Air Component of the Belgian Armed Forces | |
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One of the F-16 Fighting Falcons of the Belgian Air Component |
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Active | 1909-1915: Company of Aviators 1915-1940: Military Aviation 1940-1946: Belgian Section, RAF 1946-1949: Military Aviation 1949-2002: Belgian Air Force 2002-present: Air Component |
Country | Belgium |
Size | 8,600 personnel |
Commanders | |
Commander | Major-General Claude Van de Voorde |
Insignia | |
Roundel | |
Identification symbol |
The Air Component, formerly the Belgian Air Force, is the air arm of the Belgian Armed Forces. Originally founded in 1909, it is one of the world's first air forces, and was a pioneer in aerial combat during the First World War. Despite many obstacles, it performed commendably even in its first few years of existence.
The present commander is Major-General Claude Van de Voorde, appointed on 23 July 2009.
Contents |
The Belgian Air Force was founded in 1909 as a branch of the Belgian Army, carrying the name Compagnie des Ouvries et Aérostiers. King Albert's interest in the military use of airplanes was a main impetus for its formation. Coincidently, in the civil aviation sector, Baron Pierre de Caters earned the first civil pilot's brevet that same year. Caters would promptly establish an aviation school. At approximately the same time, the War Ministry decided to follow the French military's example and have pilots earn a civil pilot's brevet before their military one.[1]
As a result, in 1910, three Belgian lieutenants earned their Pilot's Brevets at that school, voluntarily paying their own fees. There were two artillery lieutenants; Baudoin de Montens d'Oosterwyck, who earned Brevet No. 19 on 30 September, and Alfred Sarteel, granted No. 23 on 10 November. The third lieutenant, Georges Nelis, was the new force's first aviation candidate, gaining Brevet No. 28 on 21 December. An airplane was personally purchased for him.[1]
In Spring of 1911, the new air force established its military aviation school with five pilots, two mechanics, and a woodworker. It received its first airplane via a circuitous route; Baron Caters gave an airplane to King Albert, who in turn presented it to the school.[1]
On 12 September 1912, pilot Lieutenant Nelis and observer Sous Lieutenant Stellingwerff were the first Europeans to fire a machine gun from an airplane; while Nelis brought the aircraft low, Stellingwerff put some bullets through a sheet staked out on the ground. They were disciplined for their efforts. Nelis then accompanied Capitaine Commandant Émile Mathieu to England during November 1913 to demonstrate aerial use of the Lewis machine gun at Hendon and Aldershot; as a result, the British adopted the Lewis, although the Belgians did not. Belgium entered World War I with planes tasked solely for reconnaissance missions.[2]
By the date of Belgium's entry into the First World War on 4 August 1914, the military aviation branch, now called the Aviation Militaire Belge, consisted of four squadrons, each consisting of four 80 horsepower Henri Farman airplanes, although Escadrilles III and IV were still forming. A truck was assigned to each squadron, along with a fifth truck serving as a mobile workshop. Each squadron had a Commander, five pilots, and six observers, with all officers seconded from parent units. As a result, most of the new aviators were from the Engineers and Artillery components of the Belgian armed forces. As the war began, a fifth squadron was created, staffed with civilian pilots called to the colors and equipped with Bleriots.[3]
The new air force suffered serious setbacks on two stormy occasions, which is not too surprising considering that bad weather prevented flying about a third of the time; on both 13 September and 28 December, windy storms destroyed and damaged its aircraft. This was not the only obstacle to its success; the Belgian airmen had their recce reports sometimes discounted and disbelieved at war's opening. They also had to adjust to the dawning of hostilities in the third dimension. The neophyte aviators were belligerent toward enemy airmen almost from the opening guns. Sous Lieutenant Henri Crombez flew on of the first war patrols, in a Deperdussin racer on 4 August 1914 above Liège.[4] Adjutant Behaeghe was the first to engage an enemy, a few days later. On 26 September, the Belgian air crew of Sous Lieutenant de Petrowski and Sergeant Benselin mortally wounded a German pilot with a rifle bullet and forced his Taube to land at Sint-Agatha-Berchem; if they had submitted a claim for this victory, its approval would have marked history's first air-to-air combat victory.[5]
On 3 January 1915, two machine guns supplied by British aviation were fitted to two Belgian planes, making a dual effort against the foe possible; these were Belgium's first dedicated fighter planes. In February, 13 of the Belgian airmen flew 28 offensive patrols; their first dogfight was fought on the 26th, with 10 Albatroses versus three Belgian Farmans. On 26 March, Sous Lieutenant Boschmans sent a German two-seater into a steep dive when he seemed to hit the pilot; the German was not seen to either crash or land. This was the Belgian aviators' first victory claim.[6]
