fbpx
Wikipedia

Colombian Navy

The Colombian Navy, officially the Colombian National Navy (Spanish: Armada Nacional de la República de Colombia), also known as the "Armada Nacional" or just the "Armada" in Spanish, is the naval branch of the military forces of Colombia. The Navy is responsible for security and defence in the Colombian zones of both the Atlantic (Caribbean) and Pacific oceans, the extensive network of rivers inside the country, and a few small land areas under its direct jurisdiction.

Colombian Navy
Armada de la República de Colombia
Coat of arms of the Colombian Navy
FoundedJuly 24, 1823[1]
Country Colombia
TypeNavy
RoleNaval warfare
Protection of the seas and rivers of Colombia
Size35,086 As of September 2013[2]
~13,000 Officers & sailors
~22,000 Marine Infantry
Motto(s)Plus Ultra (Latin: further beyond)
March"Viva Colombia, soy marinero"
AnniversariesJuly 24
EngagementsBattle of Lake Maracaibo
Thousand Days War (Civil war)
Colombia-Peru War
World War II
Korean War
Colombian Armed Conflict
Operation Atalanta[3]
Commanders
Current
commander
Admiral Gabriel Pérez Garcés
Notable
commanders
José Prudencio Padilla
Insignia
Naval ensign
Naval jack
Flag
Standard

The Colombian Navy has a strength of 35,086 personnel as of September 2013 including approximately 22,000 in the Marine Infantry corps.[2]

The acronym "ARC", (Spanish: Armada de la República de Colombia) is used both as the official ship prefix for all the Colombian Navy ships, as well as a common short name for the Navy itself.

Mission

"Protecting the blue of our flag"

As stated in its institutional site, the mission of the Colombian Navy is:

Contribute with the defense of the Nation through the effective use of flexible naval power in the maritime, river and land spaces under its responsibility, in order to fulfill the constitutional role and participate in the development of sea power and the protection of the interests of Colombians". [4]

In order to accomplish its mission, the Colombian navy establishes four strategic objectives:[5]

  1. Protection of the population and resources and consolidation of territorial control.
  2. Neutralization of illegal drug trafficking.
  3. Strategic deterrence.
  4. Maritime and riverine safety.

In addition to functions of security and defense the Navy is called to participate in missions aimed to ensure the integral use of the sea by the Nation. For this purpose it must fulfill both military and diplomatic activities along with implementation and enforcement of law and order.

Its formal motto has been historically, "Plus Ultra" (Latin: further beyond); but more recently, and as part of a public media campaign in the 2000s, the additional slogan "Protecting the blue of our flag" (Spanish: Protegemos el azul de la bandera) became known and has been adopted institutionally as well, perhaps as a result of being a more relatable catchphrase to the public than the formal Latin motto.

Its former slogan was "Sailing our pride" (Spanish: Navega nuestro orgullo).

History

The history of the Colombian Navy is closely tied to, and somewhat reflects the history of Colombia itself: from its birth at the Declaration of Independence from Spain, the subsequent ups and downs throughout a later 19th century rife with civil wars, a 20th-century where it slowly starts asserting itself only to be challenged by the internal conflict and drug traffic of the later decades, to a Navy that is now reaching a more mature and modern shape, much like the country it protects.

19th century and origins

 
"Acción del Castillo de Maracaibo " Painting by José María Espinosa Prieto (1796–1883)

The Colombian Navy celebrates its birthday on July 24, the anniversary of the Battle of Lake Maracaibo fought on July 24, 1823, which was the last large naval battle of the Spanish American wars of independence and helped cement the South American independence. But the roots of the Navy can be traced 13 years back, to 1810, just a few weeks after the Colombian Declaration of Independence of July 20, 1810. The president of the Supreme Board of Cartagena, José María García de Toledo, created the Naval Command Office (Spanish: Comandancia General de Marina) by means of a decree dated September 17, 1810. The Navy was placed under the command of Captain Juan Nepomuceno Eslava, junior son of the (former) Spanish Viceroy Sebastián de Eslava. During this period, the young navy operated mostly with small schooners, either acquired directly or by providing letters of marque to friendly captains which then operated as part or on behalf of the navy. Some of these captains would obtain later renown during the independence war, like Luis Brión and Renato Beluche. This small navy was effective in limited operations intercepting Spanish ships, but was not strong enough to attack port cities, as evidenced by the failed attacks to Santa Marta (1813) and Portobello (1814).

During 1815, a Spanish army headed by Pablo Morillo besieged Cartagena, as the first step of its "Pacifying Expedition" (Spanish: Expedición Pacificadora). The five-month siege was so harsh that earned the city its title of "Heroic" (Spanish: La Heróica). The small independent navy was impotent against the large fleet commanded by Morillo, but nevertheless managed some daring actions, in particular that of Luis Brión, who attempted to run the blockade with his corvette Dard with a load of guns and powder to the city before fleeing again to Haiti. In 1816, Simón Bolívar attempted his first campaign, the Cayos expedition, sailing from Haiti with seven schooners and corvettes: Bolivar, Mariño, Piar, Constitución, Brión, Fénix, and Conejo.[6]: 47–48  But this expedition fizzled out due to infighting amongst its generals shortly after the liberation of Margarita Island.

It was only after the Liberation Campaign of 1819 that General Francisco de Paula Santander created the Naval School on June 28, 1822, and issued additional decrees for the provision of the navy. Admiral José Prudencio Padilla would go on reorganizing and building the fleet, to support Bolívar's plans for the campaign of Zulia and the complete liberation of the east. This fleet then engaged in the Battle of Lake Maracaibo, which crushed the Spanish naval aspirations in South America.

In 1824 the first – and only – eight cadet officers graduated from naval school. On March 3, 1826, the Ministry of the Navy was created, with Lino de Clemente as minister. By 1826, both from bought and captured vessels, the Colombian Navy had become a respectable force, commanding a relatively large number of ships, including a ship of the line, a frigate, six corvettes, five brigantines, 10 schooners, 13 gunboats, and many minor vessels.[6]: 195 

But the fledgling government was strapped financially, and in a decree of December 7, 1826, Bolívar decommissioned the Naval school, abolished the Ministry of the Navy, and slashed the budget for all navy and marine affairs by more than half. [n 1][6]: 195–196  The Navy would not recover from this blow for almost a hundred years. The incipient navy of 1825 saw its ships slowly sold, scrapped, or abandoned, and by the late 1830s there were no more than a handful of serviceable ships, mostly assigned to the Army.

Under President Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera, a sizeable naval force was acquired during 1866, with the steamers of war Colombia, Cuaspud and Bolívar being purchased in England, and the Rayo acquired from America. Rayo was the largest, carrying four 9 inch guns, two smaller 30-pounders, and six torpedo launches,[7] and was incorporated into the Colombian fleet after accusations she was due to be delivered to Chile or Peru for the war against Spain.[8] It was not to last, congress decreed the ships of the navy should be sold on June 6, 1867. The Rayo was subsequently blown onto a reef September 12, 1867[9] and Cuaspud was wrecked on her delivery voyage just eleven days later.[10] The Colombia was sold in 1868, and the Bolívar, last of Mosquera's men-of-war, sold in 1872.[11]

During the rest of the 19th century, there was no formal navy to speak of. Some vessels and naval units were assigned to the Army, and throughout the civil wars of the 1880s, some transport vessels were hurriedly bought, and similarly disposed of, but no formal navy appeared.[6][12]

On January 11, 1895, an important step was made in re-establishing the formal Colombian Navy when the three gunboats of the coastguard and the Magdalena were transferred from the Ministry of the Treasury to the Ministry of War.[13]

Early 20th century

By 1907, when President Rafael Reyes Prieto created the Naval Academy, through decree 783 of July 6, 1907, only to be closed off yet again by his successor, Ramón González Valencia on December 28, 1909.

The conflict with Peru in 1932 made the Colombian Navy reappear, this time to stay. New ships were acquired and the "Escuela de Grumetes" (Navy Sailors School) was founded in 1934 and the "Escuela de Cadetes" (Navy Officers School) was founded in 1935. Nowadays both schools continue their work of instructing the Colombian men and women of the sea.

