Military Aviation > Air Forces
best air force in south america
Viggen:
The Brasilian air force, but i know nothing about them or the others. The reason i choose them is because Brasilian air force cadettes escorted Ayrton Sennas cascet through Sao Paulo and the air force made a very nice fly by. So my choice is based on more a feeling i felt in my heart, then a decision based on facts. :-\
robotcop:
i think thatPeru have a good air force but Brazil are the best in south america
tigershark:
I'm new to this post but did read both sections and have questions and comments. Maybe the people from South America might be able to help with this. How many hours do South American pilots train per year? Which country trains more and how is the training setup? A lot has to do with funding like anything else but some smaller countries do very well with the little they have. If I had to chose:
Brazil- They do very well with the F-5 fleet as far upgrading and training and now they have Mirage 2000-C, AMX attack jets that were upgrade, plus AWAC aircraft too. All these assets train together and are exposure to other countries air forces in different types of training. All good things for a well rounded air force to carry out it help that Brazil has the money and resources to do this.
Next I would pick Chile
Ten modern F-16 C/D Block-52, 16 or 18 F-16 MLU ex-Holland upgraded Vipers, (1) Israeli made AWAC aircraft, Israeli upgraded F-5s, plus a number of Mirage 5/50/ maybe Kfir’s too. I’m not sure on those numbers or if some were sold or retired. They carry out training with other air forces which is always good. From what I’ve about the US Air Force personnel saying Chile’s pilots and crew are very good and there air force is well run. Brazil and Chile I think currently are the best.
fizzog17:
in my personal opinion i would say brazil due to there technological advancement over the other countries, just my 2 cents :)
tigershark:
The first two are easy picking number 3, 4, 5, and6 are more difficult.
Venezuela-Has the money behind them and before Chavez stopped having brain cells his F-16s were still pretty good. The VAF Vipers and Mirages were from what I’ve read were kept in good shape. I’m not sure how many flight hours’ pilots received, and training and maintenance means everything to an air force. The new Flankers pilots if trained right could be flying under two years solo and maybe being dangerous in 3 or 4 years. Less if SIMs and good training were provided from the beginning so you can’t hold me to this time table.
Ecuador, Peru, Argentina
Very tough Ecuador does very well with little they have and some of there aircraft are in deep storage. I only heard good things about there Kfir’s but funding problems are hurting them. It’s a coin toss between Peru and Ecuador because from the little I was able to find out about Peru was only six or seven Mig-29s are flyable and there Mirage 2000s all need parts, so there not flown a lot. It’s hard to get a number on how many are flyable or what shape there really in Peru isn’t such an open country. Very difficult choice on paper Peru seems to have a little more but what shape there is unknown. I use to know a guy from Ecuador and he would always tell me Ecuador trains there pilots better. Both of these countries suffer from no money and lack of resources for new aircraft or even spare parts. Both could do better but sadly both Ecuador and Peru’s air force have seen better times. Argentina might have suffered more cut back then either Ecuador or Peru has. It seems Argentina’s armed forces has been scaled down and a lot of there aircraft are dated. A-4 are one of my favorite aircraft of all times don’t get me wrong it’s just in 2007 Argentina’s current fighters and attack aircraft have seen better days. Experience wise all three Argentina 1982 and Peru-Ecuador 1995 wouldn’t have any or very few pilots from those years left flying so that’s a moot point. Brazil pilots probably racks up the most time and stick experience now with Chile running second, both hold and take part in training with other air forces and that’s big and means a lot. I’m sure Peru, Ecuador, and Argentina could do much better with more funding and all three have a good air force history. Like with most things in life it comes down to money. If somebody could give an update on Peru, Ecuador, and Argentina’s air force like how many jets are flying and what shape there please put it up, thanks in advance. I read a few years back all of Peru’s Mirage Vs are in storage and won’t fly again. Any updated info would be helpful.
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