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Air force history of Iran

The history of the Iranian Air Force, currently known as the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force, can be divided into two phases—before the Islamic Revolution, and after it.

Imperial era edit

 
Eight major officers of the IIAF, in the 1930s.
 
An F-86 Sabre from the Golden Crown aerobatic display team, of the Imperial Iranian Air Force.
 
CH-47C Chinook of the Imperial Iranian Air Force at Issy heliport, Paris, in 1971.
Imperial Iranian Air Force
 
The logo of the Imperial Iranian Air Force
FoundedFebruary 25, 1925
Disbanded11 February 1979
Country  Pahlavi Iran
AllegianceShah of Iran
TypeAir force
RoleAerial warfare
Size100,000 (1979)
Aircraft450 modern combat aircraft (1978)
Insignia
Roundel 
Fin flash 

The Imperial Iranian Air Force (IIAF) was a branch of the Imperial Iranian Armed Forces and was established by Reza Shah, the Shah of Iran, in 1920.[citation needed] It became operational with its first fully trained pilots on February 25, 1925.[citation needed] Iran's first attempt to procure aircraft from the United States in the 1920s failed due to Washington's refusal to supply equipment because of a World War I[which?] treaty.[1] Until World War II, the IIAF's aircraft inventory consisted entirely of European aircraft, mainly British and German. However, following a coordinated British and Soviet invasion of Iran during World War II in response to Reza Shah's declaration of neutrality, the IIAF's bases were occupied by the Allies and all existing IIAF aircraft were either destroyed or dismantled by the Soviet and British military. A few Iranian planes did manage to get airborne during the invasion and engaged the Royal Air Force (RAF) in dogfights, in which the RAF emerged victorious.[citation needed]

A roughly 1946 order of battle for the Air Force can be found in Jane's Fighting Aircraft of World War II. Two regiments were both reported to be based near Tehran. After World War II, the IIAF began to slowly rebuild its inventory, with aircraft mainly supplied by the United States and Great Britain. A national, aerobatic display team was formed in 1958. Called "Golden Crown", and a part of the IIAF, this lasted until 1978.[2] Lieutenant General Nader Jahanbani is credited with establishing the Golden Crown and is generally considered the "Father of IIAF".

In the 1960s, the IIAF acquired 90 Canadair Sabre fighters from the RCAF, but they were flipped over to the Pakistan Air Force.

In the 1960s and 1970s, the air force was used as part of a joint, aerial espionage programme of Iran and the United States, against the former-Soviet Union. This was in two parts, known as Project Dark Gene and Project Ibex.[3]

The IIAF deployed aircraft to Oman in the 1970s, when Iran provided military assistance to that country, during the Dhofar rebellion. During this conflict, one Iranian F-4 Phantom II was shot down by rebels.

In 1976, the Imperial Iranian Air Force responded to a UFO incident over the Iranian capital, Tehran.

Later in the 1970s, the IIAF became the only military force other than the United States Navy to be equipped with the F-14 Tomcat. Consequently, it also became the only other operator of the AIM-54 Phoenix air-to-air missile.

During this era, the United States instituted the "Spellout", "Peace Ruby" and "Peace Net" programmes to upgrade the air-defence system of Iran. As well as air defence radars, the network was linked using microwave and troposcatter communications networks.

 
The first F-4D Phantom II squadron of Iran, 1971.

After the 1979 Iranian revolution, some of the IIAF's F-14s were not in working order due to a lack of necessary spare parts, because of an American arms embargo and damage sustained by the aircraft during the 1980 Iraqi invasion. Some were brought back into service, due to localised production of reverse-engineered, Iranian-made, spare parts, as well as "cannibalism", the process of taking working parts from damaged aircraft and using them to repair others. The IIAF had also placed an order for over 150 F-16 Fighting Falcon fighter aircraft in 1976, but deliveries were never made due to the revolution. These aircraft would go on to serve in the Israeli Air Force.