World War II

 
Colombian destroyer Caldas in the 1940s

During World War II, Colombia initially declared its neutrality, but nevertheless leaned towards the Allied cause; between 1939 and 1941 nothing much changed either in political relations nor in the sea, as the war was seen as a mostly European issue. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941 changed things somewhat and prompted Colombia to break diplomatic relations with the Axis countries, but not to formally declare war. By 1942 the Colombian Navy found itself performing regular patrols in the Caribbean Sea-something that was only occasionally done in the years previous to the war-due to German U-boats marauding the Panama Canal access routes, mostly hunting for American and British vessels entering or leaving the canal.[14]
These German hunting runs, despite the Colombian Navy patrols, eventually resulted in the sinking of three Colombian ships during 1942–43, under circumstances that were never fully cleared up.[15] The three vessels were: Resolute, a 52-tonne[n 2][16] schooner sunk on June 23, 1942, by U-172;[17] Roamar (originally registered as Urious), a 110-tonne schooner sunk on July 27, 1942, by U-505[18] and finally, Rubby, a 39-tonne schooner sunk on November 1, 1943, by the German submarine U-516.[19] Rubby's sinking led to Colombia formally declaring a 'belligerent status' against Germany and the other Axis powers on November 23, 1943[20] and as a result the Colombian Navy significantly stepped up its presence in the Caribbean after this date and throughout the rest of the war.

Perhaps the most well-known engagement of the Colombian Navy during the war occurred on March 29, 1944, as the tanker MC Cabimas was en route from Cartagena to Panama City escorted by the destroyer ARC Caldas, the latter under the command of Captain Federico Diago Díaz. Around 8:00 pm, Caldas detected the periscope of a U-boat and proceeded to engage it with cannon fire and depth charges. Later accounts identified this U-boat as U-154. While badly shaken and perhaps damaged, U-154 managed to escape, and was sunk four months later in another engagement with USS Frost and USS Inch. For his quick reaction in defence of the national seas, Captain Diago Díaz was later decorated by the Colombian government.[21][22][23]

Korean War

 
Ships of four nations alongside the US Navy repair ship Jason at the Han Estuary, South Korea, 16 January 1952. The ships (L-R) are: HMAS Murchison, ARC Almirante Padilla, USS Gloucester and ROKS Taedong.

Colombia was signatory to the Declaration by United Nations in 1943, and one of the original 51 signatory countries to the creation of the United Nations (UN) at the San Francisco Conference. As such, when the Korean War erupted, and the UN Security Council issued S/RES/83 : Complaint of aggression upon the Republic of Korea[24] and decided the formation and dispatch of the UN Forces in Korea, Colombia was the only sovereign country[n 3] in Latin America that offered support, by sending a frigate (afterwards, Colombia also provided an infantry battalion). This act, and the subsequent effort and sacrifice of the Colombian troops and sailors on the defense of South Korea have made the relationship between South Korea and Colombia much closer ever since. The Colombian forces deployed in Korea became known as the Colombian Battalion.

Perhaps not surprisingly, there were multiple opinions in the US about accepting this help: On the one side, the State Department wanted to make sure the UN-sponsored operation had indeed the collaboration of multiple countries, the Treasury viewed it with disbelief and worried about the underlying extra cost that such 'help' would likely represent and might need to be paid by the US in the end, and the Defense Department wanted as much external help as possible, while also losing sleep about the logistics nightmare of integrating foreign units with little knowledge of its standards and even the language. Finally, the Colombian offer was accepted, and with Government Decree 3230 of October 23, 1950, Colombia's participation becomes formal and the Navy Ops Chief would receive orders to incorporate the Colombian frigate to the Order of Battle, under the 7th Fleet's Task Force 95. Eventually, Colombia provided three frigates that would rotate their service throughout 1951–1955.[25]

 
ARC Almirante Padilla (CM 51) circa 1948.

The frigate ARC Almirante Padilla[n 4] took to sea on November 1, 1950[26] under command of CC Julio Cesar Reyes Canal, stopping at San Diego, California, for fitting and then at Hawaii for operations training with the US Navy, finally reaching its destination at the Korean coast on May 14, 1951. Almirante Padilla performed operations with the escort groups GT95.5 and Blockade GT95.2, participated in the coastal bombardment at Wonsan and patrol runs at Wonsan, Seongjin and the islands of Cho-Do and Seok-Do; it finished its first tour on January 19, 1952.

The frigate ARC Capitán Tono,[n 5] under command of CC Hernando Berón Victoria replaced Almirante Padilla in January, and performed patrol and coast operations also around Wonsan and Seongjin, and submarine patrol around the Sasebo naval base; it received the Republic of Korea Merit medal for its support to the naval operations in the area; it finished its first tour on November 12, 1952.

The frigate ARC Almirante Brión,[n 6] under command of CC Carlos Prieto Silva formally relieved Capitán Tono in November 1952. However, it only arrived in the area by June 1953, as it had to be refitted in Japan due to some damages during its previous tour as USS Burlington. It performed patrols at the same areas as its sister ships and would finish its first tour on May 17, 1954.

An uncommon detail about the two newer frigates, Capitán Tono and Almirante Brión is that they were both already in the region after serving in World War II first with the US Navy and then the Soviet Navy under the Lend-Lease program and the secret Project Hula; they were returned to the US Navy at Japan in 1949; they sailed in the Korean theater with the US Navy during 1950–1951 before being acquired by the Colombian Navy at Japan under the Mutual Defense Assistance Program so their crews had to be sent to Japan by different means, and the ships themselves never saw the Colombian coast until their arrival to the country after the war effort in 1955, so the Colombian Navy started the campaign with only one frigate, but finished it with three.

All three frigates continued their service tours, until October 1955, and distinguished themselves in their duty along with other units from United States, Australia, New Zealand, the Republic of Korea and Thailand, amongst others.[25][27][28][29]

21st century

Anti-piracy operations in the Horn of Africa

On 27 July 2015, the Colombian offshore patrol vessel ARC 7 de Agosto set sail from the port city of Cartagena de Indias to take part in both Operation Atalanta and Operation Ocean Shield. During the operations, the Colombian Navy monitored over 400 watercraft near the coast of Somalia.[30] The operations also saw an opportunity for the Colombian Navy patrol vessel to perform naval exercises with other navies taking part in the surveillance efforts; amongst them where Hyanë and Erfurt of the German Navy,[31] Galicia, Victoria, and Meteoro of the Spanish Navy,[32][33] the destroyer JS Akizuki of the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force,[34] and HDMS Absalon of the Royal Danish Navy.[35] While stationed on Victoria, Seychelles, the crew aboard ARC 7 de Agosto also instructed and shared information, with members of the Seychelles Coast Guard and Maritime Police, on structural and naval operations.[36][37]

Engagements and Conflicts

Organization

The Navy is part of the executive branch of the Colombian Government, the President of Colombia being the commander-in-chief of all military forces, via the civilian Minister of Defense, and the General Commander of Military Forces (Spanish: Comandante General Fuerzas Militares), who is a senior officer appointed by the president from any of the 3 services (Army, Air Force or Navy). The most senior officer organic to the Navy is the Commander of the Navy (Spanish: Comandante de la Armada Nacional).

Forces and Commands

The Colombian Navy operates with 8 specialized forces or commands across the territory:

  • Marine Infantry Command: Land, amphibious and riverine operations across all territory.
  • Naval Force of the Pacific: Surface and submarine defense and patrol of the Colombian Pacific sea.
  • Naval Force of the Caribbean: Surface and submarine defense and patrol of the Colombian Caribbean sea.
  • Naval Force of the South: Riverine operations across the Southern and Southeastern areas of the country.
  • Naval Force of the East[40]
  • Comando de Guardacostas: Maritime security, control, monitoring and interdiction in both Caribbean and Pacific seas.
  • Navy Aviation Command: Naval air support, surveillance, transport and logistics and Search and Rescue.
  • Specific Command of San Andres y Providencia: Surface and submarine defense and patrol of the Colombian Caribbean sea around the San Andres Archipelago.

Naval educational institutions

Along with the 7 operational commands above, the Colombian Navy maintains 3 major training schools for its personnel:

  • Naval Academy: Escuela Naval de Cadetes "Almirante Padilla"
  • Navy NCO School: Escuela Naval de Suboficiales ARC Barranquilla
  • Marine Infantry Basic School: Escuela de Formación Infantería de Marina

The Navy also has 12 other post graduate schools aimed at sharpening and intensifying the needed capacities and personnel of the various naval services and the Marine Corps.

