Air force

Air force

An air force, also known in some countries as an air army or historically an army air corps , is in the broadest sense, the national military or armed service that primarily conducts aerial warfare. The term "air force" may also refer to a tactical air force or numbered air force, which is an operational formation within a national air force.

Air forces typically consist of a combination of fighters, bombers, helicopters, transport planes and other aircraft. Many air forces are also responsible for operations of military space, intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM), and communications equipment. Some air forces may command and control other air-defense assets such as antiaircraft artillery, surface-to-air missiles, or anti-ballistic missile warning networks and defensive systems.

Organization

Air forces typically operate numerous types of aircraft. These may include
* "Fighters", used to destroy other aircraft;
* "Bombers" and "Ground-attack aircraft", used to attack ground targets;
* "Reconnaissance Aircraft";
* "Electronic Warfare
* "Airborne Early Warning Aircraft"; used for AWACS( Airborne Warning and Control System) missions.
* "Maritime Patrol Aircraft";
* "Transport Aircraft"; used for transporting military cargo
* "Tankers" which provide aerial in-flight refuelling for other aircraft;
* "Helicopters", used for attack, rescue or transport;
* and "Training Aircraft".

Air forces also operate numerous types of satellites. These satellites provide services such as:
* Secure and unsecure communications
* Position, navigation and timing
* Missile warning
* Weather data
* Intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR)

Some air forces such as the British Royal Air Force (RAF) have a unique rank structure loosely based on naval ranks; other air forces such as the United States Air Force (USAF) have a rank structure on the Enlisted side that is unique, but the Officer corps uses Army-style rank. Finally, there are air forces such as Soviet Air Force that use Army-style ranks for both Enlisted and Officer corps. Most (but not all) wear blue-grey uniforms ('air force', as opposed to 'navy', blue), a practice pioneered by the Royal Air Force. The organization structures of the air forces also vary: some air forces (such as the USAF and RAF) are divided into commands, groups and squadrons; others (such as the Soviet Air Force) have an Army-style organizational structure.

For every aircraft, there are pilots responsible for flying the aircraft, there are maintenance personnel who launch the aircraft and maintain it when on ground, air traffic controllers, communications crew, satellite operators, administrative personnel, and medical personnel; in some air forces, there are officers responsible for strategic nuclear weapons such as intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). Although the majority of the senior leadership of most air forces are pilots, the majority of the personnel are not. Some air forces operate anti-aircraft artillery (now with radars and missiles), and a few air forces have their own paratroopers, or ground defence personnel charged with defending Air Bases, their supply lines and surrounding areas from hostile ground forces, such as the British RAF Regiment or the French Fusiliers Commandos de l'Air. Some Air Forces also include their own Special Forces, which may include aircrews and aircraft tasked with special missions such as surveillance or insertion operations, or ground-based personnel such as the American Air Force Special Tactics or the Malaysian PASKAU units, who provide support to Air Force or Special Forces operations by performing functions such as combat search and rescue, explosive ordnance disposal, and forward air control. Given the pilots' special status, they often wear special insignia in the form of a vol or "wings". Other air crews might wear variations of such insignia.

The United States Air Force also has an auxiliary unit called the Civil Air Patrol. CAP is a non-profit organization that performs 95% of all inland searchs in the United States. There are units in every state. The air force supplies and helps the Civil Air Patrol.The B-2 is the best plane out there besides the F-22

History

Origins

The origins of military aviation lie in the use of balloons as a reconnaissance aid to ground-based commanders. The French made use of a balloon at the Battle of Fleurus in 1794 and the Americans were the first to employ balloons on a major scale during the American Civil War.

The British first experimented with balloons in 1863 and in 1888 a School of Ballooning was established.

Heavier-than-air military aircraft

Balloon corps are not generally regarded as examples of an air force. However, with the invention of heavier-than-air flying machines in 1903, armies and navies began to take interest in this new form of aviation.

The first aviation force in the world was the Aviation Militaire of the French Army formed in 1910, which eventually became L'Armée de l'Air. During World War I France, Germany, Italy and the British Empire all possessed significant aviation forces of bombers and fighters, the latter produced numerous flying aces.

Independent air forces

An independent air force is one which is a separate branch of a nation's armed forces and is, at least notionally, on equal terms to that nation's army or navy.

The Finnish Air Force claims to be the first independent air force in the world. When it was founded on 6 March 1918 [ [http://www.ilmavoimat.fi/index_en.php?id=600 Puolustusvoimat - Försvarsmakten - The Finnish Defence Forces ] ] , it consisted of one aircraft and was commanded by a junior officer. However, it is generally recognized that the British Royal Air Force was the first independent air force of any size. The RAF was founded on 1 April 1918 by merging the British Army's Royal Flying Corps and the Royal Navy's Air Service. On establishment the RAF comprised over 20,000 aircraft, was commanded by a Chief of the Air Staff who held the rank of Major General and was governed by its own government ministry (the Air Ministry).

