Venezuelan Air Force
Bolivarian Venezuelan Military Aviation Aviación Militar Bolivariana Venezolana (AMBV)[1] |
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Venezuelan Air Force emblem
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Active | 22 June 1946 - Present |
Country | ![]() |
Allegiance | President of Venezuela |
Branch | Air Force of Venezuela |
Size | 202 aircraft |
Part of | Ministry of the Popular Participation for the Defense |
Patron | Our Lady of Loreto |
Motto | Spatium superanus palatinus (Latin: The paladin of the sovereign space) |
Colors | Bleu celeste |
March | Venezuelan Air Force Hymn (Himno de la Aviacion Militar Nacional) |
Anniversaries |
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Commanders | |
Commanding General of the Venezuelan Air Force | Major General Edgar Valentín Cruz Arteaga |
Insignia | |
Roundel | ![]() |
Aircraft flown | |
Attack | |
Electronic warfare |
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Fighter | |
Trainer | |
Transport |
The Bolivarian National Air Force of Venezuela/Venezuelan National Bolivarian Military Aviation, since the end of 2008: (Spanish) Aviación Militar Nacional Bolivariana de Venezuela (previously Fuerza Aérea Venezolana, FAV)[1] is a professional armed body designed to defend Venezuela's sovereignty and airspace. It is a service component of the National Armed Forces of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.
Contents
History
Most of the airbases in Venezuela were built in the 1960s as part of a massive expansion program. The main fighter types in those years were Venom, Vampire, and F-86. Bomber squadrons typically operated B-25 Mitchell aircraft. The 1970s and 1980s saw a considerable increase in capacity, mainly because the rising oil prices enabled the FAV to re-equip most of its units. The mixture of various aircraft types was maintained and Mirage IIIE and V, VF-5A and D, T-2D, OV-10A and E, T-27 were introduced. Venezuela was one of the first export customers for the F-16 which arrived in 1983 to equip the newly formed Grupo Aéreo de Caza 16 at El Libertador Airbase.[2][3]
In the 1992 Venezuelan coup d'état attempts, elements of the Venezuelan Air Force were key instigators of the rebellion. FAV units concentrated at El Libertador Air Base under the command of Brig. General Visconti seized control of the airbase and then launched an attack on the capitol. OV-10s, AT-27 Tucanos, and Mirage III fighters under his command bombarded targets in the capitol and loyalist air bases, destroying 5 CF-5 fighters on the ground. Two loyalist pilots escaped with F-16 fighters and shot down 2 OV-10s and 1 Tucano, claiming air superiority for the government . Two more rebel OV-10s were lost to ground fire. As the tables turned on the coup attempt, General Visconti and his allies fled in two C-130s, 2 Mirages, 1 OV-10 Bronco, and several SA.330 helicopters.[4]
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Modernization
The AMV purchased 24 Sukhoi Su-30 planes from Russia in July 2006, as a result of the United States embargo on spare parts for their F-16 force.[5] In 2008, Venezuela was reported for a potential acquisition of a number of Su-35 fighter aircraft and a second batch of aircraft 12-24 Sukhoi Su-30 from Russia.[6][7] It did not proceed further.
In October 2015, Venezuela announced the purchase of 12 more Su-30MK2 from Russia for $480 million.[8][9]
Combat organization
The current organization includes an Air Group 17 with Mil Mi-17[10]
List of Venezuelan Air Force bases
Major commands of the Venezuelan Air Force
The Venezuelan Air Force as a service branch of the National Armed Forces of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela is composed of the following Major Commands, with their respective commanders and subordinate units as of 2015:[citation needed]
- Air Force General Command
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- Commanding General, Venezuelan Air Force: Maj. Gen. Edgar Valentín Cruz Arteaga
- Air Force General Staff
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- Chief of the Air Staff: Divisional General Vinicio Mictotti Lanz
- Air General Inspectorate
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- Inspector General of the Venezuelan Air Force: Div. Gen. José Manuel Duque Marín
- Air Operations Command
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- Commanding General, Air Operations Command: Div. Gen. Pedro Juliac Lartíguez
- Air Defense Forces Command
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- Commanding General, Air Defense Forces Command: Div. Gen. Franklin Rafael Gil Espinoza
- Air Personnel Command
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- Commanding General, Air Personnel Command: Div. Gen. Nicolás Gustavo Seijas Arrieta
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- Aviation Infantry Corps
- Venezuelan Air Force Corps of Engineers
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- General Officer Commanding, VAF-CoE: Brigadier General José Gregorio Guédez
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- Air Force Police
- Air Education and Training Command
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- Commanding General, AETC: Div. Gen. Roman Antonio Moreno
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- Venezuelan Air Force Academy, Maracay
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- Superintendent, Venezuelan Air Force Academy: Brig. Gen. Ángel Eduardo Armas Tagliaferro
- Asisistant Superintendent, Venezuelan Air Force Academy: Col. Víctor Adrían Pérez Jauregui