Operating Bases

 
Major naval bases of the Colombian Navy
  Exclusive Economic Zone
  Navy: Naval, Riverine and Primary Operating bases
  Marine Infantry: Primary base and training school

The ARC maintains a number of major bases in both Caribbean and Pacific littorals, as well as multiple operational riverine bases scattered over the territory.
The principal naval bases are:

some of the more important operational bases are:

The Colombian Navy also plans to establish a naval base in Antarctica, to be called the "Almirante Padilla Summer Scientific Station".[41][42]

Personnel

In 2013, the Colombian Navy had approximately 35,000 personnel, including roughly 22,000 Marine Infantry, 8,000 sailors and NCOs, 2,500 officers, 1,300 personnel in training and some 2,000 civilians (these usually deployed to specialty technical or medical posts).[2]

Ranks & Insignias

The tables below display the rank structures and rank insignias for the Colombian Navy personnel.[43][44][n 7]

Officers

Rank group General/flag officers Field/senior officers Junior officers Officer cadet
  Colombian National Navy[45]
                 
Almirante Vicealmirante Contralmirante Capitán de navío Capitán de fragata Capitán de corbeta Teniente de navío Teniente de fragata Teniente de corbeta
Abbr. - ALM - VALM CALM CN CF CC TN TF TK -

Enlisted

Rank group Senior NCOs Junior NCOs Enlisted
  Colombian National Navy[45]
                 
Suboficial jefe técnico de comando conjunto Suboficial jefe técnico de comando Suboficial jefe técnico Suboficial jefe Suboficial primero Suboficial segundo Suboficial tercero Marinero primero Marinero segundo
Abbr. SJTCC SJTC SJT SJ S1 S2 S3 MA1 MA2 -

Equipment

Ships

 
ARC Almirante Padilla (FM-51)

In keeping with its three major operational scenarios: blue-water operations, littoral/riverine operations and coast guard, the ARC maintains a mix of ships suited to each of those profiles. The scope of its operation has been historically oriented towards lightly armed coastal patrol, and as such, the majority of its vessels had been usually mid-size cutters. Traditionally, the ARC has had strong ties to the American and German navies and shipbuilders and much of its equipment traces its roots to them.
Similar to other navies in the Latin-American region, the Colombian Navy acquired many vessels in the postwar years of the 1950s and 1960s, usually as war surplus from the US Navy, and then went through a somewhat dormant period during the 1960s to 1980s, during which few major acquisitions were performed.

In more recent years, the Colombian Navy has seen two major periods of upgrading and modernization of its equipment:
The first period, as a result of the rise of the drug trade in the late 1970s and 1980s as well as, at the time, increased political tensions in the Caribbean due to territorial disputes with some of its neighbors -with Nicaragua over the San Andres archipelago and with Venezuela over the Los Monjes Archipelago- saw the need for a stronger Caribbean patrol force, and resulted in the acquisition of its biggest vessels to date, four missile corvettes (later upgraded to light frigates) in 1983 as well as some additional patrol craft.

The second period, as a consequence of the deepening in the internal Colombian conflict, started in the late 1990s and extended over to 2005–2006, provided strengthening of its riverine and littoral capabilities, involving research and development for new indigenous designs in collaboration with the state-owned Cotecmar shipyards that resulted in new types of vessels such as the state-of-the-art Riverine Support Patrol Boats (Spanish: Patrullera de Apoyo Fluvial, "PAF"), also called "riverine mothership" (Spanish: Nodriza Fluvial) like ARC Juan Ricardo Oyola Vera (NF-613) which have drawn the eye of other navies with similar requirements.

Currently, the ARC is working on additional medium and long-term programs, including the development and acquisition of a number of coastal patrol vessels (Fassmer CPV-40) [n 8][47] in 2011–2012, two oceanic patrol vessels (Fassmer OPV-80) (2011–2013),[48] and the research and development of an indigenous corvette or frigate-class vessel ("Plataforma Estratégica de Superficie"), planned towards 2018–2020.[48]

7 October 2011, South Korea is to donate a recently retired Pohang-class corvette to Colombia as part of a drive to boost arms exports to the South American region. An-Yang (PCC-755) was decommissioned by the Republic of Korea Navy (RoKN) on 29 September, having been active for some 28 years since entering service in 1983.[49][50]

In September 2022, the Colombian Navy signed a contract for the design & construction of 5 new fregates as part of the PES programma with Cotecmar shipyard and Damen Shipyards based on the SIGMA10514 design for delivery from 2026 onwards [51]

Aircraft

 
Colombian Naval Aviation roundel.
 
Colombian CN-235 aircraft at Panama Tocumen International Airport during PANAMAX 2007

The Navy Aviation Command operates approximately 17 fixed and rotary wing aircraft for naval surveillance and patrol, Search and Rescue (SAR), and logistical support of naval facilities and operations.

Colombian Navy – Aircraft[52]
Aircraft Origin Type Versions In service Notes
Fixed Wing
CASA C-212 Aviocar   Spain /   Indonesia Transport C-212-100 1
CASA CN-235   Spain /   Indonesia Maritime patrol 3
Cessna 208   United States utility 2
Beechcraft Super King Air Transport King Air 350 1
Rotary Wing
Bell UH-1N Twin Huey   United States Transport helicopter 5
Bell 412HP Utility helicopter Unknown One lost on 6 January 2013.[53]
MBB/Kawasaki BK 117   Germany /   Japan Transport helicopter 1
MBB Bo 105   Germany ASW/utility Helicopter Bo 105CB 2
Eurocopter AS 555 Fennec   France Utility helicopter AS 555 2

Bell 412 EP 4

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The marine budget of 1826 was $4,809,077 pesos. The budget for 1827 was $2.026.422, apx. 42%
  2. ^ German sources rate it at 35-tonne, but Colombian archives of the time, including the diplomatic note of protest sent on June 26, 1942, via the Switzerland delegation, rate it at 52-tonne
  3. ^ Puerto Rico is also occasionally noted as another Latin American country to support the effort, but in reality, it is an unincorporated territory of the United States
  4. ^ ARC Almirante Padilla was the former USS Groton
  5. ^ ARC Capitán Tono was the former USS Bisbee
  6. ^ ARC Almirante Brión was the former USS Burlington
  7. ^ Colombia is not a member of NATO, so there is not an official equivalence between the Colombian military ranks and those defined by NATO. The displayed parallel is approximate and for illustration purposes only.
  8. ^ Some sources have cited the acquisition of up to 4 CPV-40 vessels,[46] however, as of April 2011, only one has been confirmed launched,[47] and budgetary constraints may change this number in the future.