Post-Islamic Revolution edit

The overthrow of the Shah in the Islamic Revolution of February 1979, was followed by changes to the organization of the Iranian military. The air force was renamed the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force (IRIAF), and largely inherited the equipment and structure of the former IIAF. Due to strained relations with the west, Iran had to procure new equipment from Brazil, the Soviet Union/Russia and the People's Republic of China.

However, it lost most of its leading officers in the course of post-revolutionary chaos, as well as due to the prosecution of those considered as loyal to the Shah, pro-U.S. or elsewhere by the new government in Tehran. Its other personnel were also decimated by the purges, with many pilots removed or leaving the air force. This left the air force ill-prepared for the Iran–Iraq War.

Iran–Iraq War edit

 
Two F-14 Tomcats equipped with multiple missiles, circa 1986

A series of purges and forced retirements, as a consequence of the 1979 Iranian Revolution, resulted in the manpower of the service being halved between February 1979 and July 1980, leaving the IRIAF ill-prepared for the Iran–Iraq War (also called the "1st Persian Gulf War"). The sudden Iraqi air strikes against six Iranian airfields and four other military installations, launched on the afternoon of 22 September 1980, came as a complete surprise and caused a shock in the renamed "IRIAF", which was in the midst of reorganizing following the Iranian revolution which had ended 1 year earlier. Nevertheless, the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force retaliated, flying strikes involving up to 146 fighter-bombers against Iraqi airfields, oil industry installations, and communications sites. In addition to striking Iraqi airfields, the IRIAF succeeded in damaging Iraqi oil-producing and exporting facilities; resulting in Baghdad's decision to stop all oil exports for several years.

Following a one-week-long counter-air campaign, and due to a critical situation on the ground in Khuzestan Province, the IRIAF was thrown into the land-battle, mainly in the areas of Khorramshahr, Ahvaz, and Dezful. Here, the IRIAF's performance surprised most informed observers, with air strikes against armour and supply columns. Due to heavy losses in troops and armour, Iranian air superiority and an interruption of supply systems, the Iraqis had to stop their offensive, and then became involved in extremely bitter land-battles against Iranian ground forces.

 
The first squadron of Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force F-14 Tomcat pilots, at Shiraz Air Base.

However, the IRIAF paid a heavy price for this success, losing dozens of its best pilots and aircraft in the period between September and December 1980. Although the readiness rates of the IRIAF significantly increased in the following months, its overall role and influence declined, as the clerical government searched to put the emphasis in fighting on the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) militias, but also attempted to develop a separate air arm for this service.

After the successful liberation of most Iranian areas captured by the Iraqis, in late spring 1982, the situation of the IRIAF changed completely. From an air arm that was offensive by nature, it was largely relegated to air defense and, relatively seldom, tasks of flying bombing attacks against targets of industrial and military significance inside Iraq. Simultaneously, the IRIAF had to learn to maintain and keep operational its large fleet of U.S.-built aircraft and helicopters without outside help, due to American sanctions. Reaching back on equipment purchased from the U.S.A. in the 1970s, the Iranians began establishing their own aerospace industry; their efforts in this remained largely unrecognized until recently.

However, the IRIAF was able to obtain limited amounts of spare parts and weapons for its American-made aircraft, when Iran was able to buy American spare parts and weapons for its armed forces, during the Iran–Contra affair. Deliveries came via Israel and later, from the USA.

From 1984 and 1985, the IRIAF found itself confronted by an ever-better organized and equipped opponent, as the Iraqi Air force—reinforced by deliveries of advanced fighter-bombers from France and the Soviet Union—launched numerous offensives against Iranian population centres, industrial infrastructures, powerplants, and oil-export hubs. These became better known as "The Tanker War" and "The War of the Cities". To defend against an increasing number of Iraqi air strikes, the IRIAF leaned heavily on its large fleet of F-14 Tomcat air superiority fighters. Tomcats were mainly deployed in defense of the strategically important Kharg Island (main hub for Iranian oil exports), and Tehran. Over 300 air-to-air engagements against IQAF fighters, fighter-bombers, and bombers, were fought in these areas alone between 1980 and 1988.

