https://assets.publishing.service.gov.u ... re_34_.pdf"Beyond irony,
in bigging them up,
presumably for a quick cash sale,
the brochure is basically a long list of reasons why we shouldn't be selling them , for example,
"The aircraft that goes where others can't, won't or don't!"....
https://www.pprune.org/military-aviatio ... rly-4.html
https://www.airforce-technology.com/hom ... le-by-mod/October 17, 2022
The UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) has added the Royal Air Force’s (Raf) C-130J fleet
to its list of military equipment that will be made available for sale through the Defence Equipment Sales Authority (DESA) from 2023,
which is slated to be the out-of-service date for the type.
The withdrawal of the 14-strong C-130J fleet for the RAF will be a blow to the service’s airlift capability,
although the induction of the larger A400 Atlas is intended to offset the loss.
According to a DESA brochure, added to the Defence Equipment and Support equipment sale list,
the UK’s C-130J fleet will be made available for acquisition as they come out of service
“between 2023 and 2025”.
UK-based company Marshall Aerospace was named as the “principal retail partner” for the sale of the C-130Js,
and would provide entry into service, sustainment and capability enhancements where required.
The decision to cut the C-130Js from UK service was announced in the 2021 Defence Command Paper,
which set out the latest in a long line of restructures of the country’s military.
The move has been hotly debated ever since,
with UK parliamentarians regularly bringing up the loss of the C-130Js
as being detrimental to operational capability.
has much more to read...