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Revision as of 18:20, 2 January 2018

Hungarian Air Force
Hungarian Air Force emblem
Founded1918; 106 years ago (1918)
Country Hungary
AllegianceHungarian Defence Forces
TypeAir force
RoleAerial warfare
Size3,500 active duty personnel
Garrison/HQBudapest
Colorsred, white, green
Anniversariesaugust 15.
Commanders
Current
commander
Brigadier General Albert Sáfár
Insignia
Roundel
Low visibility roundel
Aircraft flown
FighterSaab JAS 39 Gripen
TrainerZ-242L
TransportAntonov An-26, Mil Mi-8, Mil Mi-17,

The Hungarian Air Force (Template:Lang-hu) is the air force branch of the Hungarian Defence Forces.[1]

The task of the current Hungarian Air Force is primarily defensive purposes. The flying units of the air force are organised into a single command; under the Air Command and Control Centre[2]

Air bases

There are 3 Air Force bases (AFB) in Hungary.

Air wings

  • 59th "Szentgyörgyi Dezső" Tactical Wing (59. " Szentgyörgyi Dezső" Harcászati Repülőbázis) based at Kecskemét AFB
    • 'Puma' Tactical Squadron ('Puma' Harcászati Repülőszázad) - 14 JAS-39 Gripen
    • Transport Plane Squadron (Szállító Repülőszázad) - 2 An-26
  • 86th "Szolnok" Helicopter Base (86. Helikopter Bázis) based at Szolnok AFB.
    • Transport Helicopter Battalion (Szállitóhelikopter Zászlóalj) - 5 Mi-8, 5 Mi-17
    • Attack Helicopter Battalion (Harcihelikopter Zászlóalj) (Disbanded)
    • Mixed Training Squadron (Vegyes Kiképző Repülőszázad) - 2 AS350, 2 Z-242L
  • 12th Air Defense Missile Regiment (12. Légvédelmi Rakétaezred)
  • Pápa AFB 3 C-17 Globemaster III

59. "Szentgyörgyi Dezső" Tactical Wing

JAS 39 of the Hungarian Air Force

The 59th Tactical Fighter Wing is the fixed-winged part of the Air Force. The 59th consists of 2 Fighter plane Squadrons and 1 Transport Squadron.

Tactical Squadron

There are one Fighter Squadron in the 59th Wing, the "Puma" [cougar] squadron. Operating JAS-39C Gripens.[3]

The Hungarian Air Force is leasing-buying 14 JAS 39 Gripens, 2 of which are dual-seaters, for 12 years beginning in 2006 (later extended until 2026). By December 2007 all the 14 jets had been delivered.[4] On May 19, 2015 one two-seater Saab JAS39D Gripen crashed at the end of the runway at the Čáslav AFB. The pilots ejected safely, but the aircraft, nr. 42 with callsign PUMA66 was written off, damaged beyond repair.[5]

After the lease period expires, Hungary will own the remaining Gripens.

Transport Squadron

This is the transport squadron of the 59th Wing. They operate 5 An-26.

Hungarian Air Force Saab JAS39D Gripen at RIAT 2009

The An-26s are due to be replaced by new transport planes after 2017.

86th "Szolnok" Helicopter Wing

The 86th Wing is the helicopter regiment of the Hungarian Air Force. The 86th consists of one Transport and one Attack battalion.

Transport Helicopter Battalion

This is the transport helicopter battalion of the 86th Wing. They operate:

Combat Helicopter Battalion

This is the attack helicopter battalion of the 86th Wing. This unit has recently been disbanded and a new regiment, in combination with the transport helicopters, will be formed. In April 2017, the defense minister stated that he was going to put the helicopter into service again. They operated:

Mixed Training Squadron

This is the training squadron of the Air Force. This squadron is already based at Szolnok AFB again. They operate:

12th Air Defense Missile Brigade

The 12th Air Defense Missile Brigade is in charge of providing air defense to parts of Hungary.

