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Namibian Air Force

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 195.145.211.209 (talk) at 11:32, 30 December 2010 (→‎Aircraft Inventory: It's either civil or gov use, not both.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Namibian Air Force
Founded1994 (Namibia Defence Force Air Wing)
2005 (Namibian Air Force)
CountryNamibia
Part ofNamibia Defence Force
Commanders
Air Force CommanderBrigadier-General Martin Pinehas

The Namibia Air Force was commissioned on 13 March 2005 at Grootfontein Air Base.[1] The policy, mission statements and concept of operations envisage the development of an Air Force to operate in support of the Army and the Navy.

Five separate roles for Air Force are; surveillance, transport of personnel and transport of supplies/equipment; support to the civil authorities or civil community, and training.[2]

With Grootfontein as the main air base, expansion projects are underway to expand the Keetmanshoop air base, as well as construct a new base at Karibib. This was reported by The Namibian on 20 June 2008.

The policy for the Air Force is to acquire dedicated air assets to undertake the surveillance and transport tasks. The MOD and NDF will train and employ their own pilots and technicians. Co-operation and co-ordination with other Ministries may extend to making such assets available for non-defence tasking. In addition, consideration will be given to arrangements whereby private and other national air assets could be employed where appropriate or necessary.

Aircraft Inventory

Following the independence of Namibia from South Africa in 1991, the Air defence wing of the defence forces were established in 1993-1994. Equipment purchased included Cessna O-2s, HAL Chetaks and Cheetahs from India. In late 1994 a Learjet 31A entered service for Government use.

Template:Standard table ! style="text-align: left; background: #aacccc;"|Aircraft ! style="text-align: left; background: #aacccc;"|Origin ! style="text-align: left; background: #aacccc;"|Type ! style="text-align: left; background: #aacccc;"|Versions ! style="text-align: left; background: #aacccc;"|Numbers In Service ! style="text-align: left; background: #aacccc;"|Comments |----- ! style="align: center; background: lavender;" colspan="7" | Fighter / Trainer Aircraft |----- | Chengdu F-7 Airguard | China China | Fighter/Trainer | Total
F-7NM
FT-7NG | 12
10
2 | FT-7NG trainer versions received in November 2006 [3] All 12 equipped with Grifo-MG radars. |- | Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-23 Flogger |  Soviet Union | multi-role Fighter | MiG-23[citation needed] | 2 | |- | Hongdu K-8 Karakorum | China China | Fighter/Trainer | K-8 | 12 | |----- ! style="align: center; background: lavender;" colspan="7" |

Transports |----- | Cessna Skymaster | United States United States | utility | FTB.337G
O-2A | 5 | |- | Antonov An-12 Cub |  Soviet Union | transport | An-12 | 2 | |- | Harbin Y-12 | China China | Transport
VIP transport | Y-12 | 2 | |- | Learjet 36 | United States United States | VIP transport | Model 36 | 1 | |- | Dassault Falcon 900 | France France | VIP transport | Falcon 900 | 1 | |----- ! style="align: center; background: lavender;" colspan="7" | Helicopters |----- | Mil Mi-35 Hind-E |  Soviet Union | attack helicopter | Mi-35P | 2 | |- | Mil Mi-8 Hip |  Soviet Union | Assault helicopter | Mi-8 | 2 | |- | Aérospatiale SA 319 Alouette III | France France | light utility | SA 319 | 2 | |- | HAL Cheetah | India India | light utility | | 1[4] | Indian variant of French Aérospatiale Lama |- | HAL Chetak | India India | light utility | | 2[4] | Indian variant of French Aérospatiale Alouette III |}

References

External links