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- Military Technical Academy - Air Branch, Maracay
- Venezuelan Air Force NCO School
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- Commandant of the VAF-NCOS: Brig. Gen. Ángelo Bruno D’Onofrio
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- Venezuelan National Armed Forces Air Training Center
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- Director of the ATC: Brig. Gen. Enzo Puglisi De Nisco
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- Air Power College
- Air Force Aerospace Medicine and Physical Training Center
- Venezuelan Air Force High School
- Air Mobility and Logistics Command, led by its Commanding General, Div. Gen. William Cestari Navarro
Aircraft inventory
As of December 2014[update], the Venezuelan Air Forces consists of the following aircraft models and numbers:[11]
Aircraft | Origin | Type | Versions | In service[11] | Notes |
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Fighter aircraft | |||||
Sukhoi Su-30MKV Flanker-G | Russia | multirole strike fighter | SU-30 MK2 | 23 | 24 originally delivered. One crashed during an intercept mission of an unidentified intruding aircraft from Colombia on 17 September 2015.[12] In October 2015, Venezuela announced the purchase of 12 more Su-30MK2 from Russia for $480 million.[13][14] |
Lockheed Martin F-16 Fighting Falcon | USA | fighter trainer |
F-16A/B Block 15OCU | 12 | 10 F16 A and 2 F16B |
Counter-insurgency | |||||
Hongdu K-8VV Karakorum | China | light attack/trainer | K-8VV | 22 |
-One was lost in an accident of 2010, a second one on Nov 27th 2012 during a ceremony on national television, and a third was lost during a night exercise on July 26, 2013.[15] |
Hongdu L-15 | China | light attack/trainer | L-15 | 0 | 24 on order. |
Trainer aircraft | |||||
Embraer EMB 312 T-27 Tucano | Brazil | trainer/light attack | EMB 312 T-27 | 12 | |
Aermacchi SF.260 | Italy | trainer | SF-260EV | 12 | |
SKYLANECessna 182 | USA | trainer | 182 SKYLANE | 12 | |
Diamond DA 40 | Austria | trainer | DA 40 | 0 | 36 on order.[citation needed] |
Quad City Challenger | USA | trainer | Quad City Challenger | 7 | |
Transport and aerial refueling | |||||
Boeing 707 | USA | transport/fuel Tanker | 1 | ||
Lockheed C-130 Hercules | USA | transport | C-130H | 4 | |
Shaanxi Y-8 | China | transport | Y-8F-200VV | 8 | Order completed Nov 2013.[16] |
Short 360 | UK | transport | 360-300 | 2 | |
Dornier Do 228 | GER | logistical support | 228 NG | 10 in order.[17][18] | |
Utility transport and VIP transport | |||||
Airbus A-319CJ | European Union | transport | A-319CJ | 1 | Presidential Aircraft (air force one) |
Boeing 737 | USA | VIP transport | 737-2N1 | 1 | |
Cessna Citation X | USA | VIP transport | Cessna Citation X | 1 | |
Dassault Falcon 50 | France | VIP | Falcon-50EX | 3 | |
Dassault Falcon 900 | France | VIP | Falcon 900 | 2 | |
Cessna 208B Grand Caravan | USA | transport air ambulance |
208B | 2 2 |
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Cessna Citation II | USA | transport | Citation II | 1 | |
Cessna T206H Stationair | USA | transport | T206H Stationair | 15 | |
Beechcraft B200 Super King Air | USA | transport;air ambulance | 4 | ||
Special operations | |||||
Dassault Falcon 20 | France | Electronic warfare VIP |
Falcon-20DC | 1 3 |
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Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner | USA | Electronic Warfare transport |
C-26B | 1 1 |
ELINT |
Helicopters | |||||
Eurocopter AS 332 Super Puma | France | transport helicopter | 8 | ||
Eurocopter AS 532 Cougar | France | AS-532AC AS-532UL |
transport VIP |
6 2 |
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Kazan Mi-17 | Russia | Transport helicopter | Mi-17V-5 Mi-171VIP |
5 2 |
6 Mi-17V-5; 2 Mi-171VIP purchased. One lost to crash.[when?][citation needed] |
Enstrom 480B | USA | trainer helicopter | Enstrom 480B | 16 in order.[citation needed] | |
UAV | |||||
Ghods Mohajer/Saint Arpia | Iran/ Venezuela | observation UAV | 12+[19] | 12 drones bought directly from Iran. More to be produced locally in Venezuela.[20] | |
Cavim ANT-3X Venezolano | Venezuela | observation UAV | 4 |
References
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External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Air force of Venezuela. |
- (Spanish) Sitio oficial de la Aviación Militar de Venezuela
- U.S. Arms Sales to Venezuela from the Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archives
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- ↑ 11.0 11.1 World Air Forces 2013 - Flightglobal.com, pg 30, December 11, 2012
- ↑ http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Venezuelan-Air-Force-Fighter-Jet-Crashes-near-Colombian-Border-20150918-0001.html
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ Venezuelan K-8W light fighter trainer crashes - Janes.com, 29 July 2013
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- Pages with reference errors
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with Spanish-language external links
- Articles with unsourced statements from October 2014
- Articles containing potentially dated statements from December 2014
- Vague or ambiguous time from March 2013
- Articles with unsourced statements from March 2013
- Commons category link is locally defined
- Use dmy dates from August 2010
- Military of Venezuela
- Air forces by country
- Aviation in Venezuela
- Military units and formations established in 1946
- Articles with dead external links from October 2014