  • 2K12 Kub. Mobile Surface-to-air missile battlefild (SAM) system. (To be refurbished with modernized Buk missile or replaced entirely with the US Patriot system, provided the economic situation allows procurement.)
  • Mistral missiles, a French-made lightweight SAM system with dual launchers and radar sets mounted on Unimog all-terrain vehicles.
  • 36D6 Tin Shield. All-altitude surveillance radar, modernized with domestically developed digital electronics suite.

During the Cold War period communist Hungary had numerous SA-2, SA-3, SA-4 and SA-5 batteries and a large number of radar installations, mostly tasked with defending the Danube line against NATO air strikes.

54th "Veszprém" Radar Regiment

Pápa AFB

Pápa Air Force Base was established as a military organization on 1 July 2001 as a part of national commitments in the NATO Infrastructural Development Program, and it is the legal successor of the HDF 47th Pápa Tactical Fighter Regiment.


Aircraft

A JAS39C on life off
A Hungarian Mi-17 on display

Current inventory

Aircraft Origin Type Variant In service Notes
Combat aircraft
JAS 39 Gripen Sweden multirole JAS 39C 11[6]
Transport
Antonov An-26 Ukraine transport 1
Airbus A319-112 Multinational transport 2[7]
Helicopter
Mil Mi-17 Russia utility Mi-8/17 14[6]
Mil Mi-24 Russia combat and light transport Mi-24 V/P 12[8] They are all currently overhauled by Russia
Eurocopter AS350 France liaison 2[6]
Trainer aircraft
JAS 39 Gripen Sweden conversion trainer JAS 39D 2[6]
Zlin Z-242 Czech trainer 2[9] Delivered 24th March 2017
Zlin Z-143 Czech liaison 2

Three C-17 Globemaster III’s are stationed at Pápa Air Base in Hungary to support NATO’s Strategic Airlift Capability operations.[10]

Aircraft markings

The Hungarian aircraft marking is a set of aligned triangles which points toward the front of the aircraft. They are the same colour as the Hungarian flag, red, white, and green. The innermost triangle is green, follow by white, and then red. It is displayed on the side of helicopters and in the standard four wing positions on aircraft. It was used by the Royal Hungarian Air Force until 1942, and then reinstated after the Second World War. The new Gripen fighters will wear a NATO standard compliant grey-on-grey (low-visibility) version of the Hungarian triangle insignia.

History

1918 to Pre–World War II

Following the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy in 1918, a small air arm was established operating surviving aircraft from Hungarian factories and training schools. This air arm became the Hungarian Red Air Force under the short lived Hungarian Soviet Republic, but was disbanded upon its downfall.[11]

World War II

Royal Hungarian Air Force Junkers Ju-86s, 1942

Under the Treaty of Trianon (1920), Hungary was forbidden from owning military aircraft. However, a secret air arm was gradually established under the cover of civilian flying clubs. During 1938, as a result of the Bled agreement, the existence of the Royal Hungarian Air Force (Template:Lang-hu), was made known. The army's aviation service was reorganized and expanded.

Late 1938 the army aviation was once again reorganized. Admiral Horthy, the head of state, ordered that the army aviation should become an independent service effective January 9, 1939. Colonel Ferenc Feketehalmi Czeydner became the Air Section Chief in the Honvéd Ministry; Major General Waldemar Kenese became Inspector of the Air Force; Colonel Ferenc Szentnémedy became Chief-of-Staff, and Colonel László Háry was appointed head of the Magyar Királyi Honvéd Légierő (MKHL).

It subsequently participated in clashes with the newly established Slovak Republic and in the border confrontation with the Kingdom of Romania. In April 1941, operations were conducted in support of the German invasion of Yugoslavia and, on 27 June 1941, Hungary declared war on the Soviet Union.

