IAF airlift capability gets a fillip with delivery of Boeing C-17

India’s military airlift capabilities to ferry battle tanks, howitzers and armed-to-the-teeth troopers to battlefields and conflict zones have got a boost with the delivery of the first of the 10 C-17 Globemaster-III to the Indian Air Force by US aerospace major Boeing.
IAF airlift capability gets a fillip with delivery of Boeing C-17
The delivery took place in the US at Edwards Air Force Base in Palmdale, California. With this, the IAF became the newest operator of the heavy-lift cargo plane after the US, Australian, Canadian, British, Qatari and UAE Air Force, apart from the 12-member strategic airlift initiating of the NATO and Partnership for Peace nations.
An IAF crew is now flying the C-17, which is capable of carrying over 70-tonne cargo over 4,200-km distance, to its Hindon airbase in Ghaziabad on the outskirts of the national capital. The plane, which can land on a runway just about 3,500 feet in length, will reach Hindon on June 17 ahead of a formal induction into the fleet.
“The C-17 will equip the IAF with amongst the world’s most advanced humanitarian and strategic capabilities,” IAF’s Assistant Chief of Air Staff Operations (Transport and Helicopters) Air Vice Marshal S R K Nair said. “We have looked forward to this day when our IAF flies the first C-17 to its new home in India,” he added.
Boeing is on track to deliver four more C-17s to the IAF this year and the rest five in 2014, thereby, completing the over `22,000-crore contract for 10 planes signed in mid-2011.
The first aircraft was transferred on Tuesday after completion of a flight test programme at Edwards Air Force Base that began in January this year, Boeing said in a statement after delivery of the plane to the IAF.
“Congratulations to the IAF on this milestone as India joins the worldwide community of C-17 operators,” Boeing vice-president of Business Development for Mobility, Surveillance and Engagement Tommy Dunehew said to mark the occasion. “Nations turn to the C-17 for the capability to perform a wide range of operations, from peacekeeping and disaster relief to troop movements from semi-prepared airfields. This aircraft will provide the IAF with the versatility to augment airlift capability,” Dunehew said.
Boeing will support the IAF C-17 fleet through the Globemaster-III Integrated Sustainment Programme (GISP) Performance-based Logistics contract. The GISP “virtual fleet” arrangement ensures mission readiness by providing all C-17 customers access to an extensive support network for worldwide parts availability.

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