Confronted with the fact that it could not obtain replacements for equipment lost in what became a war of attrition against Iraq, for the rest of the conflict, the IRIAF remained defence-orientated, conserving its surviving assets as a "force in being". From mid 1987, the IRIAF found itself confronted also with U.S. Navy fighters over the Persian Gulf. A number of confrontations that occurred between July 1987 and August 1988, stretched available IRIAF assets to the limit, exhausting its capability to defend Iranian air space against Iraqi air strikes.

Post Iran–Iraq War edit

 
Iranian Air Force MiG-29UB
 
IRIAF Northrop F-5A Freedom Fighter

Immediately after the end of the Iran–Iraq War, the IRIAF was partially re-built by limited purchases of MiG-29 fighters and Su-24 bombers from the Soviet Union, as well as F-7M and FT-7 fighters from China. While a welcome reinforcement, these types never replaced the older, U.S.-built F-4 Phantoms or F-14 Tomcats (now the only air arm in the world to continue using the fighter), or even Northrop F-5 Tiger IIs. Instead, the IRIAF continued efforts to maintain these types in service, and began a number of projects with the intention to refurbish and upgrade them.

A Russian attempt to sell a large number of MiG-27s, MiG-31s, and Tupolev Tu-22Ms to Iran, launched in 1993, was spoiled by a lack of interest and money on the part of Iran.

Iraqi aircraft from the Persian Gulf War edit

Following an alleged agreement (no proof exists for it) between the regimes in Baghdad and Tehran, in February 1991 a significant number of Iraqi Air Force (IrAF) aircraft were evacuated to Iranian airfields, to avoid destruction in the 1991 Persian Gulf War. The agreement was for Iran to return them after the war, but the Iranians impounded these aircraft instead, claiming them as war reparations for the Iran–Iraq War.

The IRIAF has pressed into service all of the 36 Su-24MKs, 7 SU-25s and 24 Mirage F.1BQs and F.1EQs flown from Iraq, while all the other types—including 40 Su-20/22s and at least ten MiG-23s of various versions—were stored.

Present edit

 
HESA Azarakhsh.

The exact current composition of the IRIAF is hard to determine, but estimates do exist. Due to the continuous spare parts shortages faced by the air force, a decision was made in the late 1980s to develop a local aerospace industry to support the air force.

In 2002, Iran with the co-operation of Ukraine, successfully started the manufacture of the Iran-140; a licence-built version of the Antonov An-140 transport aircraft. Simultaneously, Iran began construction of two 100% domestically produced fighters, upgraded using technology from the F-14 Tomcat and the F-5 Tiger II. The fighters have been named the Azarakhsh and the Shafaq.

Since then the country has also become self-sufficient in the manufacture of helicopters. The country claims that it is capable of producing the old U.S. AH-1 Cobra gunship. Additionally, Iran also produces Bell Helicopter Bell 212 and Bell 206 helicopters in serial production. These are known respectively as the Shabaviz 2-75 and the Shabaviz 206.

Notable pilots edit

Unlike many other nations with modern air forces, Iran was engaged in an intense and protracted war. The 8 year long conflict with Iraq gave the IRIAF the opportunity to develop some battle-tested and hardened fighter pilots. Though information about the IRIAF is, at best, hard to access, two men stand out as the best Iranian fighter aces.

Jalil Zandi is Iran's most successful fighter pilot. Flying the F-14 Tomcat he claimed 11 aerial victories, with 8 of those being confirmed by western sources.[4] These include 4 MiG-23s, 2 Su-22s, 2 MiG 21 and 3 Mirage F1s.[5] These totals make him the most successful Iranian fighter pilot, the most successful F-14 Tomcat pilot, and the most recent (and last man) to claim ace status.

