Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Pakistan Army Aviation Corps

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Active
  
14 August 1947 -

Branch
  
Country
  
Pakistan

Type
  
Military aviation

Tanker
  
Harbin Y-12


Headquarters/Garrison
  
Army Aviation Command, Rawalpindi

Engagements
  
Transports
  
Aero Commander 500 family, Cessna Citation II, Mil Mi-17

Attack aircrafts
  
Bell AH-1Z Viper, IAR 330, TAI/AgustaWestland T129, Eurocopter Fennec

Similar
  
I Corps, Pakistan Army Arm, XI Corps, II Corps, XXX Corps

The Pakistan Army Aviation Corps (Urdu: ﺁرمى اويشن كور; Army Aviation Corps), abbreviated as Avn, is an active combatant military administrative staff corps tasked with carrying out the military air operations, and responsible for doctrine, manning and configuration for all aviation unit.

Contents

History

Originally formed by British Army Air Corps in 1942, the entire unit was transferred to Pakistan in 1947. The officers and personnel were part of the Air Observation Post who were deployed in support of Punjab Boundary Force. Later the entire group was stationed at Chaklala Air Force Base before the partition of India.

Initially part of PAF, the Corps was split into the new service and became part of Pakistan Army in 1958. The Corps of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering started to maintain the aircraft and helicopters given by the United States Army Aviation Branch, opening its own aviation school in 1959.

Since the 1960s, the corps expanded in momentum, manpower, and its operational scope has widened. By the 1970s, the Corps became a fighting air component of the Pakistan Army, with its attack helicopters becoming the backbone of military operations. The Corps has become an integral part of Pakistan Army's every imitated operations, and came to public and international notice in the 1970s after initiating, and successfully quelling, the serious civil war in Balochistan.

It is also a most decorated Corps of Pakistan Army, with more national citations and awards conferred and bestowed to this Corps than any combatant corps of Pakistan Army. Although it came into existence in 1947, the corps was given a full commission in 1977.

Combat operations

As for its war capabilities, the Corps has a long history; participating in every conflict and war with India, they also led and flew bombing and combat missions in the Afghanistan war, Somalian War, Sierra Leone war, Mozambique war, Sri Lankan war Bosnian war, and recently, the War in North-West Pakistan. The corps has actively participated in Siachin Conflict, Kargil Conflict and War on Terror. The daring pilots of Pakistan Army Aviation have conducted some of the most historic and difficult missions in Aviation history, in pursuit of which some of them laid down their lives. They are known for their professionalism for high altitude flying, combat, assault and rescue missions.

The Corps also initiated the non-combatant operations in 2005, when it led a massive airlift and re-location mission after the Kashmir earthquake. In 1991, the Corps was stationed in Bangladesh, where they completed its non-combat mission after the country was hit with a cyclone. Since its inception, the Corps has become a significant combatant arm of the Pakistan Army, poised for a definite and critical role be it peace or war.

Aircraft inventory

Pakistan Army operates over 270 helicopters alongside several fixed wing aircraft.

Pakistan will buy forty (40) T-129 multi-role attack helicopters. Both the sides had agreed on the agreement during the last meeting of defense ministers of the two countries. The T-129 is a multi-role, all-weather attack helicopter co-developed by Turkish Aerospace Industries and Agusta Westland. The aircraft is currently operated by the Turkish Army and is being offered for export to a number of other countries, besides Pakistan

Retired Aircraft

.

  • Auster 5
  • Auster AOP.6
  • Aerospatiale SA 315B Lama
  • Bell Model 47
  • Bell OH-13 Sioux
  • Bell Model 205
  • Cessna O-1 Bird Dog
  • Mil Mi-8 Hip
  • ISPR. "History of Pakistan Army Aviation". Retrieved 21 December 2011. 
  • References

    Pakistan Army Aviation Corps Wikipedia


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