References

  1. ^ "Colombia's National Navy turns 190 years old". 24 July 2013. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  2. ^ a b c (PDF) (in Spanish). Republic of Colombia Ministry of National Defense. September 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-04-13. Retrieved 2013-11-22.
  3. ^ Infodefensa.com (9 March 2015). "Colombia se une a la operación multinacional Atalanta-2015 - Noticias Infodefensa América". infodefensa.com. from the original on 6 July 2017. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  4. ^ Armada Nacional de la Republica de Colombia (July 2014). "Mission of the Colombian Navy". from the original on 2014-07-03. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  5. ^ Armada Nacional de la Republica de Colombia (July 2014). "Objectives of the Colombian Navy". from the original on 2014-07-02. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  6. ^ a b c d Flórez, L. (September 1919). Acción de la Marina Colombiana en la guerra de Independencia [Action of the Colombian Navy during the Independence War] (PDF) (in Spanish). Estado Mayor del Ejército de Colombia. (PDF) from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  7. ^ Estados Unidos de Colombia (1867). "Causa contra el presidente de los Estados Unidos de Colombia: ciudadano gran jeneral Tomas Cipriano de Mosquera, i otros altos funcionarios federales". Imprenta de la nacion, Colombia (1867), p119. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  8. ^ Estados Unidos de Colombia. "DIARIO OFICIAL. AÑO III. N. 947. 11, JUNIO, 1867. PÁG. 1". suin-juriscol. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  9. ^ Edited by James L. Mooney (1959). "Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships: V. 6: R Through S, Appendices, Submarine Chasers, Eagle-Class Patrol Craft". Government Printing Office (1959), p9. Retrieved 4 May 2020. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  10. ^ "The Evansville journal. [volume], December 02, 1867, Image 1". chronclingamercia.loc.gov. The Evansville Journal. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  11. ^ Estados Unidos de Colombia. "DIARIO OFICIAL. AÑO VIII. N. 2732. 24, DECIEMBRE, 1872. PÁG. 1-2" (PDF). sidn.ramajudicial. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  12. ^ CA Luis Carlos Jaramillo Peña. "Pañol de la historia #39: Una mirada retrospectiva a nuestra Marina de Guerra". Cyber-corredera. from the original on 2014-08-12. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  13. ^ Estados Unidos de Colombia. "DIARIO OFICIAL. AÑO XXXI. N. 9680. 15, ENERO DE 1895. PÁG. 1" (PDF). sidn.ramajudicial. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
  14. ^ David Bushnell (2 July 1995). "Colombia y la causa de los aliados en la segunda guerra mundial". Credencial Historia (in Spanish) (67). from the original on 2011-05-02. Retrieved 26 April 2011.
  15. ^ "La "Resolute" fue hundida por un submarino nazi?" (in Spanish). El Tiempo. 27 June 1986. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  16. ^ "Satisfacciones morales y materiales exige Colombia del gobierno Alemán" (in Spanish). El Tiempo. 27 June 1942. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
  17. ^ Helgason, Guðmundur. "Patrol info for U-172, Departure 11 May 1942". German U-boats of WWII - uboat.net. from the original on 6 September 2008. Retrieved 2014-07-18.
  18. ^ Helgason, Guðmundur. "Patrol info for U-505, Departure 7 Jun 1942". German U-boats of WWII - uboat.net. from the original on 2008-09-04. Retrieved 2014-07-18.
  19. ^ Helgason, Guðmundur. "Patrol info for U-516, Departure 4 Oct 1943". German U-boats of WWII - uboat.net. from the original on 2009-01-07. Retrieved 2014-07-18.
  20. ^ "Estado de beligerancia con Alemania" (in Spanish). El Tiempo. 27 November 1943. Retrieved 28 April 2011.
  21. ^ "Clave 1944 ARC Caldas hunde submarino nazi" (in Spanish). El Tiempo. 22 April 1991. from the original on 3 October 2012. Retrieved 28 April 2011.
  22. ^ "Brillante victoria de la Marina Colombiana" (in Spanish). El Tiempo. 31 March 1944. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  23. ^ García, C.N. Ricardo; Bernal (February 2011). "El "M.C. Cabimas", Primer buque petolero de la Armada Nacional". Revista Armada. Armada de la República de Colombia (98, February 2011): 60–63. ISSN 1692-1097. from the original on 2014-07-30. Retrieved 21 July 2014.
  24. ^ United Nations Security Council (27 July 1950). "Complaint of aggression upon the Republic of Korea". from the original on 2014-06-08. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
  25. ^ a b CN Mario Rubianogroot Román , Asociacion Colombiana de los Descendientes de Veteranos de la Guerra de Corea (2012). . Archived from the original on 2014-07-26. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
  26. ^ "Zarpa la Fragata Padilla" (in Spanish). El Tiempo. 1 November 1950. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  27. ^ Asociacion Colombiana de los Descendientes de Veteranos de la Guerra de Corea (2012). . Archived from the original on 2014-10-24. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
  28. ^ Guia de Estudio Historia Militar III, Bogota: Escuela Militar de Cadetes General Jose Maria Cordova, Ejercito de Colombia, 2008, p. 100 & ss, from the original on 2016-03-04, retrieved 19 July 2014
  29. ^ Edwards, Paul M. (2013), United Nations Participants in the Korean War, McFarland, p. 80 & ss, ISBN 9780786474578, retrieved 19 July 2014
  30. ^ "#ARCenAtalanta". atalantacolombia.blogspot.com. Archived from the original on 25 November 2015. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  31. ^ "#ARCenAtalanta : Maniobras Navales". from the original on 2015-11-25. Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  32. ^ Operaciónatalantacolombia (26 October 2015). "#ARCenAtalanta : Encuentro Fragata "Victoria" de la Real Marina de España - 11 de Octubre". atalantacolombia.blogspot.com. Archived from the original on 25 November 2015. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  33. ^ Operaciónatalantacolombia (2 October 2015). "#ARCenAtalanta : Encuentro con el buque español BAM "Meteoro" - 06 de Septiembre". atalantacolombia.blogspot.com. Archived from the original on 27 November 2015. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  34. ^ Operaciónatalantacolombia (7 November 2015). "#ARCenAtalanta : Ejercicios navales destructor japonés DD "Akizuki" - 15 de Octubre". atalantacolombia.blogspot.com. Archived from the original on 26 November 2015. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  35. ^ Operaciónatalantacolombia (7 November 2015). "#ARCenAtalanta : Mensaje del Comandante del buque danés "Absalon" - 18 de Octubre". atalantacolombia.blogspot.com. Archived from the original on 27 November 2015. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  36. ^ Infodefensa.com (13 October 2015). "La OPV colombiana '7 de Agosto' instruye a la Marina de las Islas Seychelles - Noticias Infodefensa América". infodefensa.com. from the original on 10 September 2017. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  37. ^ "El ARC 7 de Agosto finaliza las operaciones de seguridad marítima en África". www.webinfomil.com. from the original on 31 January 2018. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  38. ^ "Colombia se une a la operación multinacional Atalanta-2015". infodefensa.com. 10 March 2015. from the original on 12 March 2015. Retrieved 14 March 2015.
  39. ^ ""Fuerzas Militares pueden enfrentar cualquier amenaza interna o externa": Mindefensa". elcolombiano.com. 28 June 2015. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  40. ^ (in Spanish). armada.mil.co. Archived from the original on 8 February 2014. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  41. ^ "Colombia's Navy plans to establish permanent base on Antarctica". The City Paper Bogotá. February 2, 2018. from the original on February 8, 2018. Retrieved February 7, 2018. The Colombian Navy – Armada Nacional – will test icy waters after announcing plans to establish a naval base on Antarctica.
  42. ^ Sanchez, Alejandro (February 7, 2018). "Colombia to acquire oceanographic vessel for Antarctic expeditions". Jane's Information Group. from the original on February 8, 2018. A 24 January Ministry of Defence statement revealed plans to construct Colombia’s first scientific base in Antarctica, to be named Almirante Padilla.
  43. ^ Armada Republica de Colombia (2006). (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2011-09-28. Retrieved 23 April 2011.
  44. ^ Congreso de la República de Colombia (28 July 2010). (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2011-07-24. Retrieved 26 April 2011.
  45. ^ a b Congreso de la República de Colombia (28 July 2010). (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2011-07-24. Retrieved 26 April 2011.
  46. ^ Infodefensa.com. "Las Fuerzas Armadas de Colombia estrenan nuevo armamento" (in Spanish). from the original on 9 October 2011. Retrieved 23 April 2011.
  47. ^ a b Fassmer Shipbuilding. "Launching of Colombian Navy 40m Coastal Patrol Vessel (CPV40)". Archived from the original on 5 January 2013. Retrieved 23 April 2011.
  48. ^ a b </ in 2011–2012 Colombian Navy introduced ARC 20, First ship built in Colombia by COTECMAR /> Fr.Cpt. Germán H Locarno (October 2010). . Revista Armada (in Spanish) (97). ISSN 1692-1097. Archived from the original on 2011-09-28. Retrieved 24 April 2011.
  49. ^ Defense Market Intelligence. . Archived from the original on 15 December 2013. Retrieved 8 October 2011.
  50. ^ Donghae class corvette
  51. ^ "COTECMAR on LinkedIn: #SeguimosAvante #Cotecmar #Colombia".
  52. ^ World Air Forces 2013 2013-11-02 at the Wayback Machine - Flightglobal.com, pg 13, December 11, 2012
  53. ^ Air Forces Monthly. Stamford, Lincolnshire: Key Publishing Ltd. March 2013. p. 32.

