Английская Википедия:Air force ground forces and special forces
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:More citations needed
Air force ground forces and special forces are the land warfare forces of an air force. They may include infantry, special forces, security forces, and military police. Airmen assigned to such units may be trained, armed and equipped for ground combat and special operations.
Rationale
Traditionally the primary rationale for air force ground forces is for force protection. Aircraft are most vulnerable when on the ground, to offensive counter air operations, and most cannot operate without fixed infrastructure, consumables, and trained personnel. An adversary may hope to achieve air supremacy or protect itself from air attack first by attacking airbases, aircraft and other assets on the ground. Such attacks can be made by, for example, aircraft, cruise missiles and short range ballistic missiles. However, an adversary at a numerical, technological or other disadvantage may choose to attempt to disrupt flight operations by aiming to overrun or raid enemy air bases as early as possible, using blitzkrieg like tactics, for example Operation Barbarossa, or through the use of special forces and unconventional attacks, such as the Taliban raid on Camp Bastion.
To protect against attacks against airbases, and from being overrun, some air forces have a force dispersal doctrine that sees aircraft dispersed to secondary and emergency air bases, such as highway strips, and, as was the case with the Royal Air Force's vertical take off Harriers, dispersals in forest clearings or the Bas 60 and Bas 90 systems of the Swedish Air Force. However, when dispersed in such a way, aircraft and personnel are even more vulnerable to ground attacks.
To defend against ground attacks, most air forces train certain airmen in basic weapons handling skills and tactics; some train units as infantry.
Other than base and asset defence roles, air force ground forces may have other roles such as Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) defence, training other air force personnel in weapon skills and basic ground defence tactics, traditional combat operations, as well as providing leadership to other airmen in base defence roles. In addition to protecting their home bases and dispersals, air force ground forces will also provide force protection when air expeditionary forces are deployed abroad and of airheads during air bridge operations, usually being some of the first air force personnel on the ground.[1] Moving towards the special operations spectrum of operations, is assaulting, capturing and securing of airfields for use by one's own aircraft.[2]
Not all air forces possess their own ground units and whether or not they do or is sometimes due to other factors such as political considerations and inter-service rivalry. Such units act as a force multiplier allowing the secure operation of forward airbases and thereby increasing the availability and responsiveness of aviation assets.
Special forces
Some air forces also possess special forces, who perform roles on land in support of air force operations. These include units and individual personnel who operate independently or, with other military units.
The chief missions in such units are combat search and rescue, including rescuing downed aircrews in hostile territory; long-range reconnaissance, direct action and forward air control in support of air to ground operations, for example illuminating targets for attack by laser-guided bombs.
Other common roles include military weather forecasting, pathfinding, domestic counter terrorism and hostage rescue missions; capturing airbases, establishing advanced airfields and conducting air traffic control.
Doctrine
In most forces a layered approach is used to deliver a defense in depth. Peacetime doctrine is to maintain the integrity of the perimeter through the use of watch posts and/or remote sensors, and if deemed necessary patrols within the perimeter. In the event of the perimeter being penetrated, heavily armed and mobile fast response units, often using armored vehicles, will attempt to intercept, identify and if necessary suppress the incursion. If attackers manage to gain entry into the working areas of the airbase, by subterfuge or other means, then the role of air force ground forces is to remove them using close quarter battle.
Wartime doctrine, in for example the RAF Regiment and USAF Security Forces, sees the addition of another layer through the use of aggressive patrolling outside the perimeter to deter, detect and destroy would be attackers. The area around the airbase is mapped and prearranged fire plans are put in place to allow patrols to call down rapid and accurate indirect fire from attached mortars and other crew served weapons.
History
World War I
The Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS), one of the two British air arms that was amalgamated to create the RAF, operated an armoured car wing that grew in size to some 20 squadrons. Using at first unarmoured vehicles to pick up downed aircrew and for line of communications security duties, it was the RNAS which created the Rolls-Royce armoured cars, which it also used to raid and harass the Germans, thus beginning the tradition of RAF armoured car operations. These were then disbanded in 1915 and the vehicles transferred to the British Army.
World War II
During World War II, Luftwaffe doctrine was to operate as a tactical air force in support of the army providing air defence and close air support against ground targets. Due to political considerations all German air defences were placed in the hands of the Luftwaffe, and Luftwaffe Flak units were attached to army units to provide ground-based air defence. In addition to self-protection and air defence roles, these Luftwaffe troops, of for example the Flak Corps, were also called upon to use their Flak guns in fire support and anti-armour roles, and it was in the hands of Luftwaffe airmen that the German 88mm gun was first used against tanks.