In April, Lieutenant Fernand Jacquet mounted a machine gun on his pusher plane and sought out the enemy. On the 17th, he scored Belgium's first confirmed aerial victory, sending an Albatros reconnaissance plane down in flames over Roeselare. Apparently at about the same time, Adjutant José Orta and Sous Lieutenant Louis de Burlet were the first to attack an enemy observation balloon when they dropped three small bombs on a gasbag over Houthulst. Luckily for them, they missed; success would probably have blown them out of the sky.[6]
On 18 January 1916, the decision was made to form a dedicated fighter squadron. On 22 February 1916, Escadrille I became the 1ère Escadrille de Chasse. It consisted of newly-supplied Nieuport 10s and one obsolete Farman two-seater. In August, the new squadron would upgrade to Nieuport 11s, and Escadrille V was turned into the 5ème Escadrille de Chasse. The new unit was the first to mount an offensive formation for the new air force; on 15 February 1917, they flew an offensive patrol of seven. By this time, the AMB had grown to 44 aircraft, including 21 fighters. At this point, individual airplanes bore personal markings affixed by their pilots, but no unit designations.[7]
In the Summer of 1917, the AMB was allotted an active role in Allied aviation operations at the beginning of the Third Battle of Ypres. In March 1918, the AMB matured into a Groupe de Chasse. At this time, the role of the Escadrilles de Chasse was finally focused on their operation strictly as fighter units. There was a general sorting out of pilots into fighter or reconnaissance roles. Not all fighter pilots went into the new fighter units; as of 1 May, 22 remained with recce units to fly escort missions. The King insisted that Jacquet be given the command of the Group. The newly organized fighter wing contained the two fighter escadrilles; however, 1ère Escadrille de Chasse became 9ème Escadrille de Chasse, and 5ème Escadrille de Chasse became 10ème Escadrille de Chasse. The 11ème Escadrille de Chasse was founded on 28 May to join them. By the start of the Allies final offensive in September 1918, the AMB was incorporated in the Allied aviation effort, and could send 40-plus planes into the air at one time. In its short span of service, the Groupe fought over 700 aerial combats and was credited with 71 confirmed and 50 probable victories.[8]
In June 1916 the nascent air force had received newer craft from the French in both single and double-seat versions of the Nieuport 10. The Belgians would continue to upgrade their planes throughout the war, though through their dependence on French manufacturers they became the stepchildren of the Allied effort from 1916 onwards.[9] The introduction dates of various types, compared to the date of their acquisition by the Belgians, tells the tale. The Franco-American Lafayette Escadrille had Nieuport 16s as early as May 1916;[10] the Belgians got them at the end of the year. The Nieuport 17 came into service with the French as early as June 1916, but the Belgians received so few that in June 1917 they were still operating all their earlier Nieuports. They then contracted for newer Nieuport 23s, which were basically up-engined Nieuport 17s. Spad VIIs had entered French service on 2 September 1916; the Belgians first received them almost an entire year later, with the first one on board on 22 August 1917. In September 1917, Belgium had the Hanriot HD.1 supplied to it the year after it was introduced. Spad XIIIs also came on line that month, but would not show up in Belgian inventory until the next year. Sopwith Camels first went into service in May 1917; the AMB received its first one on 29 November 1917.[11]
The AMB did make one attempt to design and build its own airplane. However the Ponnier M1 was not a good enough design to see production, and the ten or so manufactured ended up with clipped wings as powered "Penguin" rollers for training rookie pilots.[12]
Despite the many difficulties suffered during its foundation and first war, the AMB accomplished many things during World War I. One of its flying ace pilots, Willy Coppens, became the top ranking balloon buster of World War I, as well as one of the war's top aces. Four other pilots from the tiny force also became aces with it: Andre de Meulemeester,[13] Edmond Thieffry,[14] Jan Olieslagers,[15] and Fernand Jacquet.[16] A sixth Belgian, Adolphe DuBois d'Aische, became the war's oldest ace while in French service.[17]
The fledgling air force was even entrusted with flying both King Albert and Queen Elizabeth over the battle front at times.[18]
During the interbellum, the Belgian Air Force flew with Breguet 19. Some efforts were made to acquire aircraft from local production, as by Stampe et Vertongen and Renard.