External links

  • (in Spanish)
  • Ministerio de Defensa Nacional, Colombia—Colombian Defense Ministry Official site (in Spanish)
  • Colombia: Seguridad & Defensa—Extensive information about Colombian military forces (in Spanish)
  • —Unofficial fan site for the Military Forces of Colombia (in Spanish)

colombian, navy, officially, colombian, national, navy, spanish, armada, nacional, república, colombia, also, known, armada, nacional, just, armada, spanish, naval, branch, military, forces, colombia, navy, responsible, security, defence, colombian, zones, bot. The Colombian Navy officially the Colombian National Navy Spanish Armada Nacional de la Republica de Colombia also known as the Armada Nacional or just the Armada in Spanish is the naval branch of the military forces of Colombia The Navy is responsible for security and defence in the Colombian zones of both the Atlantic Caribbean and Pacific oceans the extensive network of rivers inside the country and a few small land areas under its direct jurisdiction Colombian NavyArmada de la Republica de ColombiaCoat of arms of the Colombian NavyFoundedJuly 24 1823 1 Country ColombiaTypeNavyRoleNaval warfareProtection of the seas and rivers of ColombiaSize35 086 As of September 2013 update 2 13 000 Officers amp sailors 22 000 Marine InfantryMotto s Plus Ultra Latin further beyond March Viva Colombia soy marinero AnniversariesJuly 24EngagementsBattle of Lake MaracaiboThousand Days War Civil war Colombia Peru War World War II Korean War Colombian Armed Conflict Operation Atalanta 3 CommandersCurrentcommanderAdmiral Gabriel Perez GarcesNotablecommandersJose Prudencio PadillaInsigniaNaval ensignNaval jackFlagStandard The Colombian Navy has a strength of 35 086 personnel as of September 2013 update including approximately 22 000 in the Marine Infantry corps 2 The acronym ARC Spanish Armada de la Republica de Colombia is used both as the official ship prefix for all the Colombian Navy ships as well as a common short name for the Navy itself Contents 1 Mission 2 History 2 1 19th century and origins 2 2 Early 20th century 2 2 1 World War II 2 2 2 Korean War 2 3 21st century 2 3 1 Anti piracy operations in the Horn of Africa 2 4 Engagements and Conflicts 3 Organization 3 1 Forces and Commands 3 2 Naval educational institutions 3 3 Operating Bases 4 Personnel 4 1 Ranks amp Insignias 4 2 Officers 4 3 Enlisted 5 Equipment 5 1 Ships 5 2 Aircraft 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksMission Edit Protecting the blue of our flag dd As stated in its institutional site the mission of the Colombian Navy is Contribute with the defense of the Nation through the effective use of flexible naval power in the maritime river and land spaces under its responsibility in order to fulfill the constitutional role and participate in the development of sea power and the protection of the interests of Colombians 4 In order to accomplish its mission the Colombian navy establishes four strategic objectives 5 Protection of the population and resources and consolidation of territorial control Neutralization of illegal drug trafficking Strategic deterrence Maritime and riverine safety In addition to functions of security and defense the Navy is called to participate in missions aimed to ensure the integral use of the sea by the Nation For this purpose it must fulfill both military and diplomatic activities along with implementation and enforcement of law and order Its formal motto has been historically Plus Ultra Latin further beyond but more recently and as part of a public media campaign in the 2000s the additional slogan Protecting the blue of our flag Spanish Protegemos el azul de la bandera became known and has been adopted institutionally as well perhaps as a result of being a more relatable catchphrase to the public than the formal Latin motto Its former slogan was Sailing our pride Spanish Navega nuestro orgullo History EditThe history of the Colombian Navy is closely tied to and somewhat reflects the history of Colombia itself from its birth at the Declaration of Independence from Spain the subsequent ups and downs throughout a later 19th century rife with civil wars a 20th century where it slowly starts asserting itself only to be challenged by the internal conflict and drug traffic of the later decades to a Navy that is now reaching a more mature and modern shape much like the country it protects 19th century and origins Edit Accion del Castillo de Maracaibo Painting by Jose Maria Espinosa Prieto 1796 1883 The Colombian Navy celebrates its birthday on July 24 the anniversary of the Battle of Lake Maracaibo fought on July 24 1823 which was the last large naval battle of the Spanish American wars of independence and helped cement the South American independence But the roots of the Navy can be traced 13 years back to 1810 just a few weeks after the Colombian Declaration of Independence of July 20 1810 The president of the Supreme Board of Cartagena Jose Maria Garcia de Toledo created the Naval Command Office Spanish Comandancia General de Marina by means of a decree dated September 17 1810 The Navy was placed under the command of Captain Juan Nepomuceno Eslava junior son of the former Spanish Viceroy Sebastian de Eslava During this period the young navy operated mostly with small schooners either acquired directly or by providing letters of marque to friendly captains which then operated as part or on behalf of the navy Some of these captains would obtain later renown during the independence war like Luis Brion and Renato Beluche This small navy was effective in limited operations intercepting Spanish ships but was not strong enough to attack port cities as evidenced by the failed attacks to Santa Marta 1813 and Portobello 1814 During 1815 a Spanish army headed by Pablo Morillo besieged Cartagena as the first step of its Pacifying Expedition Spanish Expedicion Pacificadora The five month siege was so harsh that earned the city its title of Heroic Spanish La Heroica The small independent navy was impotent against the large fleet commanded by Morillo but nevertheless managed some daring actions in particular that of Luis Brion who attempted to run the blockade with his corvette Dard with a load of guns and powder to the city before fleeing again to Haiti In 1816 Simon Bolivar attempted his first campaign the Cayos expedition sailing from Haiti with seven schooners and corvettes Bolivar Marino Piar Constitucion Brion Fenix and Conejo 6 47 48 But this expedition fizzled out due to infighting amongst its generals shortly after the liberation of Margarita Island It was only after the Liberation Campaign of 1819 that General Francisco de Paula Santander created the Naval School on June 28 1822 and issued additional decrees for the provision of the navy Admiral Jose Prudencio Padilla would go on reorganizing and building the fleet to support Bolivar s plans for the campaign of Zulia and the complete liberation of the east This fleet then engaged in the Battle of Lake Maracaibo which crushed the Spanish naval aspirations in South America In 1824 the first and only eight cadet officers graduated from naval school On March 3 1826 the Ministry of the Navy was created with Lino de Clemente as minister By 1826 both from bought and captured vessels the Colombian Navy had become a respectable force commanding a relatively large number of ships including a ship of the line a frigate six corvettes five brigantines 10 schooners 13 gunboats and many minor vessels 6 195 But the fledgling government was strapped financially and in a decree of December 7 1826 Bolivar decommissioned the Naval school abolished the Ministry of the Navy and slashed the budget for all navy and marine affairs by more than half n 1 6 195 196 The Navy would not recover from this blow for almost a hundred years The incipient navy of 1825 saw its ships slowly sold scrapped or abandoned and by the late 1830s there were no more than a handful of serviceable ships mostly assigned to the Army Under President Tomas Cipriano de Mosquera a sizeable naval force was acquired during 1866 with the steamers of war Colombia Cuaspud and Bolivar being purchased in England and the Rayo acquired from America Rayo was the largest carrying four 9 inch guns two smaller 30 pounders and six torpedo launches 7 and was incorporated into the Colombian fleet after accusations she was due to be delivered to Chile or Peru for the war against Spain 8 It was not to last congress decreed the ships of the navy should be sold on June 6 1867 The Rayo was subsequently blown onto a reef September 12 1867 9 and Cuaspud was wrecked on her delivery voyage just eleven days later 10 The Colombia was sold in 1868 and the Bolivar last of Mosquera s men of war sold in 1872 11 During the rest of the 19th century there was no formal navy to speak of Some vessels and naval units were assigned to the Army and throughout the civil wars of the 1880s some transport vessels were hurriedly bought and similarly disposed of but no formal navy appeared 6 12 On January 11 1895 an important step was made in re establishing the formal Colombian Navy when the three gunboats of the coastguard and the Magdalena were transferred from the Ministry of the Treasury to the Ministry of War 13 Early 20th century Edit By 1907 when President Rafael Reyes Prieto created the Naval Academy through decree 783 of July 6 1907 only to be closed off yet again by his successor