Flying units were also expected to closely follow the advancing army and as such could be expected to encounter enemy combatants during counterattacks or who had not been cleared; because of this, all Luftwaffe personnel were trained to a higher level in infantry skills and tactics than was normal in other air forces of the time. Also because of political considerations German paratroopers, the Fallschirmjäger, were part of the air force. Later in the war with Germany facing a manpower shortage, rather than release its personnel to the German Army, Göring chose instead to create the Luftwaffe Field Divisions, using personnel surplus to the needs of flying operations; as cadre for these units, officers and non commissioned officers were transferred from the Flak and paratroop units.
One of the great successes of the German forces in World War II was the destruction of enemy air forces by over running them on the ground, and the use of airborne forces in advance and in support of ground operations. One of the vulnerabilities of this time was the loss of one's own airfields, which if captured would give the enemy the infrastructure needed to build an air-bridge, during the Battle of Crete the airfields were a key objective for the Germans, and their capture by paratroopers allowed their use by the gliders and transports of the main air landing force. The casualties in the Fallschirmjager were such that they were largely used as ground troops thereafter.
To guard against British airfields falling to German paratroops as Maleme had, Winston Churchill demanded that RAF airmen should be trained and equipped to defend themselves against ground attack. In a condemning memo to the Secretary of State for Air and to the Chief of the Air Staff dated June 29, 1941, Churchill stated he would no longer tolerate the shortcomings of the Royal Air Force (RAF), in which half a million RAF personnel had no combat role. He ordered that all airmen be armed and ready to "fight and die in defence of their airfields" and that "every airfield should be a stronghold of fighting air-ground men, and not the abode of uniformed civilians in the prime of life protected by detachments of soldiers".[3] Amongst the measures implemented were improvised armoured cars, such as the Armadillo or Bison, and pillboxes, most notably the Pickett-Hamilton fort, which could be raised to block a runway. However, rather than training all airmen as infantry on the German model, the RAF created instead the RAF Regiment.
During the planning of the second front which became the invasion of Normandy, it was foreseen that as the allied armies advanced, aircraft operating from airfields in England would be decreasingly effective and that to maintain air cover allied fighter squadrons would need to accompany the advancing divisions. The RAF Commandos were created to service aircraft from newly built or captured airfields. However, they were fully commando trained and because of the forward nature of their operations, they were expected to help secure, make safe and defend from counterattack the airfields from which they operated.
Vietnam
Шаблон:Main In the face of US air superiority, North Vietnam resorted to attacking the United States Air Force on the ground, with infiltrators striking from both within and outside the perimeter. The United States Air Force Security Police defended against them.
First formed during World War II, the United States Air Force Security Police were dramatically reduced in scope following the war. Post war the newly established United States Air Force (USAF) saw its primary role as a strategic one. Its base defense doctrine thus was one of security policing. United States involvement in Vietnam, however, brought a real and sustained threat of ground attack. To meet these threats the Phu Cat Air Base Security Forces pioneered the Air Base Ground Defense doctrine that informs USAF practice to this day.
In a demarcation of combat roles the United States Army was primarily responsible for security outside of airbases, and the Republic of Vietnam Air Force for patrolling the internal perimeter. However, rather than just rely upon static defense, the United States Air Force pioneered the use of remote detection equipment, such as seismic detectors and ground surveillance radar, to detect infiltrators. Rifle squads responded, mounted in heavily armed Cadillac Gage Commando and M113 armored personnel carriers.