In 1940, the decision was made to unite the Air Force, the anti-aircraft forces, and the civilian air defense organizations under one central headquarters. Colonel László Háry was retired 24.12.1940, and on 01.03.1941 the new organization was constituted. General András Littay became Air Sub-Department Chief, and Colonel Géza Vörös was appointed Head of the Air General Staff. On 01.06.1941, the Air Defense Corps was established, and Lieutenant General Béla Rákosi[12] became Commander of Army Aviation. In effect the Air Force had once again become part of the Army.

In the summer of 1942, an air brigade was attached to the Luftwaffe's VIII. Fliegerkorps on the Eastern Front. Beginning March 1944, Allied bomber raids began on Hungary and progressively increased in intensity. Late in 1944 all efforts were redirected towards countering the advancing Red Army, but to no avail. All fighting in Hungary ended on 16 April 1945.[11]

Post–World War II to Present

A small air arm was organised along Soviet lines during 1947. Following the communist takeover, Russian military aid was stepped up and a major expansion program initiated. When Soviet forces invaded to suppress the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, sections of the Hungarian Air Force attacked Soviet forces and resisted Russian attempts to occupy their bases. The resistance was short-lived and the entire Hungarian air force was demobilized soon after. A reconstituted air arm was reformed in the following year, but initially only as an internal security force. Gradually, starting in 1959 as Hungary became stable, the air force was expanded again, but it remained an integral part of the army and was essentially a defensive force. The Soviets kept Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-29s based at Tokol until 1991 to defend Hungarian airspace.

In mid-1993, three batches of MiG-29s were delivered from Russia. They were based at Kecskemet. In 1994, a German gift of 20 MIL 24D/V's and 20 L-39's were donated. In 1997, Hungary undertook its first flying training course since 1956. The cost of the course was too high and was halted after the completion of only one course. Also in 1997 the MIG-23s were withdrawn from service as the Su-22s were retired after an overhaul. During the 1990s all combat aircraft were fitted with new Identification Friend or Foe (IFF) systems to enable operations in Western airspace. In April 2002, Hungary joined the NATO Flying Training in Canada (NFTC) pilot training program.[11]

Museums

The 86th "Szolnok" Helikopterezred maintains the Museum of Hungarian Aviation, which has the largest collection of "retired" military aircraft in Hungary. Some aircraft are also displayed at the Kecel Military History Park.

Insignias

References

  1. ^ "The Military Balance: Vol 117, No 1". www.tandfonline.com.
  2. ^ "Scramble". Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  3. ^ "Hungarian Gripens police Slovenia". AIRheads↑FLY. Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  4. ^ "Hungarian Gripens get CAS role". AIRheads↑FLY. Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  5. ^ Ranter, Harro. "Saab JAS 39D Gripen 42 Accident, 19 May 2015". aviation-safety.net.
  6. ^ a b c d "World Air Forces 2017". Flightglobal Insight. 2017. Retrieved 4 April 2017.
  7. ^ "Itt a bejelentés: két Airbust vesz a Magyar Honvédség". MNO. 20 December 2017. Retrieved 20 December 2017.
  8. ^ "JAVÍTÁSRA SZÁLLÍTOTTÁK A MI–24-ESEKET". Magyar Idok. 24 November 2017. Retrieved 20 December 2017.
  9. ^ "Korszerű kiképzőgépekkel gyarapodik a légierő". 23 March 2017.
  10. ^ "Strategic Airlift Capability (SAC)". www.nato.int. Retrieved 8 April 2017.
  11. ^ a b c "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 11 February 2006. Retrieved 17 February 2006. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. ^ "Biography of Lieutenant-General Béla Rákosi (1889 – 1968), Hungary". www.generals.dk.
  • Dorschener, Jim. "Hungary's Fleet Revolution". Air International, Vol. 86, No. 2. February 2014. pp. 72–75. ISSN 0306-5634.

Further reading

  • World Air Power Journal No.3 p. 150
  • World Air Power Journal No.14 p. 148
  • Air Forces Monthly June 1997