Ramon Gonzalez Valencia on December 28 1909 The conflict with Peru in 1932 made the Colombian Navy reappear this time to stay New ships were acquired and the Escuela de Grumetes Navy Sailors School was founded in 1934 and the Escuela de Cadetes Navy Officers School was founded in 1935 Nowadays both schools continue their work of instructing the Colombian men and women of the sea World War II Edit See also Colombia during World War II The Military Forces of Colombia and Colombia during World War II The Battle of the Caribbean Colombian destroyer Caldas in the 1940s During World War II Colombia initially declared its neutrality but nevertheless leaned towards the Allied cause between 1939 and 1941 nothing much changed either in political relations nor in the sea as the war was seen as a mostly European issue The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941 changed things somewhat and prompted Colombia to break diplomatic relations with the Axis countries but not to formally declare war By 1942 the Colombian Navy found itself performing regular patrols in the Caribbean Sea something that was only occasionally done in the years previous to the war due to German U boats marauding the Panama Canal access routes mostly hunting for American and British vessels entering or leaving the canal 14 These German hunting runs despite the Colombian Navy patrols eventually resulted in the sinking of three Colombian ships during 1942 43 under circumstances that were never fully cleared up 15 The three vessels were Resolute a 52 tonne n 2 16 schooner sunk on June 23 1942 by U 172 17 Roamar originally registered as Urious a 110 tonne schooner sunk on July 27 1942 by U 505 18 and finally Rubby a 39 tonne schooner sunk on November 1 1943 by the German submarine U 516 19 Rubby s sinking led to Colombia formally declaring a belligerent status against Germany and the other Axis powers on November 23 1943 20 and as a result the Colombian Navy significantly stepped up its presence in the Caribbean after this date and throughout the rest of the war Perhaps the most well known engagement of the Colombian Navy during the war occurred on March 29 1944 as the tanker MC Cabimas was en route from Cartagena to Panama City escorted by the destroyer ARC Caldas the latter under the command of Captain Federico Diago Diaz Around 8 00 pm Caldas detected the periscope of a U boat and proceeded to engage it with cannon fire and depth charges Later accounts identified this U boat as U 154 While badly shaken and perhaps damaged U 154 managed to escape and was sunk four months later in another engagement with USS Frost and USS Inch For his quick reaction in defence of the national seas Captain Diago Diaz was later decorated by the Colombian government 21 22 23 Korean War Edit Ships of four nations alongside the US Navy repair ship Jason at the Han Estuary South Korea 16 January 1952 The ships L R are HMAS Murchison ARC Almirante Padilla USS Gloucester and ROKS Taedong Colombia was signatory to the Declaration by United Nations in 1943 and one of the original 51 signatory countries to the creation of the United Nations UN at the San Francisco Conference As such when the Korean War erupted and the UN Security Council issued S RES 83 Complaint of aggression upon the Republic of Korea 24 and decided the formation and dispatch of the UN Forces in Korea Colombia was the only sovereign country n 3 in Latin America that offered support by sending a frigate afterwards Colombia also provided an infantry battalion This act and the subsequent effort and sacrifice of the Colombian troops and sailors on the defense of South Korea have made the relationship between South Korea and Colombia much closer ever since The Colombian forces deployed in Korea became known as the Colombian Battalion Perhaps not surprisingly there were multiple opinions in the US about accepting this help On the one side the State Department wanted to make sure the UN sponsored operation had indeed the collaboration of multiple countries the Treasury viewed it with disbelief and worried about the underlying extra cost that such help would likely represent and might need to be paid by the US in the end and the Defense Department wanted as much external help as possible while also losing sleep about the logistics nightmare of integrating foreign units with little knowledge of its standards and even the language Finally the Colombian offer was accepted and with Government Decree 3230 of October 23 1950 Colombia s participation becomes formal and the Navy Ops Chief would receive orders to incorporate the Colombian frigate to the Order of Battle under the 7th Fleet s Task Force 95 Eventually Colombia provided three frigates that would rotate their service throughout 1951 1955 25 ARC Almirante Padilla CM 51 circa 1948 The frigate ARC Almirante Padilla n 4 took to sea on November 1 1950 26 under command of CC Julio Cesar Reyes Canal stopping at San Diego California for fitting and then at Hawaii for operations training with the US Navy finally reaching its destination at the Korean coast on May 14 1951 Almirante Padilla performed operations with the escort groups GT95 5 and Blockade GT95 2 participated in the coastal bombardment at Wonsan and patrol runs at Wonsan Seongjin and the islands of Cho Do and Seok Do it finished its first tour on January 19 1952 The frigate ARC Capitan Tono n 5 under command of CC Hernando Beron Victoria replaced Almirante Padilla in January and performed patrol and coast operations also around Wonsan and Seongjin and submarine patrol around the Sasebo naval base it received the Republic of Korea Merit medal for its support to the naval operations in the area it finished its first tour on November 12 1952 The frigate ARC Almirante Brion n 6 under command of CC Carlos Prieto Silva formally relieved Capitan Tono in November 1952 However it only arrived in the area by June 1953 as it had to be refitted in Japan due to some damages during its previous tour as USS Burlington It performed patrols at the same areas as its sister ships and would finish its first tour on May 17 1954 An uncommon detail about the two newer frigates Capitan Tono and Almirante Brion is that they were both already in the region after serving in World War II first with the US Navy and then the Soviet Navy under the Lend Lease program and the secret Project Hula they were returned to the US Navy at Japan in 1949 they sailed in the Korean theater with the US Navy during 1950 1951 before being acquired by the Colombian Navy at Japan under the Mutual Defense Assistance Program so their crews had to be sent to Japan by different means and the ships themselves never saw the Colombian coast until their arrival to the country after the war effort in 1955 so the Colombian Navy started the campaign with only one frigate but finished it with three All three frigates continued their service tours until October 1955 and distinguished themselves in their duty along with other units from United States Australia New Zealand the Republic of Korea and Thailand amongst others 25 27 28 29 21st century Edit Anti piracy operations in the Horn of Africa Edit Further information Piracy in Somalia On 27 July 2015 the Colombian offshore patrol vessel ARC 7 de Agosto set sail from the port city of Cartagena de Indias to take part in both Operation Atalanta and Operation Ocean Shield During the operations the Colombian Navy monitored over 400 watercraft near the coast of Somalia 30 The operations also saw an opportunity for the Colombian Navy patrol vessel to perform naval exercises with other navies taking part in the surveillance efforts amongst them where Hyane and Erfurt of the German Navy 31 Galicia Victoria and Meteoro of the Spanish Navy 32 33 the destroyer JS Akizuki of the Japan Maritime Self Defense Force 34 and HDMS Absalon of the Royal Danish Navy 35 While stationed on Victoria Seychelles the crew aboard ARC 7 de Agosto also instructed and shared information with members of the Seychelles Coast Guard and Maritime Police on structural and naval operations 36 37 Engagements and Conflicts Edit Battle of Lake Maracaibo Thousand Days War Civil war Colombia Peru War World War II Korean War Colombian Armed Conflict Operation Atalanta 38 Operation Enduring Freedom Horn of Africa Operation Ocean Shield 39 Organization EditThe Navy is part of the executive branch of the Colombian Government the President of Colombia being the commander in chief of all military forces via the civilian Minister of Defense and the General Commander of Military Forces Spanish Comandante General Fuerzas Militares who is a senior officer appointed by the president from any of the 3 services Army Air Force or Navy The most senior officer organic to the Navy is the Commander of the Navy Spanish Comandante de la Armada Nacional Forces and Commands Edit The Colombian Navy operates with 8 specialized forces or commands across the territory Marine Infantry Command Land amphibious and riverine operations across all territory Naval Force of the Pacific Surface and submarine defense and patrol of the Colombian Pacific sea Naval Force of the Caribbean Surface and submarine defense and patrol of the Colombian Caribbean sea Naval Force of the South Riverine operations across the Southern and Southeastern areas of the country Naval Force of the East 40 Comando de Guardacostas Maritime security control monitoring and interdiction in both