At the start of World War II, the Army Air Force had three active Air Force Regiments. Planes which were used by those regiments were the Renard R-31 and R-32, the Fiat CR.42, the Hawker Hurricane, the Gloster Gladiator, the Fairey Fox, and the Fairey Battle. These were massacred by the much superior German Luftwaffe in the German invasion of May 1940.
The following (possibly incomplete) table lists the inventory of the Belgian Air Force as in May 1940[19]
Aircraft | Origin | Type | Year acquired | In service |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fairey Battle | United Kingdom | Light bomber | 1938 | 16 |
Fairey Fox | United Kingdom | Light bomber and observation | 1933–1938 | 154 |
Fiat CR.42 | Italy | Fighter | 1940 | 27 |
Fokker F.VII | Netherlands | Transport | 1935 | 9 |
Gloster Gladiator | United Kingdom | Fighter | 1937 | 22 |
Hawker Hurricane | United Kingdom | Fighter | 1939 | 20 |
Koolhoven FK.56 | Netherlands | Advanced trainer | 1940 | 12 |
LACAB GR.8 | Belgium | Bomber prototype | 1936 | 1 |
Morane-Saulnier MS.230 | France | Observation | 1932 | 23 |
Potez 33 | France | Light bomber and reconnaissance | 1930 | 10 |
Renard R.31 | Belgium | Observation | 1935 | 33 |
Renard R.38 | Belgium | Fighter prototype | 1940 | 1 |
SABCA S-47 / Caproni Ca.335 | Belgium / Italy | Light bomber prototype | 1940 | 1 |
Savoia-Marchetti SM.73 | Italy | Transport | 1940 | 8 |
Savoia-Marchetti SM.83 | Italy | Transport | 1940 | 3 |
Stampe-et-Vertongen SV-5 | Belgium | Training | 1936 | 21 |
Stampe-et-Vertongen SV-22 | Belgium | Training | 1933 | 10 |
Stampe-et-Vertongen SV-26 | Belgium | Training | 1933 | 10 |
Before the outbreak of the war Belgium also sought to equip its Aviation Militaire with foreign designs, ordering production licences in Poland and France and aircraft in the USA. However, the acquired licences could not be used until May 1940 and the aircraft produced in the USA were eventually delivered to France and to the United Kingdom. The following table summarizes Belgium's foreign orders:
Aircraft | Origin | Type | Year acquired | Number |
---|---|---|---|---|
Breguet 693 | France | Light bomber and assault aircraft | 1940 | Licence to build 32 |
Brewster B-339 | United States | Fighter | 1939 | 40 ordered, 1 delivered to Bordeaux, 6 to Martinique, rest to RAF[20] |
Douglas DB-7 | United States | Medium bomber | 1939 | 16 ordered, transferred to RAF after surrender |
PZL.37 Łoś | Poland | Medium bomber | 1938 | Licence to build unknown number |
Grumman Martlet | United States | Fighter | 1940 | an order for at least 10 aircraft was placed, never delivered and transferred to Royal Navy after surrender, aircraft was proposed with fixed wings for land based operations |
Caproni Ca.313 | Italy | Light bomber and reconnaissance aircraft(designated Ca.312) | 1940 | 24 ordered, none delivered |
After the surrender of Belgium on 28 May 1940, a very small Belgian Air Force in exile was created in Great Britain. This small force was active within the British Royal Air Force, and its squadrons were equipped with versions of the Supermarine Spitfire and Hawker Typhoon.
On 15 October 1946, the Belgian military aviation was turned into an autonomous force, independent of the Belgian Army.