Yadollah Javadpour flew the F-5 and claimed five Iraqi aircraft shot down; two being reliably confirmed.[6] This makes him an ace and the most successful F-5 fighter pilot, but his greatest claim to fame happened on August 6, 1983 when he shot down an Iraqi MiG-25. This was a significant achievement for an F-5 pilot, as the MiG-25 is a much bigger and faster aircraft with a substantial altitude advantage. His other confirmed kill was an Su-20 on October 17, 1980.[7]

Inventory 1920–1979 edit

Inventory of the Imperial Iranian Air Force (IIAF)
Aircraft Number Origin Image
Avro Anson Mk.I   United Kingdom
Beechcraft F-33A Bonanza 10   United States  
Beechcraft F-33C Bonanza 39   United States
Bell 206 JetRanger   United States
Bell 212   United States
Bell AH-1J International   United States
Boeing 707-368C   United States  
Boeing 707-3J9C   United States
Boeing 747-100   United States
Boeing 747-100F   United States
Boeing 747-200F   United States
Boeing-Vertol CH-47C Chinook   United States  
Breguet 14   French Third Republic
Breguet 19 A2   French Third Republic  
Canadair CL-13B Sabre   Canada
Cessna O-2A Skymaster 12   United States  
Curtiss H75A-9   United States
Dassault Falcon 50   France
de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver   Canada  
de Havilland Canada DHC-4 Caribou 1   Canada  
de Havilland Tiger Moth 109   Canada  
Fokker F27-400M 2   Netherlands  
Fokker F27-600 25   Netherlands
General Dynamics F-16A Fighting Falcon 160 were ordered and 140 were ready to be shipped, but were not delivered due to the severance of Iran-US relations.   United States  
Grumman F-14A Tomcat 79   United States  
Hawker Fury Mk.I   United Kingdom
Hawker Fury Mk.II   United Kingdom
Hawker Hart   United Kingdom
Hawker Hind 55   United Kingdom  
Hawker Audax 66   United Kingdom  
Hawker Hurricane Mk.I   United Kingdom  
Hawker Hurricane Mk.II   United Kingdom
Hawker Hurricane Mk T.IIC 2   United Kingdom  
Kaman HH-43 Huskie 12   United States  
Lockheed C-130E Hercules 28   United States  
Lockheed C-130H Hercules 32   United States
Lockheed RC-130 Hercules   United States
Lockheed P-3F Orion 6   United States  
Lockheed JetStar 8 3   United States
Lockheed T-33 Shooting Star   United States  
McDonnell Douglas F-4D Phantom II 32   United States  
McDonnell Douglas F-4E Phantom II 177   United States  
McDonnell Douglas RF-4E Phantom II 16   United States
Northrop F-5A Freedom Fighter 104   United States  
Northrop F-5B Freedom Fighter 23   United States
Northrop F-5E Tiger II   United States
McDonnell Douglas F/A-18 Hornet 200-250 was on the shopping list but remained incomplete due to the severance of relations between Iran and the United States   United States  
Northrop F-5F Tiger II   United States
North American F-86F Sabre   United States  
Polikarpov DH.4
Polikarpov DH.9A  
Polikarpov R-1  
Pilatus PC-7 Turbo Trainer
Polikarpov R-5
Republic P-47D Thunderbolt 50   United States  
Republic F-84F Thunderstreak   United States
Republic RF-84F Thunderstreak   United States
Republic F-84G Thunderjet   United States  
Rockwell 681   United States
Rockwell 690A   United States

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ Nassirkhani, Farhad (ed.). . Imperial Iranian Air Force. Archived from the original on 2019-12-05.
  2. ^ Alibabaie, Gholamreza (2004). History of Iranian Air Force. Tehran: Ashian. pp. 98–99. ISBN 964-7518-19-6.
  3. ^ . 15 February 2009. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
  4. ^ Fire in the Hills: Iranian and Iraqi Battles of Autumn 1982, by Tom Cooper & Farzad Bishop, Sept. 9, 2003 2014-08-22 at the Wayback Machine: Dead link
  5. ^ Arabian Peninsula & Persian Gulf Database: Iranian Air-to-Air Victories, 1982–Today, Sept. 16, 2003 2010-03-23 at the Wayback Machine: Dead link
  6. ^ Imperial Iranian Air Force: Samurai in the skies
  7. ^ Arabian Peninsula & Persian Gulf Database: Iranian Air-to-Air Victories, 1976–1981, Sept. 16, 2003 2010-03-23 at the Wayback Machine:Dead link

Bibliography edit

  • Andersson, Lennart (July 1998). "Histoire de l'aéronautique persane, 1921–1941: La première aviation du Chah d'Iran" [History of the Persian Air Force, 1921–1941: The First Aircraft of the Shah of Iran]. Avions: Toute l'aéronautique et son histoire (in French) (76): 2–12. ISSN 1243-8650.

