![]()
Last week the Department of Transportation and Iraq’s Civil Aviation Authority certified the country’s first three air traffic controllers. Another 22 are in the pipeline and should get the thumbs up later that year. These controllers are the first to get training based on worldly aviation safety standards.
“It is yet another sign of how Iraqis are taking charge of their own fate,” said Mary Peters, head of the US Secretary of Transportation. “While the job of these controllers will be to help direct the skies, their mission will be to help guide that nation to a new future.”
Inspirational sound bites aside, the certifications are vital. Iraq has six major commercial airports:
Baghdad universal, Basra, Mosul, Kirkuk, Bamerny and Al Muthana. US and coalition forces have been running the air traffic control show at all of these airports since the invasion in 2003, but now responsibility for civilian airspace above 29,000 feet is in the hands of Iraqi controllers.
If the certification process for the Iraqis is anything like that mandatory of their US counterparts, it’s no cake walk.
According to the Department of Labor, controller trainees
Iraqi controllers will find their training coming in handy — they’ll be responsible for at least 30,000
commercial flights a month, and that number is expected to bump up in a
major way. Middle Eastern airlines like Emirates increasingly pass through Iraqi airspace en route to other destinations, and the Iraqis are prepping their own national airline. The reconstituted Air Iraq has ordered 30 Boeing 737s and is
firming up
plans for 10 787 Dreamliners.
According to the airline’s website, Air Iraq will launch service to a range of Gulf States as well as serving key worldly destinations. One of the first on their list? Baghdad to Baltimore/Washington.
Photo by Lockheed Martin
Original post by Dave Demerjian

























Related Articles
No user responded in this post
Leave A Reply
Please Note: Comment moderation maybe active so there is no need to resubmit your comments