List of air force ground and special forces units
- Шаблон:Flagicon Special Operations Group
- Шаблон:Flagicon Airfield Defence Guards
- Шаблон:Flagicon No. 4 Squadron RAAF
- Шаблон:Flagicon No. 41 Squadron BAF
- Шаблон:Flagicon Force Protection Squadron[4]
- Шаблон:Flagicon Air Force Infantry
- Шаблон:Flagicon Para-SAR
- Шаблон:Flagicon Agrupación Antisecuestros Aéreos
- Шаблон:Flagicon Comandos de Aviación
- Шаблон:Flagicon Infanteria de Aviación
- Шаблон:Flagicon PLAAF Airborne Corps
- Шаблон:Flagicon Agrupación de Comandos Especiales Aéreos
- Шаблон:Flagicon Czech Air Force Security Squadrons
- Шаблон:Flagicon Estonian Air Force Base Defense Operations Center[5]
- Шаблон:Flagicon Fusiliers Commandos de l'Air
- Шаблон:Flagicon German Air Force Regiment
- Шаблон:Flagicon Kampfretter
- Шаблон:Flagicon 31st Search and Rescue Operations Squadron[6] (special force)
- Шаблон:Flagicon Hellenic Air Force Police
- Шаблон:Flagicon Garud Commando Force
- Шаблон:Flagicon Bravo Detachment 90
- Шаблон:Flagicon Kopagsgat Quick Reaction Corps
- Шаблон:Flagicon Unit 669
- Шаблон:Flagicon Unit 5101
- Шаблон:Flagicon 16º Stormo (Battaglione Fucilieri dell'Aria - Air Force Fusiliers Battalion)
- Шаблон:Flagicon 17º Stormo Incursori (17th Raiders Wing)
- Шаблон:Flagicon Base Defense Development & Training Squadron
- Шаблон:Flagicon RMAF Special Force
- Шаблон:Flagicon Montenegrin Air Force Air Base Security Platoon
- Шаблон:Flagicon RNZAF Security Forces
- Шаблон:Flagicon Luchtvaarttroepen [1]
- Шаблон:Flagicon Nigerian Air Force Regiment
- Шаблон:Flagicon Royal Norwegian Air Force Base Defense Squadron
- Шаблон:Flagicon Special Service Wing
- Шаблон:Flagicon 710th Special Operations Wing
- Шаблон:Flagicon JW GROM
- Шаблон:Flagicon JW Komandosów
- Шаблон:Flagicon Polícia Aérea
- Шаблон:Flagicon 6th Search & Rescue Air Group
- Шаблон:Flagicon Combat Control Team
- Шаблон:Flagicon Escuadrón de Zapadores Paracaidistas (EZAPAC)
- Шаблон:Flagicon Escuadrón de Apoyo al Despliegue Aéreo (EADA)
- Шаблон:Flagicon Segundo Escuadrón de Apoyo al Despliegue Aéreo (SEADA)
- Шаблон:Flagicon Sri Lanka Air Force Regiment
- Шаблон:Flagicon Parachute Reconnaissance Company 17
- Шаблон:Flagicon Swedish Air Force Rangers
- Шаблон:Flagicon Swedish Air Force Force Protection (Flygbassäk)[7]Шаблон:Circular reference
- Шаблон:Flagicon RTAF Security Force Regiment
- Шаблон:Flagicon RTAF Special Operations Regiment
- Шаблон:Flagicon Combat Search and Rescue (Turkish Armed Forces)
- Шаблон:Flagicon RAF Regiment
- Шаблон:Flagicon Ukrainian Air Force Rifle Infantry Brigade (Consolidated)
- Шаблон:Flagicon United States Air Force Security Forces[8][9]
- Шаблон:Flagicon United States Air Force Air Support Operations Squadrons
- Шаблон:Flagicon United States Air Force Rescue Squadrons
- Шаблон:Flagicon United States Air Force Special Tactics Squadrons
- Шаблон:Flagicon United States Air Force Special Reconnaissance
- Шаблон:Flagicon Venezuelan Air Force Infantry (Infanteria Aeronautica de la Aviacion Militar)
- Шаблон:Flagicon Venezuelan Air Force Commandos (Grupos de Operaciones Especiales Aeroes)
Historic
- Шаблон:Flagicon Fallschirmjäger
- Шаблон:Flagicon 1st Fallschirm-Panzer Division Hermann Göring
- Шаблон:Flagicon Luftwaffe Field Divisions
- Шаблон:Flagicon Royal Air Force Commandos
- Шаблон:Flagicon it: Arditi distruttori della Regia Aeronautica (Destroyer Commando Royal Air Force)
- Шаблон:Flagicon Caçadores Paraquedistas
- Шаблон:Flagicon Air Force Air Defense Artillery and Security Guards Command
- Шаблон:Flagicon Unit 684
See also
References
External links
- The Air Force’s New Ground War Шаблон:Webarchive
- Current air base ground defense doctrine:are we postured to meet the expectations of AEF
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web page 22, Шаблон:ISBN
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Prime Minister to Secretary of State for Air and Chief of the Air Staff, 29 June 41. Included in appendix in Winston S. Churchill, The Grand Alliance: The Second World War, Volume 3, p 693. RosettaBooks, 2010. Шаблон:ISBN, 9780795311444
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ 31 Search & Rescue Operations Squadron
- ↑ sv:Flygbassäkerhetstjänst
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
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