- â–º Contract awarded to Top Aces Corp. for $33,193,783 firm fixed price.
- â–º Provides F-16 instructor pilot training for Argentina under Foreign Military Sales.
- â–º Training will be conducted in Argentina to build independent operational capability.
- â–º Work is scheduled for completion by June 30, 2029.
- â–º Contract managed by the 338th Contracting Squadron at Joint Base San Antonio Randolph.
Top Aces Awarded F-16 Instructor Pilot Training Contract For Argentina
The F-16 instructor pilot training contract awarded to Top Aces Corp. marks a significant step in Argentina’s effort to field and sustain an operational F-16 fleet under the U.S. Foreign Military Sales framework.
The U.S. Air Force announced a $33,193,783 firm fixed price award to the Mesa, Arizona based contractor to provide advanced F-16 instructor pilot training. The effort is designed to enable Argentine pilots to achieve independent operational capability outside the continental United States.
The contract includes $22,754,462 in fiscal 2026 Foreign Military Sales funds obligated at the time of award. Work will take place in Argentina and is expected to conclude by June 30, 2029. The award was issued as a directed source acquisition.
The 338th Contracting Squadron at Joint Base San Antonio Randolph is the contracting authority.
Building Argentina’s F-16 Capacity
The F-16 instructor pilot training program forms a critical component of Argentina’s broader F-16 transition. Instructor pilot qualification is central to long term force sustainability. Without a domestic cadre of qualified instructors, new operators remain dependent on external training pipelines.
-
By conducting training in Argentina, the program reduces the need for extended deployments to U.S. based training units. It also supports faster absorption of aircraft, tactics, and maintenance practices into national service.
Under standard Foreign Military Sales procedures administered by the U.S. Department of Defense and the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, training is often structured to ensure partners can operate independently once aircraft deliveries and initial training phases conclude.
In this case, the F-16 instructor pilot training contract directly supports that objective.
Why Top Aces
Top Aces has built a reputation as a commercial adversary air and training provider, operating advanced fighter aircraft including F-16 variants for aggressor and readiness missions. The company already supports U.S. Air Force training requirements under separate contracts.
Leveraging a commercial provider for F-16 instructor pilot training allows the Air Force to draw on an experienced pilot pool without placing additional strain on active duty training squadrons. It also reflects a broader Pentagon trend of outsourcing certain training functions to specialized contractors.
For Argentina, the arrangement accelerates capability development while remaining aligned with U.S. oversight standards under Foreign Military Sales.
Strategic Context
Argentina’s move to field F-16 aircraft represents a modernization shift for its air force. Transitioning to a Western fourth generation platform introduces new requirements in training, logistics, and sustainment.
Instructor pilot development is often the most complex part of that transition. Qualified instructors must master advanced tactics, weapons employment, mission planning systems, and safety procedures. Once certified, they become force multipliers within their home units.
The multi year structure of this F-16 instructor pilot training contract suggests a phased approach. Early cohorts are likely to train alongside experienced contractor instructors before gradually assuming instructional duties themselves.
From a U.S. perspective, Foreign Military Sales training packages also strengthen interoperability. Pilots trained under U.S. aligned standards are better positioned to participate in multinational exercises and regional security cooperation initiatives.
Oversight And Funding
The contract was issued under number FA300226C0003 and managed by the 338th Contracting Squadron. The firm fixed price structure provides cost certainty over the performance period.
Foreign Military Sales cases are funded by the partner nation, in this case Argentina, with the U.S. government managing execution and oversight. Funds obligated at award ensure initial training phases can proceed without delay.
As global demand for F-16 sustainment and training grows, the role of commercial providers is expanding. This award underscores how F-16 instructor pilot training is increasingly viewed as a specialized service market, not solely a government function.
With completion set for mid 2029, the contract positions Argentina to establish a self sustaining F-16 training ecosystem within the decade.
Get real time update about this post category directly on your device, subscribe now.


