Combined Air Operations Centre

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This article is about Combined Air Operations Centre in accordance with German army regulation (HDv 100/900) in line to the NATO command structure. It should not be confused with the Air and Space Operations Center as a type of command center used by the United States Air Force.

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US CAOC at Al Udeid Air Base, 2009

Combined Air Operations Centre (short: CAOC) is according to the German army regulation German: Heeresdienstvorschrift (HDv) 100/900 defined as – «A multinational headquarters for tactical and operational control of NATO Air Forces below the Joint Force Command level».

Within the European NATO command structure it is subordinated to the Component Command – Air, and is superior to Control and Reporting Centres. NATO may operate in Europe static and deployable CAOCs.

Predecessor organizations of the CAOC were Air Tactical Operations Centre (ATOC) and Air Defence Operations Centre (ADOC). Until 1980 the two HQs for air attack and air defence operated autonomously.

Active CAOCs

Inactive CAOCs

  • CAOC 1 - Finderup (Jutland), Denmark (deactivated in 2008, replaced at same location by CAOC Finderup)
  • CAOC 2 - Uedem, Germany (deactivated in 2008, replaced at same location by Deployable CAOC Uedem

Deployable)[5]

  • CAOC 3 - Reitan, Norway (deactivated in 2008, responsibility moved to Combined Air Operations Centre Finderup)
  • CAOC 4 - Meßstetten, Germany (deactivated in 2008, responsibility moved to CAOC Udem
  • CAOC 5 - Poggio Renatico, Italy (deactivated in 2013, replaced at same location by Deployable CAOC)
  • CAOC 6 - Eskisehir, Turkey[6] (deactivated in 2013, responsibility moved to Combined Air Operations Centre Torrejon)
  • CAOC 7 - Larissa, Greece[7] (deactivated in 2013, responsibility moved to CAOC Torrejon)
  • CAOC 8 - Torrejon, Spain[8] (deactivated in 2013, replaced at same location by CAOC Torrejon)
  • CAOC 9 - RAF High Wycombe, United Kingdom (deactivated in 2008, responsibility moved to CAOC Finderup)
  • Balkans CAOC - Vicenza, Italy (deactivated in 2001)[9]
  • CAOC 10 - Lisbon, Portugal[10] (deactivated in 2013, responsibility moved to Combined Air Operations Centre-Torrejon)
  • CAOC F - Finderup, Denmark[11] (deactivated in 2013, responsibility moved to CAOC Uedem)
  • DCAOC UD - Deployable CAOC Uedem, Germany[12] (deactivated in 2013, replaced at same location by CAOC UD)

References / sources

  1. ^ http://www.airn.nato.int/page5851910.aspx
  2. ^ http://www.airn.nato.int/page584196.aspx
  3. ^ http://www.airn.nato.int/page5861915.aspx
  4. ^ "SHAPE | Progress in NATOs Deployable Air Command and Control Capability". aco.nato.int. Retrieved 2016-01-16.
  5. ^ "NATO HQ Aircom" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-02-21. Retrieved 2016-01-16. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ CAOC-6 Factsheet Template:Wayback
  7. ^ Allied Joint Force Command Naples Template:Wayback
  8. ^ "Air Operations Centre in Spain" - NATO Official Website
  9. ^ "Combined Air Operations Center will move to new Italy location". web.archive.org. May 22, 2001. Retrieved 2016-01-16.
  10. ^ US Army NATO Template:Wayback
  11. ^ "NATO HQ Aircom | We're sorry" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-02-18. Retrieved 2016-01-16. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  12. ^ "CAOC 2: State-of-the-Art Engineering for more Security" Allied Air Component Command HQ Ramstein - Press Release Template:Wayback