They had thought

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GoldfishLord

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Ukrainian officials have said that they urgently need F-16 warplanes to give them a chance of winning control of the air, which Nato military doctrine says is vital for attacking forces.

They had thought that the first Ukrainian pilots flying F-16s would not be ready for combat until the first quarter of 2024 but the US has now said that this timeline will be sped up.

Source: The Telegraph

What's the reason the past perfect was used in the bold part instead of the simple past?
 
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You could read it as: "They had thought that, but they don't anymore" or "They had thought that, but now they're not so sure". I think simple past doesn't work quite as well
 
The past perfect reinforces the main idea that it's earlier than expected.

They originally expected the pilots to be ready in 2024 before whatever happened to speed things up.
 
Is the past perfect used there to express the action was completed before a point in time in the past?
 
There's no action, just an expectation.

They expected X. Then they changed their mind, and now they expect Y. So X is before Y in terms of time sequence.
 
1. Is "flying" in "the first Ukrainian pilots flying F-16s" a noun or a participle?

2. Does "the first Ukrainian pilots flying F-16s" mean "the first Ukrainian pilots which would fly F-16s"?
 
1. That's not a good question. Think about the meaning instead. In this case flying is an action.
2. More or less, yes. I think you understand it correctly.
 
2. Does "the first Ukrainian pilots flying F-16s" mean "the first Ukrainian pilots which would fly F-16s"?
I think it's time you stopped asking Does A mean B? questions. A means A. B might have a very similar meaning, but it is not the 'meaning' of A.

Which should be who or that.
 
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