During the Cold War, the Belgian Air Force operated the following aircraft:
Aircraft | Origin | Description | Variants | Operated | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aero Commander 560F | United States | Twin-engined light transport | 560F | 1 | 1961 to 1973 as royal transport |
Airspeed Consul | United Kingdom | Twin-engined light transport | 4 | Used from 1948 in Belgian Congo. | |
Airspeed Oxford | United Kingdom | Twin-engined light transport | 20 | Operated between 1947 and 1954. | |
Auster AOP6 | United Kingdom | Single-engine light observation aircraft, | 22 | Operated between 1947 and 1955. | |
Avro Anson | United Kingdom | Twin-engined light transport | 15 | Operated between 1946 and 1954. | |
Avro-Canada CF-100 Canuck | Canada | Twin-jet interceptor | Mk 5 | 53 | Operated from 1957 into the mid 1960s. |
Boeing 727-200 | United States | Three-engined jet airliner | 727-29C | 2 | Operated from 1975. |
Dassault Mirage 5 | France Belgium | Jet fighter-bomber and reconnaissance | 5BA
5BD 5BR |
63
16 27 |
Operated from 1970. 3 were built in France |
Dassault Falcon | France | Twin-engined light jet transport | 20E | 2 | Operated from 1973. |
de Havilland Tiger Moth | United Kingdom | Biplane trainer | 15 | Operated from 1946. | |
de Havilland Dominie | United Kingdom | Biplane transport | 7 | Operated from 1946. | |
de Havilland Mosquito | United Kingdom | Twin-engined piston light fighter-bomber | TT3
NF30 |
7
24 |
Operated from 1947 as target tugs and night fighters. |
de Havilland Canada Chipmunk | Canada | Single-engined piston trainer | 2 | For evaluation from 1948. | |
Alpha Jet | Germany/ France | Ground attack | Alpha Jet B | 33 | co designed and build by SABCA |
Douglas C-47 Dakota | United States | Passenger/troop transport | 41 | Operated in various roles between 1946 and 1976. | |
Douglas DC-4 | United States | Four-engined piston airliner | 2 | Operated from 1950 to 1969. | |
Douglas DC-6 | United States | Four-engined piston airliner | 4 | Operated from 1954 to 1971. | |
Fairchild C-119 Flying Boxcar | United States | Twin-engined troop or cargo transport | C-119F
C-119G |
46 | Operated from 1952 to 1973. |
Fouga Magister | France Germany | Jet trainer | CM.170R | 50 | Operated from 1960 |
SABCA F-16 | Belgium United States | Fighter | F-16A
F-16B |
136
24 |
Built under licence in Belgium and the Netherlands. |
Gloster Meteor | United Kingdom | Jet fighter | F4
T7 F8 NF11 |
48
43 260 24 |
Operated from 1949 some built in Belgium and the Netherlands |
Hawker Hurricane | United Kingdom | Piston fighter | II | 3 | Operated from 1946 |
SABCA Hunter | Belgium United Kingdom | Jet fighter | F4
F6 |
148
144 |
Operated from 1956 all built in Belgium under licence |
Hawker Siddeley 748 | United Kingdom | Twin-engined transport | 2A | 3 | Operated from 1976 |
Lockheed T-33 | United States | Single engine jet | T-33A
RT-33A |
38
1 |
Operated from 1952 |
SABCA F-104 Starfighter | Belgium United States | Multi-role jet | F-104G
TF-104G |
100
12 |
Operated from 1963, Belgian-built |
Miles Magister | United Kingdom | Single-engines trainer | 1 | Operated from 1946 to 1948 | |
Miles Martinet | United Kingdom | Single-engined target tug | 11 | Operated from 1947 to 1953 | |
North American Harvard | United States | Basic trainer | Various | 173 | Operated in Belgian Kongo |
Percival Proctor | United Kingdom | Single-engined liaison | IV | 6 | Operated from 1947 |
Percival Pembroke | United Kingdom | Twin-engined light transport | C51 | 12 | Operated from 1954. |
Republic F-84 Thunderjet | United States | Single-engined fighter-bomber | F-84E
F-84G |
213 | Operated from 1951 |
Republic F-84F Thunderstreak | United States | Single-engined fighter-bomber | F-84F | 197 | Operated from 1955 |
Republic RF-84F Thunderflash | United States | Single-engined reconnaissance | RF-84F | 34 | Operated from 1955 |
SIAI-Marchetti SF.260 | Italy | Single-engined trainer | SF.260MB | 36 | Operated from 1969 |
Stampe SV.4 | Belgium
France |
Biplane trainer | SV-4B
SV-4C |
20
45 |
Operated from 1948 |
Supermarine Spitfire | United Kingdom | Piston-engined fighter | IX and XVI | 181 | Operated from 1945 |
Swearingen Merlin | United States | Twin-engined light transport | Merlin 3A | 6 | Operated from 1976 |
Westland Sea King | United Kingdom | Rescue helicopter | Mk 48 | 5 | Operated from 1976 |
At the beginning of the 1990s, the end of the Cold War caused the Belgian government to restructure the Belgian Armed Forces in order to cope with the changed threats. The Belgian Air Force was hit hard and saw its strength more than halved with the disbanding of the 3rd Tactical Wing in Bierset (1994); the disbanding of the 1st Fighter Wing in Beauvechain; the 9th Training Wing in Sint-Truiden Air Base; and the Elementary Flying School in Goetsenhoven (1996).
