March 29, 2007:
Russian Air Force generals are not happy with all those
upgraded fighters they are receiving, and the lack of money for fuel and spare
parts so the pilots can learn how to handle them. A recent collision, at high
(25,000 feet) altitude, between two MiG-29s, was publicly blamed on lack of
training. The Russian general who made that statement may have committed career
suicide, but his outspokenness represents a feeling common throughout Russian
military aviation.
While Russian jet fighters are now as complex and capable as those in the
West, Russian pilots are still flying hours more suitable for the simpler
aircraft of the Soviet Union days. In the West, fighting pilots get about 200
hours a year in the air, plus a growing number of hours on highly realistic
simulators. Russian pilots get about 60 hours in the air a year, and
practically no hours in modern flight simulators. The only exceptions are
pilots assigned to places like Chechnya, where there are still some combat
missions to be flown. But most of the action down there is for Su-25 ground
attack aircraft and helicopter gunships.
While the Russian armed forces are undergoing a long overdue infusion of new
equipment and upgrades, money for actually training on all that stuff is not a
high priority. Russia was never big on "wearing out" military equipment for
training. This was a Soviet custom that even the Soviet military leaders
eventually realized was counterproductive. But old habits die hard, and it may
be another generation before Russia is willing to pay what it takes to train
like Westerners.