Iraqi Army Aviation Command
| Iraqi Army Aviation Command | |
|---|---|
| قيادة طيران الجيش العراقي | |
| File:شعار طيران الجيش العراقي الجديد 2020.png Iraqi Army Aviation Insigna | |
| Active | 26 June 1980 |
| Country | File:Flag of Iraq.svg Iraq |
| Type | Army Aviation |
| Role | Tactical and logistical support of ground units |
| Part of | Iraqi Armed Forces |
| Command Headquarters | Baghdad |
| Equipment | Helicopters UAVs |
| Engagements | |
| Commanders | |
| Current commander | Major General Pilot Muhammad Abdul-Karim Aouni |
| Insignia | |
| Country Flag | File:Flag of Iraq.svg |
The Iraqi Army Aviation Command is the aviation branch of the Iraqi Ground Forces founded in 1980. It commands the helicopter class as well as the class of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). It is a completely separate force from the Iraqi Air Force, and its current commander is Maj. Gen. Muhammad Abdul-Karim Aouni.[1][2]
History
[edit | edit source]Origination Of Aviation Command
[edit | edit source]The Iraqi Army Aviation Command was formed after a split from the Iraqi Air Force in 1980.[citation needed]
The 1990s
[edit | edit source]After Iraq's military was destroyed in the Gulf War, and the Army Aviation Command lost much of its equipment in military operations. After the war, Iraq was unable to rebuild to its previous state of military power as a result of the United Nations' decision to blockade Iraq.
After 2003
[edit | edit source]After the United States and its allies invaded Iraq in 2003 and the civil administrator Paul Bremer, decided to dissolve and rehabilitate the Iraqi army. The Army Aviation Command was dissolved and most of the military, logistical equipment and infrastructure was dismantled. The United States then aided in the reconstruction of the Army Aviation Command and supplied it with the necessary military equipment, logistics and rehabilitation of army bases and airports.[citation needed]
Organization
[edit | edit source]Command
[edit | edit source]The Army Aviation Command Headquarters is located in Baghdad, Iraq.
Academies and training centers
[edit | edit source]Army Aviation College
The College of Aviation is one of the formations of the Army Aviation Command. The college habilitates, prepares and trains pilots in various specialized and military theory and skills, including navigation, flight theories, air conditioning, the English language, communications and various military lessons in order to prepare them to work in all squadrons and air bases and to continue performing their tasks in combating terrorism and defending Iraq. The college consists of five wings: Aviation, Teaching, Technical, Administration, supplies and Military Training.
Bases and airports
[edit | edit source]The Army Aviation Command uses military bases and airports scattered throughout Iraq.
Personnel
[edit | edit source]Army Aviation Command Commanders
[edit | edit source]| Military Rank | Name | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Lieutenant General Pilot | Hamed Atiya Al-Maliki | 2005-2020 |
| Lieutenant General Pilot | Samir Zaki Husayn Al-Maliki | 2020-2024 |
| Major General Pilot | Muhammad Abdul-Karim Aouni | 2024-present |
Ranks
[edit | edit source]The ranks of the army aviation force are the same as the standard armed forces ranks. Because the army's flight force is derived from the air force, it inherited the ranks of the air force and comes with epaulets of sky-blue color and below the epaulettes are two wings of an eagle (indicating the pilots). Technical officers, engineers and ground crews have the same rank form with the wings of an eagle. The wings of the eagle are on the red stripe in the case of the staff officer, the epaulettes used to be the olive drab or khaki of the Army but with wings.
Officers
[edit | edit source]Soldiers and Warrant officers
[edit | edit source]Soldiers and warrant officers in Army Aviation Command constitute are the ground crew, responsible for set and preparation of the aircraft on the flight line as well as ground guidance. they are not flying the aircraft, so the epaulette have no eagle's wings. The soldier's uniform does not contain epaulettes.
Equipment
[edit | edit source]Helicopters
[edit | edit source]This force reached its peak power at the end of the first Gulf War, when the commanding cadres numbered nearly 900 different helicopters. The armament of the Iraqi army was generally from the eastern bloc. As a result of the policies followed by the Iraqi state, most of the helicopters were Soviet. After 2003 the United States armed the Iraqi army aviation with American and Western helicopters.
In October 2012, it was reported that Iraq had signed a contract with Russia to purchase weapons, including approximately 30 Mil Mi-28 helicopters.[3] The agreement was confirmed on October 9.[citation needed] Part of the deal was later canceled due to the Iraqi parliament's condemnation of the deal on suspicion of corruption, but the Iraqi Defense Minister stated that "the deal will go ahead".[4] The contract was already signed and included the Mil Mi-28NE helicopters, and deliveries began in September 2013. Another 10 aircraft of the same model were delivered in January 2014.
The Army Aviation currently has 218 operational helicopters, including 40 attack helicopters, as follows:
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs)
[edit | edit source]| name | image | origin | type | number | notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UAV | |||||
| CH-5 | File:Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg China | MALE UCAV | Unknown[24][25] | ||
| CH-4 | File:Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg China | MALE UCAV | 1[26] | CH-4B | |
| Bayraktar TB2 | File:Flag of Turkey.svg Turkey | UCAV | 8 on order[27] | ||
Iraq has contracted for 14 CH-4 medium-altitude and long-range (M.A.L.E.) UAV from China, used for reconnaissance and treating targets using precision-guided missiles.
Losses of helicopters destroyed during the fight against ISIS
[edit | edit source]| Helicopters | origin | downed/
destroyed |
|---|---|---|
| Bell 407 | File:Flag of the United States.svg United States | 1 |
| Mil Mi-17 | 1 | |
| Mil Mi-28 | 1 | |
| Mil Mi-35M | File:Flag of Russia.svg Russia | 1 |
| Total | 4 |
References
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- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ "Baby Come Back: Iraq is Buying Russian Weapons Again". defenseindustrydaily.com, 12 November 2012. Archived 2017-09-25 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Iraq to go ahead with billion-dollar Russian arms deal". Globalpost.com, 10 November 2012. Archived 2016-04-22 at the Wayback Machine
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