In 2002, the Belgian government decided to emulate Canada and impose a "single structure" on its armed forces in which the independent Belgian Air Force ceased to exist. The former Air Force became the Air Component (COMOPSAIR) of the Belgian Armed Forces. COMOPSAIR consists of the 2nd Tactical Wing in Florennes Air Base and the 10th Tactical Wing in Kleine Brogel Air Base, both flying F-16s in four squadrons. Out of the 160 F-16s originally bought by Belgium, only 105 were upgraded; with further reductions to 72 aircraft in 2005; and planned to 60 by 2015. The 1st Wing (Belgium) at Beauvechain Air Base is assigned for the training of pilots, using the piston-powered Aermacchi SF.260 for elementary training, and the Alpha Jet for advanced training. Advanced combat training is done on F-16's at Kleine Brogel.
COMOPSAIR still operates the Lockheed C-130 Hercules in the 15th Air Transport Wing based at Melsbroek Air Base, planning to replace them by seven Airbus A400M transport planes. VIPs are transported with Embraer 135/145 jets, Dassault 20/900, and the Airbus A310. The Sea King helicopters and the Alouette III SAR helicopters will be active for years. They will be replaced by NH-90s (10: 4 NFH + 6 TTH).
In 2004, as part of the unified structure, the Army Aviation units of the Wing Heli were transferred to the COMOPSAIR. These contain the Agusta A109 attack helicopter, and the Alouette II training and recce helicopter.
In 2005, the Belgian Alpha Jets moved to Cazaux in France to continue the Initial Operational Training, while the Advanced Jet Training is done on French Alpha Jets at Tours.
Within the framework of its commitments within the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, NATO, Belgium has assigned its 72 F-16s to NATO purposes. Two squadrons with a total of 16 aircraft have been designated for use by the Rapid Reaction Forces.
In February 2008, Defense Minister Pieter De Crem announced that due to increasing problems and poor serviceability, the two A310s were to be replaced as soon as possible by two aircraft in the same class. An Airbus A330 was dry-leased to take their place.
On September 1, 2010, the Wing Heli was disbanded and the Agusta A109 helicopters moved to Beauvechain Air Base to become 1st Wing. The SF260 squadrons became the Basic Flying Training School.
On May 24, 2011, it was reported that the two retired Airbus A310 aircraft have been sold to the Brussels-based company MAD Africa for the amount of 700,000 euros. The company then sold them on to the Dutch Van Vliet transport company, who in their turn will transfer the aircraft to an as yet unspecified Abu Dhabi-based operator.
In January 1991, 18 Mirage 5 aircraft of the 3rd Tactical Wing were deployed to Turkey's Diyarbakır air base. During this operation, Belgian planes carried out several flights along the Iraqi border. After this operation the obsolete Mirage 5's were phased out.
On 15 July 1996, a C-130 with serial CH-06 carrying 37 members of the Dutch Army Fanfare Band and four crew crashed at Eindhoven after a birdstrike while executing a go-around, resulting in the loss of power to three engines. 34 Dutch soldiers were killed, and only 7 survived.
From October 1996, the Belgian Air Force cooperated with the Dutch Royal Air Force in the Deployable Air Task Force in patrolling former Yuguslavian airspace. F-16's of the 2nd and 10th Tactical Wings, operating from the Italian bases of Villafranca and Amendola, were assigned to missions insuring the control of a No-Fly Zone over Yugoslavia, and providing the air support necessary for UN and NATO troops. Between March 24 and June 10, 1999, 12 Belgian F-16s carried out 679 combat sorties - the first time since the second World War that Belgian aircraft took part in active war operations in enemy territory - against Serbia during the Kosovo crisis. The last Belgian F-16 detachment left Italy in August 2001.
On 29 March 2004, four F-16's from Kleine Brogel were transferred under NATO's Baltic Air Policing mission to the Šiauliai Air Base in Lithuania for three months, where they were employed in monitoring the Lithuanian, Latvian, and Estonian skies.
In 2005, the Helicopter Wing (WHeli - HeliW) deployed 4 A-109 (including 1 Medevac) in Bosnia (Tuzla). In July, four F-16's deployed to Afghanistan to support the NATO International Security Assistance Force.[1] At the same, the 80 UAV Sqn deployed its B-Hunter in Bosnia (Tuzla) for a four months period: 52 persons, 6 B-Hunter and 4 GCS. [2]
On 9 September 2005, an F-16 crashed near Vlieland, Netherlands, killing its pilot.