Further reading edit

  • Deurenberg, Ruud (March–April 2001). "Round-Out: Iranian 'Open-Top' Hurricanes". Air Enthusiast (92): 77. ISSN 0143-5450.

External links edit

    force, history, iran, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, relies, largely, entirely, single, source, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Air force history of Iran news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2018 This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The history of the Iranian Air Force currently known as the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force can be divided into two phases before the Islamic Revolution and after it Contents 1 Imperial era 2 Post Islamic Revolution 2 1 Iran Iraq War 2 2 Post Iran Iraq War 2 3 Iraqi aircraft from the Persian Gulf War 2 4 Present 3 Notable pilots 4 Inventory 1920 1979 5 Gallery 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksImperial era edit nbsp Eight major officers of the IIAF in the 1930s nbsp An F 86 Sabre from the Golden Crown aerobatic display team of the Imperial Iranian Air Force nbsp CH 47C Chinook of the Imperial Iranian Air Force at Issy heliport Paris in 1971 Imperial Iranian Air Force nbsp The logo of the Imperial Iranian Air ForceFoundedFebruary 25 1925Disbanded11 February 1979Country nbsp Pahlavi IranAllegianceShah of IranTypeAir forceRoleAerial warfareSize100 000 1979 Aircraft450 modern combat aircraft 1978 InsigniaRoundel nbsp Fin flash nbsp The Imperial Iranian Air Force IIAF was a branch of the Imperial Iranian Armed Forces and was established by Reza Shah the Shah of Iran in 1920 citation needed It became operational with its first fully trained pilots on February 25 1925 citation needed Iran s first attempt to procure aircraft from the United States in the 1920s failed due to Washington s refusal to supply equipment because of a World War I which treaty 1 Until World War II the IIAF s aircraft inventory consisted entirely of European aircraft mainly British and German However following a coordinated British and Soviet invasion of Iran during World War II in response to Reza Shah s declaration of neutrality the IIAF s bases were occupied by the Allies and all existing IIAF aircraft were either destroyed or dismantled by the Soviet and British military A few Iranian planes did manage to get airborne during the invasion and engaged the Royal Air Force RAF in dogfights in which the RAF emerged victorious citation needed A roughly 1946 order of battle for the Air Force can be found in Jane s Fighting Aircraft of World War II Two regiments were both reported to be based near Tehran After World War II the IIAF began to slowly rebuild its inventory with aircraft mainly supplied by the United States and Great Britain A national aerobatic display team was formed in 1958 Called Golden Crown and a part of the IIAF this lasted until 1978 2 Lieutenant General Nader Jahanbani is credited with establishing the Golden Crown and is generally considered the Father of IIAF In the 1960s the IIAF acquired 90 Canadair Sabre fighters from the RCAF but they were flipped over to the Pakistan Air Force In the 1960s and 1970s the air force was used as part of a joint aerial espionage programme of Iran and the United States against the former Soviet Union This was in two parts known as Project Dark Gene and Project Ibex 3 The IIAF deployed aircraft to Oman in the 1970s when Iran provided military assistance to that country during the Dhofar rebellion During this conflict one Iranian F 4 Phantom II was shot down by rebels In 1976 the Imperial Iranian Air Force responded to a UFO incident over the Iranian capital Tehran Later in the 1970s the IIAF became the only military force other than the United States Navy to be equipped with the F 14 Tomcat Consequently it also became the only other operator of the AIM 54 Phoenix air to air missile During this era the United States instituted the Spellout Peace Ruby and Peace Net programmes to upgrade the air defence system of Iran As well as air defence radars the network was linked using microwave and troposcatter communications networks nbsp The first F 4D Phantom II squadron of Iran 1971 After the 1979 Iranian revolution some of the IIAF s F 14s were not in working order due to a lack of necessary spare parts because of an American arms embargo and damage sustained by the aircraft during the 1980 Iraqi invasion Some were brought back into service due to localised production of reverse engineered Iranian made spare parts as well as