping off into another of his bouts of delirium dementium. So the F-16s could be in action by late autumn.

F-16s or No F-16s?

Equipping the Ukraine Air Force has been the subject of intense debate within NATO (see Putin’s War, Week 52. US and China Face off, Prigozhin Goes for the Jugular, Mystery Weapon Strikes, and Happy Anniversary) and inside the Biden foreign and defense policy clown car. The Ukrainian Air Force uses the same Soviet-designed sleds as the Russian Air Force. Eastern Europe has been scoured for Soviet airframes of all sorts, flyable or unflyable. The operational aircraft are used to fill gaps in the Ukrainian Air Force. The non-operational ones are broken up for parts. That well has run dry. To show how far the decision to equip Ukraine with F-16 fighters is from where we started, shortly after the war began, several East European countries wanted to send surplus Soviet aircraft to Ukraine, and the US blocked that effort; see Transfer of NATO Aircraft to Ukraine Falls Through as Zelensky Resumes His Campaign for a No Fly ZoneDid Blinken Put Poland Outside NATO Protection if It Transfers New Fighter Aircraft to Ukraine?, and Biden Junta Duplicity Revealed After Poland Declares MiGs for Ukraine Are Ready to Go.

The next step was to equip Ukraine with an aircraft designed and built in Western Europe. The fighter needed to be multi-role (air-to-air, close air support, suppression of enemy air defenses, and interdiction), and there needed to be enough to make it worth the effort. The F-16, which the F-35 is replacing in many European air forces, was the logical answer.

Blinken vs. Kahl

The hold-up was a battle inside the Biden national security apparatus over this. The main combatants seem to be Secretary of State Blinken and Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Colin Kahl. The F-16 question was just the most visible battleground between the two sides. The general fight was between those who feel that Ukraine needs to be given the weaponry it needs to expel the Russians and create the foundation for a stable security arrangement (Blinken) and those who want to drag the war out to a stalemate and then something (Kahl).

Losing the F-16 battle is not a little thing for Kahl. On the contrary, it represents a total repudiation of his position on the subject. In January, Kahl declared that Ukraine did not need the aircraft. In April, he said it would take 18 months to send the aircraft to Ukraine.

 

The USAF assessment of the training level of Ukrainian pilots has suddenly been “leaked,” and it says only four months transition training is needed.