The two World Wars

Germany was the first country to use its air force to drop bombs on enemy cities. In the First World War it used its zeppelins (airships) to drop bombs on British cities. At that time, Britain did have aircraft, though her airships were less advanced than the zeppelins and were very rarely used for attacking; instead they were usually used to spy on German U-boats (submarines). Planes at that point were primitive world wide, they only travelled at around 50 mph and were very vulnerable to attack. The average pilot at that time would only live for one week after they completed their training.Fact|date=July 2008

By the time the Second World War started, planes had become much safer, faster and more reliable. They were adopted as standard for bombing raids and taking out other aircraft because they were much faster than airships. The World's largest military Air Force by the start of the Second World War in 1939 was the Red Air Force, and although much depleted, it would stage the largest air operations of WWII over the four years of combat with the Luftwaffe. The war's most important air operation, known as the Battle of Britain, took place during 1940 over Britain and the English Channel between Britain's Royal Air Force and Germany's Luftwaffe over a period of several months. In the end Britain emerged victorious and this caused Adolf Hitler to give up his plan to invade Britain. Other prominent operations during the Second World War include the bombing of Pearl Harbor by the Japanese in 1941, the Allied bombing of Germany during 1942-1944, and the Red Air Force operations in support of strategic ground offensives on the Eastern Front.

trategic bombing

The air force's role of strategic bombing against enemy infrastructures was developed during the 1930s by the Japanese in China and by the Germans during the Spanish Civil War. This role for the bomber was perfected during World War II, during Allied "Thousand Bomber Raid" operations. The need to intercept these bombers, both during the day and at night, accelerated fighter aircraft developments. The war ended when United States Army Air Force Boeing B-29 Superfortress bombers dropped two atomic bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan in August 1945.

Post World War II

The United States Air Force finally became an independent service in 1947. As the Cold War began, both the USAF and the Soviet Air Force built up their nuclear-capable strategic bomber forces. Several technological advances were widely introduced during this time: the jet engine; the missile; the helicopter; and inflight refueling.

Communist China has also developed a large air force (which, contrary to popular belief, is in fact quite independent from the ground force), initially with aid from the Soviet Union, and later on its own. Both the US and the USSR supplied large numbers of aircraft, technical advice and training to their allied nations.

During the 1960s, Canada took the unusual step of merging the Royal Canadian Air Force with the army and the navy to form the unified Canadian Forces, with a green uniform for everyone. This proved very unpopularFact|date=June 2007, and recently the air force (and the navy) have re-adopted their distinct identities (although structurally they remained a unified force). Perhaps the latest air force to become "independent" is the Irish Air Corps, which changed its uniform from army green to blue in the 1990s.

Air Armies

Several countries title their military aviation Air Army, notably France. In such countries the army is officially called the Land Army, although in common usage "army" retains its meaning of a land force.
However, in the Soviet Union and the Russian Federation the Air Army also refers to a military formation, and during WWII eighteen Air Armies operated as part of the Red Army Order of Battle of the Military units and formations of the Soviet Union in World War II. The Air Armies were divided into the air forces of the military district PVO, the Frontal Aviation Air Armies assigned one to each Front, and the Anti-Air Defense Armies that included anti-aircraft guns and interceptors.

ee also

*List of air forces
*Aerial warfare
*Life support (aviation)
*History of military aviation

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Air Force 1 — Air Force One Pour les articles homonymes, voir Air Force One (homonymie). L actuel Air Force One survolant le mont Rushmore dans le Dakota du …   Wikipédia en Français

  • air force — (n.) 1917, from AIR (Cf. air) (n.1) + FORCE (Cf. force) (n.); first attested with creation of the Royal Air Force. There was no United States Air Force until after World War II. The Air Corps was an arm of the U.S. Army. In 1942, the War… …   Etymology dictionary

  • Air Force — steht für: die Luftstreitkräfte oder Luftwaffe eines Landes United States Air Force, die Luftwaffe der Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika Royal Air Force , die Königliche Luftwaffe Großbritanniens Royal Australian Air Force, die königlich… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Air Force 1 — steht für: Air Force One, der Funkrufname für jedes Flugzeug der US Air Force, in dem sich der Präsident der Vereinigten Staaten befindet Air Force One (Film), einen US amerikanischer Actionfilm Air Force 1 (Schuh), einen Basketballschuh …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • air-force — or airˈ force adjective (air force blue a greyish blue such as is used for Royal Air Force uniforms) • • • Main Entry: ↑air …   Useful english dictionary

  • Air force — Bat 21 Données clés Titre original Bat*21 Réalisation Peter Markle Scénario William C. Anderson (livre) William C. Anderson (scénario) and George Gordon (scénario) Acteurs principaux Gene Hackman Danny Glover …   Wikipédia en Français

  • air force — ♦♦♦ air forces N COUNT An air force is the part of a country s armed forces that is concerned with fighting in the air. ...the United States Air Force... Jack Mann was a Royal Air Force fighter pilot during World War II …   English dictionary

  • air force — n. 1. the aviation branch of the armed forces of a country 2. a) an organizational unit of an aviation force b) in the U.S. Air Force, a unit lower than an air command, usually made up of several air divisions …   English World dictionary

  • Air Force — 〈[ɛ:r fɔ:rs] f.; ; unz.; in England u. Amerika Bez. für〉 Luftstreitkräfte; →a. Royal Air Force [engl.] * * * Air Force   [ eə fɔːs, englisch] die, , die (englische und amerikanische) Luftwaffe …   Universal-Lexikon

  • air force — air ,force noun count ** the part of a country s military organization that uses airplanes in fighting: the Russian air force an air force pilot …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • Air Force — 〈[ɛ:r fɔ:(r)s] f.; Gen.: ; Pl.: unz.; Mil.; in England u. Amerika〉 Luftstreitkräfte; →a. s. Royal Air Force [Etym.: engl.] …   Lexikalische Deutsches Wörterbuch

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”