Caribbean and Pacific seas Navy Aviation Command Naval air support surveillance transport and logistics and Search and Rescue Specific Command of San Andres y Providencia Surface and submarine defense and patrol of the Colombian Caribbean sea around the San Andres Archipelago Naval educational institutions Edit Along with the 7 operational commands above the Colombian Navy maintains 3 major training schools for its personnel Naval Academy Escuela Naval de Cadetes Almirante Padilla Navy NCO School Escuela Naval de Suboficiales ARC Barranquilla Marine Infantry Basic School Escuela de Formacion Infanteria de MarinaThe Navy also has 12 other post graduate schools aimed at sharpening and intensifying the needed capacities and personnel of the various naval services and the Marine Corps Operating Bases Edit Major naval bases of the Colombian Navy Exclusive Economic Zone Navy Naval Riverine and Primary Operating bases Marine Infantry Primary base and training school The ARC maintains a number of major bases in both Caribbean and Pacific littorals as well as multiple operational riverine bases scattered over the territory The principal naval bases are Naval Base ARC Bolivar BN 1 near Cartagena 10 24 42 91 N 75 32 55 62 W 10 4119194 N 75 5487833 W 10 4119194 75 5487833 Naval Base ARC Bolivar BN 1 Naval Base ARC Bahia Malaga BN 2 near Buenaventura 3 58 8 64 N 77 19 1 09 W 3 9690667 N 77 3169694 W 3 9690667 77 3169694 Naval Base ARC Bahia Malaga BN 2 Naval Base ARC Leguizamo BN 3 near Puerto Leguizamo 0 12 10 92 S 74 46 37 29 W 0 2030333 S 74 7770250 W 0 2030333 74 7770250 Naval Base ARC Leguizamo BN 3 Naval Base ARC San Andres BN 4 at San Andres 12 31 31 16 N 81 43 48 61 W 12 5253222 N 81 7301694 W 12 5253222 81 7301694 Naval Base ARC San Andres BN 4 Naval Base ARC Puerto Carreno BN 5 near Puerto Carreno 6 10 43 63 N 67 28 54 49 W 6 1787861 N 67 4818028 W 6 1787861 67 4818028 Naval Base ARC Puerto Carreno BN 5 some of the more important operational bases are Riverine and Coast Guard Post near Tumaco 1 48 43 56 N 78 45 59 33 W 1 8121000 N 78 7664806 W 1 8121000 78 7664806 Riverine and Coast Guard Post Tumaco Riverine and Marine Infantry Post near Leticia 4 12 48 25 S 69 56 46 23 W 4 2134028 S 69 9461750 W 4 2134028 69 9461750 Riverine and Marine Infantry Post Leticia Riverine and Marine Infantry Post near Puerto Berrio 6 29 27 32 N 74 23 44 91 W 6 4909222 N 74 3958083 W 6 4909222 74 3958083 Riverine and Marine Infantry Post Puerto Berrio Riverine and Marine Infantry Post near Puerto Carreno 6 10 43 63 N 67 28 54 49 W 6 1787861 N 67 4818028 W 6 1787861 67 4818028 Riverine and Marine Infantry Post Puerto Carreno Riverine and Marine Infantry Post near Puerto Inirida 3 52 7 35 N 67 55 43 41 W 3 8687083 N 67 9287250 W 3 8687083 67 9287250 Riverine and Marine Infantry Post Puerto Inirida The Colombian Navy also plans to establish a naval base in Antarctica to be called the Almirante Padilla Summer Scientific Station 41 42 Personnel EditIn 2013 the Colombian Navy had approximately 35 000 personnel including roughly 22 000 Marine Infantry 8 000 sailors and NCOs 2 500 officers 1 300 personnel in training and some 2 000 civilians these usually deployed to specialty technical or medical posts 2 Ranks amp Insignias Edit Further information Military ranks of the Colombian Armed Forces and Colombian Marine Infantry Ranks amp Insignias The tables below display the rank structures and rank insignias for the Colombian Navy personnel 43 44 n 7 Officers Edit Rank group General flag officers Field senior officers Junior officers Officer cadet Colombian National Navy 45 vte Almirante Vicealmirante Contralmirante Capitan de navio Capitan de fragata Capitan de corbeta Teniente de navio Teniente de fragata Teniente de corbetaAbbr ALM VALM CALM CN CF CC TN TF TK Enlisted Edit Rank group Senior NCOs Junior NCOs Enlisted Colombian National Navy 45 vte Suboficial jefe tecnico de comando conjunto Suboficial jefe tecnico de comando Suboficial jefe tecnico Suboficial jefe Suboficial primero Suboficial segundo Suboficial tercero Marinero primero Marinero segundoAbbr SJTCC SJTC SJT SJ S1 S2 S3 MA1 MA2 Equipment EditShips Edit Further information List of active ships of the Colombian Navy and List of decommissioned ships of the Colombian Navy ARC Almirante Padilla FM 51 ARC Juan Ricardo Oyola Vera NF 613 in Cartagena In keeping with its three major operational scenarios blue water operations littoral riverine operations and coast guard the ARC maintains a mix of ships suited to each of those profiles The scope of its operation has been historically oriented towards lightly armed coastal patrol and as such the majority of its vessels had been usually mid size cutters Traditionally the ARC has had strong ties to the American and German navies and shipbuilders and much of its equipment traces its roots to them Similar to other navies in the Latin American region the Colombian Navy acquired many vessels in the postwar years of the 1950s and 1960s usually as war surplus from the US Navy and then went through a somewhat dormant period during the 1960s to 1980s during which few major acquisitions were performed In more recent years the Colombian Navy has seen two major periods of upgrading and modernization of its equipment The first period as a result of the rise of the drug trade in the late 1970s and 1980s as well as at the time increased political tensions in the Caribbean due to territorial disputes with some of its neighbors with Nicaragua over the San Andres archipelago and with Venezuela over the Los Monjes Archipelago saw the need for a stronger Caribbean patrol force and resulted in the acquisition of its biggest vessels to date four missile corvettes later upgraded to light frigates in 1983 as well as some additional patrol craft The second period as a consequence of the deepening in the internal Colombian conflict started in the late 1990s and extended over to 2005 2006 provided strengthening of its riverine and littoral capabilities involving research and development for new indigenous designs in collaboration with the state owned Cotecmar shipyards that resulted in new types of vessels such as the state of the art Riverine Support Patrol Boats Spanish Patrullera de Apoyo Fluvial PAF also called riverine mothership Spanish Nodriza Fluvial like ARC Juan Ricardo Oyola Vera NF 613 which have drawn the eye of other navies with similar requirements Currently the ARC is working on additional medium and long term programs including the development and acquisition of a number of coastal patrol vessels Fassmer CPV 40 n 8 47 in 2011 2012 two oceanic patrol vessels Fassmer OPV 80 2011 2013 48 and the research and development of an indigenous corvette or frigate class vessel Plataforma Estrategica de Superficie planned towards 2018 2020 48 7 October 2011 South Korea is to donate a recently retired Pohang class corvette to Colombia as part of a drive to boost arms exports to the South American region An Yang PCC 755 was decommissioned by the Republic of Korea Navy RoKN on 29 September having been active for some 28 years since entering service in 1983 49 50 In September 2022 the Colombian Navy signed a contract for the design amp construction of 5 new fregates as part of the PES programma with Cotecmar shipyard and Damen Shipyards based on the SIGMA10514 design for delivery from 2026 onwards 51 Aircraft Edit Colombian Naval Aviation roundel Colombian CN 235 aircraft at Panama Tocumen International Airport during PANAMAX 2007 The Navy Aviation Command operates approximately 17 fixed and rotary wing aircraft for naval surveillance and patrol Search and Rescue SAR and logistical support of naval facilities and operations Colombian Navy Aircraft 52 Aircraft Origin Type Versions In service NotesFixed WingCASA C 212 Aviocar Spain Indonesia Transport C 212 100 1CASA CN 235 Spain Indonesia Maritime patrol 3Cessna 208 United States utility 2Beechcraft Super King Air Transport King Air 350 1Rotary WingBell UH 1N Twin Huey United States Transport helicopter 5Bell 412HP Utility helicopter Unknown One lost on 6 January 2013 53 MBB Kawasaki BK 117 Germany Japan Transport helicopter 1MBB Bo 105 Germany ASW utility Helicopter Bo 105CB 2Eurocopter AS 555 Fennec France Utility helicopter AS 555 2Bell 412 EP 4See also EditColombian Marine Infantry Military Forces of Colombia Military ranks of the Colombian Armed ForcesNotes Edit The marine budget of 1826 was 4 809 077 pesos The budget for 1827 was 2 026 422 apx 42 German sources rate it at 35 tonne but Colombian archives of the time including the diplomatic note of protest sent on June 26 1942 via the Switzerland delegation rate it at 52 tonne Puerto Rico is also occasionally noted as another Latin American country to support the effort but in reality it is an unincorporated territory of the United States ARC Almirante Padilla was the former USS Groton ARC Capitan Tono was the former USS Bisbee ARC Almirante Brion was the former USS Burlington Colombia is not a member of NATO so there is not an official equivalence between the Colombian military ranks and those defined by NATO The displayed parallel is approximate and for illustration purposes only Some sources have cited the acquisition of up to 4 CPV 40 vessels 46 however as of April 2011 only one has been confirmed launched 47 and budgetary constraints may change this number in the future References Edit Colombia s National Navy turns 190 years old 24 July 