cannibalism the process of taking working parts from damaged aircraft and using them to repair others The IIAF had also placed an order for over 150 F 16 Fighting Falcon fighter aircraft in 1976 but deliveries were never made due to the revolution These aircraft would go on to serve in the Israeli Air Force Post Islamic Revolution editThe overthrow of the Shah in the Islamic Revolution of February 1979 was followed by changes to the organization of the Iranian military The air force was renamed the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force IRIAF and largely inherited the equipment and structure of the former IIAF Due to strained relations with the west Iran had to procure new equipment from Brazil the Soviet Union Russia and the People s Republic of China However it lost most of its leading officers in the course of post revolutionary chaos as well as due to the prosecution of those considered as loyal to the Shah pro U S or elsewhere by the new government in Tehran Its other personnel were also decimated by the purges with many pilots removed or leaving the air force This left the air force ill prepared for the Iran Iraq War Iran Iraq War edit nbsp Two F 14 Tomcats equipped with multiple missiles circa 1986A series of purges and forced retirements as a consequence of the 1979 Iranian Revolution resulted in the manpower of the service being halved between February 1979 and July 1980 leaving the IRIAF ill prepared for the Iran Iraq War also called the 1st Persian Gulf War The sudden Iraqi air strikes against six Iranian airfields and four other military installations launched on the afternoon of 22 September 1980 came as a complete surprise and caused a shock in the renamed IRIAF which was in the midst of reorganizing following the Iranian revolution which had ended 1 year earlier Nevertheless the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force retaliated flying strikes involving up to 146 fighter bombers against Iraqi airfields oil industry installations and communications sites In addition to striking Iraqi airfields the IRIAF succeeded in damaging Iraqi oil producing and exporting facilities resulting in Baghdad s decision to stop all oil exports for several years Following a one week long counter air campaign and due to a critical situation on the ground in Khuzestan Province the IRIAF was thrown into the land battle mainly in the areas of Khorramshahr Ahvaz and Dezful Here the IRIAF s performance surprised most informed observers with air strikes against armour and supply columns Due to heavy losses in troops and armour Iranian air superiority and an interruption of supply systems the Iraqis had to stop their offensive and then became involved in extremely bitter land battles against Iranian ground forces nbsp The first squadron of Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force F 14 Tomcat pilots at Shiraz Air Base However the IRIAF paid a heavy price for this success losing dozens of its best pilots and aircraft in the period between September and December 1980 Although the readiness rates of the IRIAF significantly increased in the following months its overall role and influence declined as the clerical government searched to put the emphasis in fighting on the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps IRGC militias but also attempted to develop a separate air arm for this service After the successful liberation of most Iranian areas captured by the Iraqis in late spring 1982 the situation of the IRIAF changed completely From an air arm that was offensive by nature it was largely relegated to air defense and relatively seldom tasks of flying bombing attacks against targets of industrial and military significance inside Iraq Simultaneously the IRIAF had to learn to maintain and keep operational its large fleet of U S built aircraft and helicopters without outside help due to American sanctions Reaching back on equipment purchased from the U S A in the 1970s the Iranians began establishing their own aerospace industry their efforts in this remained largely unrecognized until recently However the IRIAF was able to obtain limited amounts of spare parts and weapons for its American made aircraft when Iran was able to buy American spare parts and weapons for its armed forces during the Iran Contra affair Deliveries came via Israel and later from the USA From 1984 and 1985 the IRIAF found itself confronted by an ever better organized and equipped opponent as the Iraqi Air force reinforced by deliveries of advanced