In 2006, Belgian Hunter unmanned air vehicles deployed to the Democratic Republic of the Congo as part of the EU EUFOR peacekeeping mission. At the same time, the Helicopter Wing (WHeli - HeliW) deployed 3 A-109 (including 1 Medevac) in Bosnia (Mostar), Operation codeword "Blue Bee". [3]
On 5 May 2006, a Belgian C-130 "Hercules" undergoing updating at the Sabena Technics was destroyed when the hangar that it was in burned to the ground. The Belgian Air Force announced its intention to acquire a secondhand C-130 to replace the one lost in the fire. A month later, the Air Component acquired a C-130E from the American operator Evergreen (serial N130EV, to become CH13).
On 1 December 2006 the Belgian Air Force deployed again under Baltic Air Policing mission four F-16 MLU aircraft to Šiauliai Air Base in Lithuania, to defend the airspace of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.[21]
From August 2008, four F-16s will be deployed to Kandahar in Afghanistan in support of the Dutch land forces.[22]
On 27 June 2008 an Agusta A109 helicopter crashed in Halleux. The pilot, co-pilot, a doctor and a nurse were injured.
On 27 July 2009 an F-16 fighter jet flying a practice mission over Germany accidentally dropped a non-explosive practice bomb into woods near the small town of Lastrup. There were no casualties.[23]
in March 2011, Belgium deployed 6 F-16 Fighters to Araxos in Greece, in support of operation: Odyssey Dawn, to support the NATO operations over Libya. the aircraft were already at the base as part of a joint exercise and were transferred to NATO command. as of June 2011, the aircraft have flown over 1000 hours over Libya and attacked various military instalations and targets, without causing any collateral damage to the civilian population.
On 12 September 2011 a wikileaks document showed a diplomatic cable from the American ambassador and the Minister of Defence Pieter De Crem that Belgium is interested to buy off-the-shelf Lockheed F-35 Lightnings by 2020.
Aircraft | Origin | Type | Versions | In service[24] | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fighter Aircraft | ||||||
SABCA F-16 Fighting Falcon | Belgium | Multirole fighter | F-16AM
F-16BM |
50
10 |
MLU versions license-built and developed by SABCA |
|
Trainers | ||||||
Aermacchi SF.260 | Italy | Propeller-driven trainer | SF.260D
SF.260M |
9
25 |
||
SABCA Alpha Jet | Belgium | Jet trainer | Alpha Jet 1B+ | 29 | Based in France for joint training with French Air Force | |
Helicopters | ||||||
Aérospatiale SA 316 Alouette III | France | Light utility helicopter | SA 316B | 3 | Mainly used by Belgian Navy | |
Agusta A109 | Italy | Light recce/attack helicopter | A109
A109A |
12
15 |
||
NHI NH90 | European Union | Transport helicopter | NFH
TTH |
8 to be delivered by 2012 (4 NFH & 4 TTH) + 2 optional TTH | ||
Westland Sea King | United Kingdom | Search and rescue helicopter | Mk.48 | 4 | One has been retired, the remaining helicopters will stay in service till the NH90 arrives in 2012 | |
Transports | ||||||
Airbus A330 | European Union | VIP/troop transport aircraft | A330-322 | 1 | Replaced one Airbus A310 as of October 23, 2009, the aircraft has been dry-leased from Portuguese operator Hi Fly and will retain its civilian registration (CS-TMT). | |
Airbus A400M | European Union | Medium transport aircraft | A400M | 7 | the Belgians have 7 aircraft on order, with deliveries expected around 2018/2020[25] | |
Dassault Falcon 20 | France | Light transport aircraft | Falcon 20E-5 | 2 | ||
Dassault Falcon 900 | France | Light transport aircraft | Falcon 900B | 1 | ||
Embraer ERJ 135 | Brazil | Light transport aircraft | ERJ 135LR | 2 | ||
Embraer ERJ 145 | Brazil | Light transport aircraft | ERJ 145LR | 2 | ||
Lockheed C-130 Hercules | United States | Medium transport aircraft | C-130H | 11 | ||
UAV | ||||||
RQ-5 Hunter (B-Hunter) | Israel | Reconnaissance UAV | MQ-5B | 6 aircraft and two ground control stations |
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