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Poles visit Aviano to get familiar with F-16s

August 24, 2004 (by Kent Harris) - If all goes as scheduled, F-16s will be flying regularly in the skies over Poland in a few years. And they won't have Americans in them.
Currently, though, one of the closest places members of the Polish air force can see the jets - and the personnel, material and systems that keep them airborne - is at Aviano.

It takes hundreds of Americans doing their jobs to get one of the aircraft off the ground. That's the kind of effort the visitors are most interested in seeing.

"It's a fantastic opportunity for our guys," said 2nd Lt. Jeff Fogle, executive officer for the 31st Maintenance Group. "The Polish air force is building the next generation of its air force and we have an opportunity to play a small role in that."

Aviano had no role in the sale of 48 F-16s to Poland for a reported $3.5 billion. And Lt. Col. Steven Jarvis, the Air Force's country director for Poland, cringed when he heard the word "training" mentioned Monday.

He said the visit - one of dozens planned at various bases in Europe and the States - was more to show the Poles how the Air Force operates at a base that flies F-16s. It is service-to-service cooperation at its best, he said.

"I think it's a testimony to how close we want to work together," Jarvis said.

Most of those visiting this week are higher-level officers who will be spending more time putting together Polish programs and policies than piloting the planes.

"I'm too old," said Col. Wladyslaw Lesikowski, smiling. The team leader, who has spent the better part of two decades piloting aircraft such as the SU-22 and various MiG models, is to get his first ride in an F-16 this week.

Tadeusz Pieciukiewicz, a retired colonel now working in the country's defense department, said the majority of pilots that Poland trains will be younger officers.

"It's a long-term investment for us," he said, adding that those trained would, it is hoped, be flying the planes for decades.

As for the planes, they'll be a newer version - with an array of the latest technology - than those that call Aviano home. The jets are to start arriving in late 2006.

Col. Adam Swierkocz, who commands the Polish air base in Lask, has been on an F-16 before - thanks to the Danish air force. Asked to compare that ride to piloting the SU-22, he laughed.

"I forgot. It was about six years ago. Ask me in two days," he said.

While Lesikowski and Swierkocz visited the 510th Fighter Squadron to be briefed on how the squadron is structured and functions, other members of the Polish delegation took a look at maintenance and operations.

A visit to the maintenance facilities at Aviano might be eye-opening for those used to a different system.

"They have officers doing what we have airmen doing," Fogle said.

Capt. Phil Lancaster, a 510th pilot escorting one of the groups of Polish visitors, said a lot of the things the air forces do appear to be similar. But there are quite a few differences, too.

"They're not afraid to ask questions," Lancaster said. "But they're teaching us, too."


Published on August 24, 2004 in the European edition of Stars and Stripes.
Used with permission from Stars and Stripes, a DoD publication.
© 2004 Stars and Stripes.