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On May 2, 9:28 am, Paul Elliot wrote:
wrote: On 26 Kwi, 06:15, "Flashnews" wrote: Of all the attack birds the Su-22 Fitter H/G da da seems to have become the THUD of the east and is still liked by pilots in former Communist countries such as Poland that actually upgraded them. It had lots of power, carries a lot, stable as hell in bombing, adapts to all kinds of junk, handles well and maintains good. Not a digital cockpit but it was one of the best before the MiG-29 came out. Thanks for your kind words on our hardware. Actually, what Polish Air Forces still fly is Su-22M4 Fitter K. The aircraft is like a dragster lorry, needs quite a lot of space to make a turn, but indeed, can carry quite a lot. Some Japanese visitors to one of the units back in the mid-1990's were very surprised to see the only real avionics on board is... the radar. The Floggers / Fencers / Fitters and what have you have all been replaced by the Sukhoi Su-27 family and for a while the MiG-29 had trouble but now it is steaming ahead. One more mistake in the manual: among the drawings in the manual I saw only flat-nose MiG-23BM/MiG-27 version, as if large-nose variants (e.g.MiG-23MF/ML/MLD) did not exist at all. Best regards, Jacek Thanks Jacek, Are the Polish Marines still deployed to southern Iraq? They really kicked ass there! God bless them. Paul -- Heaven is where the police are British, the chefs Italian, the mechanics German, the lovers French and it is all organized by the Swiss. Hell is where the police are German, the chefs British, the mechanics French, the lovers Swiss and it is all organized by Italians. http://new.photos.yahoo.com/paul1cart/albums/ Flag of Poland Poland - Currently, 900 non-combat troops from the 'First Warsaw Division', based at Camp Echo in Diwaniyah. Poland leads the Multi-National Division (South Central) which consists of forces from several other countries. In accordance with the decision of the former Polish Minister of Defense Jerzy Szmajdziński, the number of troops was reduced from 2,500 to 1,500 during the second half of 2005. Poland's former leftist government, which lost September 25, 2005 elections, had planned to withdraw the remaining 1,500 troops in January. However, the new defense minister, Radosław Sikorski, visited Washington on December 3 for talks on Poland's coalition plans, and Prime Minister Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz declared that he would decide after the Iraqi elections on December 15, whether to extend its troops' mandate beyond December 31.[18] On Tuesday 22 December, Prime Minister Marcinkiewicz announced that he had asked President Lech Kaczyński to keep Polish troops in Iraq for another year, calling it "a very difficult decision."[19] On January 5, 2006, Polish troops handed over control of the central Babil province to U.S. troops and decided to remain on bases in Kut and Diwaniyah for the remainder of their mandate,[20] cutting their contingent from 1,500 troops to 900 troops two months later,[21] and switching their main objective from patrolling their sector to the training of Iraqi security forces. Poland has lost 20 soldiers in Iraq: 14 in bombings or ambushes and 6 in various accidents. In July 2004, Al Zarqawi released a statement threatening Japan, Poland and Bulgaria over their troop deployments. He demanded of the Polish government 'Pull your troops out of Iraq or you will hear the sounds of explosions that will hit your country.' Hours later Prime Minister Marek Belka denied, and deputy Defence Minister Janusz Zemke said pulling out would be a 'terrible mistake.' Wiki Multinational force |
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