Everything about The Swiss Air Force totally explained
The
Swiss Air Force (
Schweizer Luftwaffe,
Forces aériennes suisses,
Forze Aeree Svizzere) is the air component of the
Swiss Armed Forces. It was established on
July 31,
1914 but didn't become a separate service until
1936.
A report in the Swiss news magazine
FACTS reveals that the Swiss Air Force only provides ready-to-take-off aircraft during office hours – on working days. The air force staff declared that, due to financial limits, they're not operational all the time. The difficulty of defending Swiss airspace is illustrated by the small size of the country; the maximum extension of Switzerland is 348 km, a distance that can be flown in little over 20 minutes by commercial aircraft. Further, Switzerland's policy of neutrality means that they're unlikely to be deployed elsewhere.
Its primary front-line air-defence fleet consists of 33
F-18 Hornets (Squadrons: 11, 17, 18. 34 were originally bought, but one crashed) and 54 remaining
F-5 Tiger IIs (110 were originally purchased). In 2010 the Swiss Air Force intends to begin the retirement of the F-5 in the three squadrons (Patrouille Suisse, 8th, 19th) that use it and hopes to acquire a New Warplane/Neues Kampfflugzeug (NFK) as replacement. As with the earlier F/A-18 procurement conducted in the late 1990s, this is expected to prove a politically fraught procurement due to Switzerland's socialist, anti-army and green groups, which are all opposed to such purchases. The
Patrouille Suisse will need to change to a new aircraft, either the F/A-18 Hornet or the new fighter. The
Eurofighter Typhoon,
Dassault Rafale and the
Saab Gripen are being considered, with the
F/A-18E/F Super Hornet rumoured to having been discarded as a choice due to hangar-size discompatibilities.
In 2011 the Swiss Air Force will also be retiring its fleet of 60
Aérospatiale Alouette III, which will be replaced by
Eurocopter EC-635s. The first EC-635 was delivered on 12 March 2008.
The national aerobatic demonstration team of Swiss Air Force is the
Patrouille Suisse, which flies the
F-5 Tiger II aircraft.
History
1900 with the creation of an
observation balloon force that was eventually abolished in
1938. After trials with civilian aircraft, a rudimentary air force was established in
1914, coinciding with the outbreak of
World War I. Suffering from a lack of modern equipment, funding and attention by the military leadership, the air force played no part in the defence of neutral Switzerland during World War I and had little or no military value during the
1910s and
1920s.
This changed dramatically during the
1930s. Concerned with the fast-growing threat of modern air warfare and propelled by increasing popular support, caused in part by fear over the rise of
fascism in nearby countries, the government decided to embark on a rapid and thorough programme of modernisation. Some 450 modern aircraft were built or acquired up until
1940, including 90 state-of-the-art
Me-109 from Germany, and a network of
air defence positions was constructed. This consumed a billion
Swiss francs over the course of the decade, a staggering amount for the time. The air force became an independent branch of the armed forces in
1936.
Aircraft
On Order
2 Eurocopter EC 135 - for VIP transport
18 Eurocopter EC 635 - to replace the Alouette IIIs from 2010
6 Pilatus PC-21 - for advanced flying training
Airbases
The Swiss Air Force has nine air bases, the most important of these being Payerne, in western Switzerland. The others are the helicopter base at Alpnach, a dormant base at Buochs and several other bases at Bern, Dübendorf, Emmen, Meiringen, Sion and Locarno. However, the air force closed Mollis by January 2007, and Alpnach will be reduced in size.
Image:Meiringen air base mp3h0370.jpg|Meiringen air base
Further Information
Get more info on 'Swiss Air Force'.
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