2013 Retrieved 23 May 2020 a b c Logros de la Politica Integral de Seguridad y Defensa para la Prosperidad PISDP Septiembre 2013 PDF in Spanish Republic of Colombia Ministry of National Defense September 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 04 13 Retrieved 2013 11 22 Infodefensa com 9 March 2015 Colombia se une a la operacion multinacional Atalanta 2015 Noticias Infodefensa America infodefensa com Archived from the original on 6 July 2017 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Armada Nacional de la Republica de Colombia July 2014 Mission of the Colombian Navy Archived from the original on 2014 07 03 Retrieved 18 July 2014 Armada Nacional de la Republica de Colombia July 2014 Objectives of the Colombian Navy Archived from the original on 2014 07 02 Retrieved 18 July 2014 a b c d Florez L September 1919 Accion de la Marina Colombiana en la guerra de Independencia Action of the Colombian Navy during the Independence War PDF in Spanish Estado Mayor del Ejercito de Colombia Archived PDF from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 30 July 2014 Estados Unidos de Colombia 1867 Causa contra el presidente de los Estados Unidos de Colombia ciudadano gran jeneral Tomas Cipriano de Mosquera i otros altos funcionarios federales Imprenta de la nacion Colombia 1867 p119 Retrieved 6 May 2020 Estados Unidos de Colombia DIARIO OFICIAL ANO III N 947 11 JUNIO 1867 PAG 1 suin juriscol Retrieved 4 May 2020 Edited by James L Mooney 1959 Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships V 6 R Through S Appendices Submarine Chasers Eagle Class Patrol Craft Government Printing Office 1959 p9 Retrieved 4 May 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help The Evansville journal volume December 02 1867 Image 1 chronclingamercia loc gov The Evansville Journal Retrieved 6 May 2020 Estados Unidos de Colombia DIARIO OFICIAL ANO VIII N 2732 24 DECIEMBRE 1872 PAG 1 2 PDF sidn ramajudicial Retrieved 4 May 2020 CA Luis Carlos Jaramillo Pena Panol de la historia 39 Una mirada retrospectiva a nuestra Marina de Guerra Cyber corredera Archived from the original on 2014 08 12 Retrieved 18 July 2014 Estados Unidos de Colombia DIARIO OFICIAL ANO XXXI N 9680 15 ENERO DE 1895 PAG 1 PDF sidn ramajudicial Retrieved 25 May 2020 David Bushnell 2 July 1995 Colombia y la causa de los aliados en la segunda guerra mundial Credencial Historia in Spanish 67 Archived from the original on 2011 05 02 Retrieved 26 April 2011 La Resolute fue hundida por un submarino nazi in Spanish El Tiempo 27 June 1986 Retrieved 18 July 2014 Satisfacciones morales y materiales exige Colombia del gobierno Aleman in Spanish El Tiempo 27 June 1942 Retrieved 19 July 2014 Helgason Gudmundur Patrol info for U 172 Departure 11 May 1942 German U boats of WWII uboat net Archived from the original on 6 September 2008 Retrieved 2014 07 18 Helgason Gudmundur Patrol info for U 505 Departure 7 Jun 1942 German U boats of WWII uboat net Archived from the original on 2008 09 04 Retrieved 2014 07 18 Helgason Gudmundur Patrol info for U 516 Departure 4 Oct 1943 German U boats of WWII uboat net Archived from the original on 2009 01 07 Retrieved 2014 07 18 Estado de beligerancia con Alemania in Spanish El Tiempo 27 November 1943 Retrieved 28 April 2011 Clave 1944 ARC Caldas hunde submarino nazi in Spanish El Tiempo 22 April 1991 Archived from the original on 3 October 2012 Retrieved 28 April 2011 Brillante victoria de la Marina Colombiana in Spanish El Tiempo 31 March 1944 Retrieved 18 July 2014 Garcia C N Ricardo Bernal February 2011 El M C Cabimas Primer buque petolero de la Armada Nacional Revista Armada Armada de la Republica de Colombia 98 February 2011 60 63 ISSN 1692 1097 Archived from the original on 2014 07 30 Retrieved 21 July 2014 United Nations Security Council 27 July 1950 Complaint of aggression upon the Republic of Korea Archived from the original on 2014 06 08 Retrieved 19 July 2014 a b CN Mario Rubianogroot Roman Asociacion Colombiana de los Descendientes de Veteranos de la Guerra de Corea 2012 Participacion de la Armada Nacional de Colombia en la Guerra de Corea Archived from the original on 2014 07 26 Retrieved 19 July 2014 Zarpa la Fragata Padilla in Spanish El Tiempo 1 November 1950 Retrieved 18 July 2014 Asociacion Colombiana de los Descendientes de Veteranos de la Guerra de Corea 2012 La Participacion de Colombia en la Guerra de Corea Archived from the original on 2014 10 24 Retrieved 19 July 2014 Guia de Estudio Historia Militar III Bogota Escuela Militar de Cadetes General Jose Maria Cordova Ejercito de Colombia 2008 p 100 amp ss archived from the original on 2016 03 04 retrieved 19 July 2014 Edwards Paul M 2013 United Nations Participants in the Korean War McFarland p 80 amp ss ISBN 9780786474578 retrieved 19 July 2014 ARCenAtalanta atalantacolombia blogspot com Archived from the original on 25 November 2015 Retrieved 1 May 2018 ARCenAtalanta Maniobras Navales Archived from the original on 2015 11 25 Retrieved 2015 11 25 Operacionatalantacolombia 26 October 2015 ARCenAtalanta Encuentro Fragata Victoria de la Real Marina de Espana 11 de Octubre atalantacolombia blogspot com Archived from the original on 25 November 2015 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Operacionatalantacolombia 2 October 2015 ARCenAtalanta Encuentro con el buque espanol BAM Meteoro 06 de Septiembre atalantacolombia blogspot com Archived from the original on 27 November 2015 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Operacionatalantacolombia 7 November 2015 ARCenAtalanta Ejercicios navales destructor japones DD Akizuki 15 de Octubre atalantacolombia blogspot com Archived from the original on 26 November 2015 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Operacionatalantacolombia 7 November 2015 ARCenAtalanta Mensaje del Comandante del buque danes Absalon 18 de Octubre atalantacolombia blogspot com Archived from the original on 27 November 2015 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Infodefensa com 13 October 2015 La OPV colombiana 7 de Agosto instruye a la Marina de las Islas Seychelles Noticias Infodefensa America infodefensa com Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved 1 May 2018 El ARC 7 de Agosto finaliza las operaciones de seguridad maritima en Africa www webinfomil com Archived from the original on 31 January 2018 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Colombia se une a la operacion multinacional Atalanta 2015 infodefensa com 10 March 2015 Archived from the original on 12 March 2015 Retrieved 14 March 2015 Fuerzas Militares pueden enfrentar cualquier amenaza interna o externa Mindefensa elcolombiano com 28 June 2015 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Forces and commands in Spanish armada mil co Archived from the original on 8 February 2014 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Colombia s Navy plans to establish permanent base on Antarctica The City Paper Bogota February 2 2018 Archived from the original on February 8 2018 Retrieved February 7 2018 The Colombian Navy Armada Nacional will test icy waters after announcing plans to establish a naval base on Antarctica Sanchez Alejandro February 7 2018 Colombia to acquire oceanographic vessel for Antarctic expeditions Jane s Information Group Archived from the original on February 8 2018 A 24 January Ministry of Defence statement revealed plans to construct Colombia s first scientific base in Antarctica to be named Almirante Padilla Armada Republica de Colombia 2006 Insignias de la Armada in Spanish Archived from the original on 2011 09 28 Retrieved 23 April 2011 Congreso de la Republica de Colombia 28 July 2010 Ley 1405 de 2010 Nuevos Grados Militares in Spanish Archived from the original on 2011 07 24 Retrieved 26 April 2011 a b Congreso de la Republica de Colombia 28 July 2010 Ley 1405 de 2010 Nuevos Grados Militares in Spanish Archived from the original on 2011 07 24 Retrieved 26 April 2011 Infodefensa com Las Fuerzas Armadas de Colombia estrenan nuevo armamento in Spanish Archived from the original on 9 October 2011 Retrieved 23 April 2011 a b Fassmer Shipbuilding Launching of Colombian Navy 40m Coastal Patrol Vessel CPV40 Archived from the original on 5 January 2013 Retrieved 23 April 2011 a b lt in 2011 2012 Colombian Navy introduced ARC 20 First ship built in Colombia by COTECMAR gt Fr Cpt German H Locarno October 2010 Porque un OPV para la ARC Revista Armada in Spanish 97 ISSN 1692 1097 Archived from the original on 2011 09 28 Retrieved 24 April 2011 Defense Market Intelligence Colombia Navy granted ex S Korean missile Corvette Archived from the original on 15 December 2013 Retrieved 8 October 2011 Donghae class corvette COTECMAR on LinkedIn SeguimosAvante Cotecmar Colombia World Air Forces 2013 Archived 2013 11 02 at the Wayback Machine Flightglobal com pg 13 December 11 2012 Air Forces Monthly Stamford Lincolnshire Key Publishing Ltd March 2013 p 32 External links EditColombian Navy Official site in Spanish Ministerio de Defensa Nacional Colombia Colombian Defense Ministry Official site in Spanish Colombia Seguridad amp Defensa Extensive information about Colombian military forces in Spanish UNFFMM pagina no oficial de las Fuerzas Militares de Colombia Unofficial fan site for the Military Forces of Colombia in Spanish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Colombian Navy amp oldid 1114169560, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.