Tunisian Air Force

The Tunisian Air Force (Arabic: اجيش الطيران, French: Armée de l'Air[1]) is one of the branches of the Tunisian Armed Forces.

Tunisian Air Force
Arabic: جيش الطيران
French: Armée de l'Air
Tunisian Air Force emblem
Founded1959
Country Tunisia
Size4,000 personnel
Part ofTunisian Armed Forces
HQBizerte
Nickname(s)TAF
Anniversaries24 July
Equipment118 aircraft
EngagementsWar on Terror
Commanders
CommanderGeneral Taïeb Lajimi
Insignia
Roundel
Aircraft flown
AttackAermacchi MB-326
FighterNorthrop F-5
PatrolSIAI-Marchetti S.208
TrainerAero L-59 Super Albatros
Aermacchi SF.260
TransportG-222
Let L-410 Turbolet
Lockheed C-130B/H/J-30 Hercules/Super Hercules

History

The Tunisian Air Force was established in 1959, three years after Tunisia regained its independence from France. It took deliveries of its first aircraft, eight Saab 91 Safirs, in 1960, later to be complemented by further Saab 91 Safirs. The Tunisian Air Force entered the jet age in 1965 with the purchase of 8 MB326-B's and then 5 MB326-LT's. In 1969, the country received 15 ex-USAF F-86F Sabre. Between 1974 and 1978 12 SF.260 Warriors and 9 SF.260C were delivered for basic training. In 1977–78 8 MB.326KT's were supplied for light attack duties. In 1981 Tunisia ordered 12 F-5's (8 F-5E and 4 F-5F), deliveries taking place in 1984-85. Then adding 5 ex-USAF F-5E's from the Alconbury Aggressor Squadron (in 1989). In 1985 Tunisia ordered 2 C130-H's Hercules. In 1995 a major Czech order was placed with 12 Aero L-59 armed trainers and 3 Let L-410UVP transports ordered. In 1997 five surplus C-130B's were delivered from the USA. Tunisia has two C-130J-30s on order for delivery in 2013 and 2014.

Possible purchase of 12 UH-60M[2]

There are four main bases: Bizerte/Sidi Ahmed, Gafsa, Bizerte/La Karouba and Sfax.

Organization

The order of battle of the Tunisian Air force is as below:[3]

Tunis-Laouina

36°50′57″N 010°14′51″E

No. 12 Squadron
Transport squadron, Let L-410 Turbolet

Bizerte-Sidi Ahmed

37°14′58″N 009°46′48″E

No. 11 Squadron
Jet trainer squadron, Aermacchi MB-326
No. 15 Squadron
Fighter squadron, Northrop F-5 Tiger
No. 21 Squadron
Transport squadron, C-130 Hercules, G-222

Bizerte-La Karouba

37°15′10″N 009°47′40″E

No. 31 Squadron
Helicopter squadron, Bell 205, UH-1 Iroquois
No. 32 Squadron
Helicopter squadron, Alouette II, Ecureuil
No. 33 Squadron
Helicopter squadron
No. 36 Squadron
Helicopter squadron

Sfax-Thyna

34°42′55″N 010°41′47″E

No. 13 Squadron
Light utility and liaison squadron, flying SF-260s
No. 14 Squadron
Light utility and liaison squadron, flying SF-260s
No. ? Squadron
Helicopter squadron

Gafsa

34°25′04″N 008°48′45″E

No. 16 Squadron
Jet trainer squadron, flying L-59s
No. 34 Squadron

Aircraft

A C-130 taxis down the runway at Lajes Field, Portugal
A Tunisian HH-3 helicopter participating in a rescue exercise in Bizerte
A SIAI-Marchetti SF.260

Current inventory

Aircraft Origin Type Variant In service Notes
Combat Aircraft
Northrop F-5 United States fighter F-5E 12[4]
Transport
Let L-410 Czech Republic utility 5[4]
C-130 Hercules United States transport / SAR C-130B/H 7[4]
C-130J Super Hercules United States tactical airlifter 2[4]
Helicopters
Bell 205 United States utility 36[4] of which 16 are UH-1H’s
Bell 412 United States utility 3[4]
Bell OH-58 United States reconnaissance OH-58D 7[4] 17 on order[5]
Alouette II France liaison / light utility 8[4]
Alouette III France liaison / utility 8[4]
Sikorsky HH-3 United States SAR / transport 16[4]
Sikorsky UH-60 United States utility UH-60M 8[4]
Eurocopter AS350 France utility / liaison 6[4]
Trainer Aircraft
Northrop F-5 United States conversion trainer F-5F 3[4]
Aero L-39 Czech Republic jet trainer 9[4]
Aermacchi MB-326 Italy jet trainer 10[6]
SIAI-Marchetti SF.260 Italy trainer 17[4]

References

  1. "Présentation au profil de l'armée de l'air" (in French). Retrieved 11 March 2020.
  2. "Tunisia – UH-60M Black Hawk Helicopters - The Official Home of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency". Archived from the original on 27 July 2014. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
  3. "Tunisian Air Force OrBat". Scramble. Archived from the original on 15 December 2010. Retrieved 5 August 2007.
  4. "World Air Forces 2020". Flightglobal Insight. 2020. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  5. "First Tunisian OH-58's arrive". Air Forces Monthly pg. 22. Key Publishing. April 2017. |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  6. Lake, Jon (15 October 2019). "T-6C Texan II Sale Possible for Tunisia". ainonline.

Sources

  • World Aircraft Information Files. Brightstar Publishing, London. File 337 Sheet 03

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.