Royal Jordanian Air Force
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The Royal Jordanian Air Force (RJAF) (Arabic: القوات الجوية المكية الأردنية, Transliterated: Al Quwwat al-Jawwiya Almalakiya al-Urduniya in Arabic) is the Aviation branch of the Jordanian Armed Forces.
History
Hashemite
Kingdom of Jordan |
| Geography of Jordan>Geography |
|---|
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Governorates · Cities Transport · The Mediterranean Dead Sea · Red Sea · Amman |
| History of Jordan |
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Transjordan · Black September Sykes-Picot Agreement · Mandate of Palastine · PLO |
| Arab-Israeli conflict |
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1948 War · Six-Day War Peace treaties with: Israel |
| Economy of Jordan>Economy |
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Aqaba · Petra
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| Demographics of Jordan>Demographics · Culture |
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Islam in Jordan · Music of Jordan · Sports in Jordan University of Jordan · Arabic · Famous Jordanians |
| Politics of Jordan>Politics |
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Kings · Prime Ministers · Marouf al-Bakhit King Abduallah II |
| Foreign relations of Jordan>Foreign affairs |
| United Nations · Arab League |
| Jordanian Armed Forces |
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Land Force · Intelligence Department · Air Force His Majesty's Special Security · Royal Special Forces |
By 1955, King Hussein began to realize the need for Jordan to have a more modern Air force, so the RJAF was established on September 25, 1955. By 1958 the Royal Air Force had left Jordan and the RJAF had taken control of airfields in the country.
With the advent of the 1960s, the RJAF had a fleet of Hawker Hunters in the fighter role, and a number of different cargo planes and helicopters used in the transport role.
1964 brought the RJAF's first victory in the air. In what is known as the Battle of the Dead Sea, four Hawker Hunters shot down one Israeli Mirage and allegedly damaged three others.
During the 1967 Six-Day War, the RJAF managed to destroy an Israeli transport on the grounds of an Israeli Air Force base before an Israeli counterstrike destroyed the RJAF in their hangers and decisively removed the RJAF from the war.
In the 1980s, the RJAF supported Saddam Hussein and the Iraqi regime during the Iran-Iraq War committing their aircraft to combat practive alongside Iraqi aircraft squadrons and jointly operating one aircraft squadron. During the 1991 Desert Storm conflict, Jordan declared support for the Saddam Hussein and the Iraqi regime, but the RJAF was never committed to combat in support of these political statements.
The 1970s had the RJAF greatly modernized. F-104 Starfighters had been acquired from the United States following heavy losses in the Six-Day War. The RJAF also acquired F-5s from Iran which had gotten them from the United States. T-37 Tweets were also acquired for the training role. In 1977, the RJAF turned over its entire fleet of Hawker Hunters to the Royal Omani Air Force. Following peace between Egypt and Israel in 1979, the RJAF began to modernize its fleet once again. The first part of this program was the procurement of Dassault Mirage F1 which became the RJAF's frontline fighter.
In 1987 the RJAF received CASA C-101s to replace the T-37 in the training role. The newest addition to the RJAF is the F-16 Fighting Falcon which is also the most advanced aircraft in the Air Force. The RJAF plans to acquire more of these airplanes in order to keep its fleet modernized and combat ready.
The current commander of the Royal Jordan Air Force is His Royal Highness Major General Feisal Bin Al-Hussein. King Abdullah II was an officer in the RJAF before his accession to the throne.
Aircraft
- F-5 Freedom Fighter
- Dassault Mirage F1
- F-16 Fighting Falcon
- UH-1 Iroquois
- AH-1 Cobra
- CASA C-101
- Eurocopter EC 135
Markings
External links
- [Official Site of the Royal Jordanian Air Force]
- [Royal Jordanian Airforce] courtesy of Scramble.nl
See also
|
Lists of Aircraft | Aircraft manufacturers | Aircraft engines | Aircraft engine manufacturers
| Airlines | Air forces | Aircraft weapons | Missiles | Timeline of aviation |
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