Royal Australian Air Force Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
The Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) is Australia's air force. It is part of the Australian Defence Force.The RAAF began in March 1914 as the Australian Flying Corps and became a fully independent air force in March 1921.
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2 Future Equipment 3 Involvement in Hostilities 4 See also 5 External link |
Current Equipment
Future Equipment
This list include aircraft on order or a requirement which has been identified.
In June 2002 the Australian government shocked competitors in its Air 6000 fighter competition when it cancelled the programme and committed to the JSF. Eurofighter International were offering their Typhoon and Dassault their Rafale to replace the RAAF's F-111s and eventually the F/A-18s. The losing competitors argued that potential participation in the manufacture of their aircraft would far exceed any workshare in the JSF project. Recently however Australia has been pushing to be the site for a Pacific/Asian service centre for the F-35 to offer in-service support. 100 JSFs are expected in 2012.
Involvement in Hostilities
In World War II Australian squadrons served based in Great Britain. Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor and the beginning of the Pacific war saw the RAAF defending a threatened Australian mainland for the first time.
In the Korean War, Australian Gloster Meteor aircraft were flown in mainly ground support, combat air patrol, and escort missions. They sometimes faced Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15 opponents, a much more modern aircraft. Kill ratios were approximately 1-to-1. The Air Force also operated transport aircraft during the conflict.
In the Vietnam War, Australian English Electric Canberra bombers flew a large number of bombing missions. Two bombers were lost, one by a surface to air missile. Their crews were rescued. Additionally, a number of transport aircraft and helicopters supported Australian and American ground troops.
While military airlifts were conducted for a number of purposes in the intervening decades (for instance, in support of the peacekeeping operations in East Timor), Australia's combat aircraft were not used again in anger until the 2003 invasion of Iraq, where F/A-18's were used to fly bombing missions, as well as combat air patrol missions. A veil of secrecy still surrounds the details of their actions during this conflict, with some commentators grumbling that this was mainly for political reasons. See Operation Falconer for more details.
This is an Article on Royal Australian Air Force. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Royal Australian Air Force See also
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