Hybrid Initial Training Course Allows Pilots To Be Aircraft
Commanders
The first two Afghan air force helicopter pilots to complete
basic pilot training in the U.S. recently began the initial Mi-17
qualification course meant to convert them into Mi-17 helicopter
pilots at the Afghan air force base in Kabul. A hybrid of Croatian
and U.S. helicopter training syllabi, the course is a six-month
evolution that will qualify the pilots, 1st Lt. Abdul Saboor Amin
and 1st Lt. Ahmad Fawad Haidari, as helicopter aircraft commanders
in the Mi-17 and authorize them to fly as such in the Afghan air
force, said U.S. Navy Lt. Jason Dickerson, the NATO Air Training
Command-Afghanistan/438th Air Expeditionary Advisory Squadron
training & evaluations officer.

(L-R) Afghan air force 1st Lts. Ahmad Fawad Haidari, Abdul
Saboor Amin USAF Photo
"Since they have been trained and winged via a U.S. training
program, the expectations from them as far as skill-level and
overall professionalism is very high," Lieutenant Dickerson
said.
Both the Croatian and U.S training pipelines are extremely
challenging, and by design, the pilots expect a very high amount of
work and professionalism to ensure a quality product, Lieutenant
Dickerson said. As such, these two pilots are being held to a much
higher standard. Such an attention to detail is evident during a
flight brief for a training mission that Lieutenants Amin and
Haidari flew with their instructor pilot, Croatian air force Capt.
Zoran Maranovic, an adviser with the 438th AEAS.
Scanning through the pre-flight weather, fuel, cargo and mission
information, Captain Maranovic quizzed the Afghan pilots'
understanding of the Mi-17 and the day's mission: a trip to
Blackwater, a training site outside of Kabul, to practice traffic
patterns. "You put a pilot into traffic patterns you will learn
everything you need to know about the pilot," Captain Maranovic
said.

USAF Photo
"Traffic patterns involve many elements of piloting: take-off,
flying, ascent, descent, hovering, and final approach," he said.
"It is a way of building consistency in skills and ability. This
exercise gives them experience regarding how the aircraft operates,
and is the best exercise for forming the foundation of pilot
training."
Successfully answering Captain Maranovic's questions, Lieutenant
Amin, Lieutenant Haidari and their IP made their way to the
aircraft to begin the training evolution, which will bring their
total flight time to around nine hours in the Mi-17. "They are
getting better and better," Captain Maranovic said. "They are
exactly where they should be."
Switching focus from the training mission to the future of the
pilots and the Afghan air force, Captain Maranovic said, "They are
good pilots, and we will see a big difference in the Afghan Air
Force because of them. If NATC-A continues to advise and instruct
the pilots, we will not only lift the skill found in the Afghan air
force, but we will also lift their spirits. Attitudes also need
advising."
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