BusinessMirror June 11, 2022

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ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDS

2006 National Newspaper of the Year 2011 National Newspaper of the Year 2013 Business Newspaper of the Year 2017 Business Newspaper of the Year 2019 Business Newspaper of the Year 2021 Pro Patria Award PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY 2018 Data Champion

BusinessMirror

EJAP JOURNALISM AWARDS

BUSINESS NEWS SOURCE OF THE YEAR

(2017, 2018, 2019, 2020)

DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

2018 BANTOG MEDIA AWARDS

FLIGHT TO GLORY www.businessmirror.com.ph

A broader look at today’s business n

Saturday, June 11, 2022 Vol. 17 No. 246

P25.00 nationwide | 26 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

Philippine Air Force readies to soar to higher skies with modern and newer assets

FA-50 fighter jets

PAF

T

By Rene Acosta

“The PAF continues to modernize its air assets and equipment. It may not be on a par yet with our Southeast Asian neighbors, but we are moving towards a more capable and credible Air Force,” Canlas said. Canlas talked about the Air Force’s capability upgrade efforts under the overall revised modernization program of the AFP, which will also seek to modernize the whole military under three phases—Horizon, 1, 2 and 3. It began during the administration of the late President Benigno Simeon Aquino III and will punctuate at the end of the term of Marcos Sr.’s son, incoming President Ferdinand “Bongbong” R. Marcos Jr., or in 2028.

HE Philippine Air Force (PAF), brandishing its newly acquired assets, will showcase a new milestone in its modernization phase with a flyby in the skies of the National Capital Region and elsewhere as the country observes its 124th Independence Day on Sunday (June 12). FA-50 fighter jets, Black Hawks, Super Tucanos, Agusta Westland and the rest of the newest assets of the PAF will briefly streak over Metro Manila’s horizon to mark the auspicious occasion in history against a backdrop of a myriad of challenges confronting the country. The roaring thunder from the engine of South Korean-made fighter planes and the bombastic sound and thunderous clapping of the helicopters will serve as short melodies to the country’s marking of its 124th Independence Day. For Filipinos, the aircraft’s flyby may just be a grand spectacle, something that had been missing for years in the celebrations of the country’s freedom D-day; but for the Air Force, it means much more: it denotes a homecoming—a big return to the skies.

The true message

OTHER than a gesture of unity to the Independence Day celebrations, the sight of modest advanced air assets in the skies above Luneta Park conveys the message that the Air Force is slowly moving to reclaim its old glory. It reassures everyone that it is steadily maneuvering away

PAF under Duterte, Horizon 2

AS it upgrades, the Air Force has already acquired a modest number of BELL 412EP combat utility helicopters PAF

AIR Force Commanding General Lt. Gen. Connor Anthony Canlas: “The PAF continues to modernize its air assets and equipment. It may not be on a par yet with our Southeast Asian neighbors, but we are moving towards a more capable and credible Air Force.” PAF

from the non-flattering tag of being “all air with no force,” a line which Voltaire Gazmin dropped years ago as a defense secretary, to ruefully describe the Air Force’s condition and underscore the need to modernize it. The show of jets and attack helicopters in the Independence Day celebrations also intends to show the Air Force has since flipped and veered away from Gazmin’s rather derisive but somehow realistic description. But that was then.

Evolution

“TODAY, the PAF has evolved into a modernized air force anchored

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 52.9450

on the Flight Plan 2028, which has achieved significant milestones in the PAF’s development and ability to detect, identify, intercept and neutralize threats within the Philippine defense area of operations,” said Air Force Commanding General Lt. Gen. Connor Anthony Canlas. The Air Force was answering queries from the BusinessMirror on the current state of the military’s primary air unit and how it is comparable with the air forces of its neighbors in the region, assets and equipment wise. In the middle part of the 1950s up to the middle part of the administration of the late strongman former President Ferdinand E. Marcos Sr., the PAF had been the object of envy, not only by its neighbors but even by countries in the Asia-Pacific region, due to its strength and air superiority. It was equipped with the most modern planes and other aircraft

Continued on A2

that could fly at that time. In fact, it already had the most modern US fighter plane, the F-5 Phantom, long before Japan could even acquire it. The formation of the PAF’s aerobatic team, the fabled “Blue Diamonds,” in 1952, which is even older than the US Air Force’s Thunderbirds, was a testament to the PAF’s worldwide “grandeur” in the sky. After the end of the Marcos government, the state of the Air Force and even the whole of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) spiraled. It came even to a point when PAF had to make do with second-hand assets. While there have been efforts to revive the Air Force along with the AFP, the supposed modernization attempts and the corresponding funding, if not squandered, would only suffice to repair and rehabilitate existing Army, Air Force and Navy assets even in their vintage state.

n JAPAN 0.3940 n UK 66.1865 n HK 6.7456 n CHINA 7.9117 n SINGAPORE 38.2938 n AUSTRALIA 37.5804 n EU 56.2276 n SAUDI ARABIA 14.1141

Source: BSP (June 10, 2022)


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