fighter bombers from France and the Soviet Union launched numerous offensives against Iranian population centres industrial infrastructures powerplants and oil export hubs These became better known as The Tanker War and The War of the Cities To defend against an increasing number of Iraqi air strikes the IRIAF leaned heavily on its large fleet of F 14 Tomcat air superiority fighters Tomcats were mainly deployed in defense of the strategically important Kharg Island main hub for Iranian oil exports and Tehran Over 300 air to air engagements against IQAF fighters fighter bombers and bombers were fought in these areas alone between 1980 and 1988 Confronted with the fact that it could not obtain replacements for equipment lost in what became a war of attrition against Iraq for the rest of the conflict the IRIAF remained defence orientated conserving its surviving assets as a force in being From mid 1987 the IRIAF found itself confronted also with U S Navy fighters over the Persian Gulf A number of confrontations that occurred between July 1987 and August 1988 stretched available IRIAF assets to the limit exhausting its capability to defend Iranian air space against Iraqi air strikes Post Iran Iraq War edit nbsp Iranian Air Force MiG 29UB nbsp IRIAF Northrop F 5A Freedom FighterImmediately after the end of the Iran Iraq War the IRIAF was partially re built by limited purchases of MiG 29 fighters and Su 24 bombers from the Soviet Union as well as F 7M and FT 7 fighters from China While a welcome reinforcement these types never replaced the older U S built F 4 Phantoms or F 14 Tomcats now the only air arm in the world to continue using the fighter or even Northrop F 5 Tiger IIs Instead the IRIAF continued efforts to maintain these types in service and began a number of projects with the intention to refurbish and upgrade them A Russian attempt to sell a large number of MiG 27s MiG 31s and Tupolev Tu 22Ms to Iran launched in 1993 was spoiled by a lack of interest and money on the part of Iran Iraqi aircraft from the Persian Gulf War edit Following an alleged agreement no proof exists for it between the regimes in Baghdad and Tehran in February 1991 a significant number of Iraqi Air Force IrAF aircraft were evacuated to Iranian airfields to avoid destruction in the 1991 Persian Gulf War The agreement was for Iran to return them after the war but the Iranians impounded these aircraft instead claiming them as war reparations for the Iran Iraq War The IRIAF has pressed into service all of the 36 Su 24MKs 7 SU 25s and 24 Mirage F 1BQs and F 1EQs flown from Iraq while all the other types including 40 Su 20 22s and at least ten MiG 23s of various versions were stored Present edit nbsp HESA Azarakhsh The exact current composition of the IRIAF is hard to determine but estimates do exist Due to the continuous spare parts shortages faced by the air force a decision was made in the late 1980s to develop a local aerospace industry to support the air force In 2002 Iran with the co operation of Ukraine successfully started the manufacture of the Iran 140 a licence built version of the Antonov An 140 transport aircraft Simultaneously Iran began construction of two 100 domestically produced fighters upgraded using technology from the F 14 Tomcat and the F 5 Tiger II The fighters have been named the Azarakhsh and the Shafaq Since then the country has also become self sufficient in the manufacture of helicopters The country claims that it is capable of producing the old U S AH 1 Cobra gunship Additionally Iran also produces Bell Helicopter Bell 212 and Bell 206 helicopters in serial production These are known respectively as the Shabaviz 2 75 and the Shabaviz 206 Notable pilots editUnlike many other nations with modern air forces Iran was engaged in an intense and protracted war The 8 year long conflict with Iraq gave the IRIAF the opportunity to develop some battle tested and hardened fighter pilots Though information about the IRIAF is at best hard to access two men stand out as the best Iranian fighter aces Jalil Zandi is Iran s most successful fighter pilot Flying the F 14 Tomcat he claimed 11 aerial victories with 8 of those being confirmed by western sources 4 These include 4 MiG 23s 2 Su 22s 2 MiG 21 and 3 Mirage F1s 5 These totals make him the most successful Iranian fighter pilot the most successful F 14 Tomcat pilot and the most recent and last man to claim ace status Yadollah Javadpour flew the F 5 and claimed five Iraqi aircraft shot down two being reliably confirmed 6 This makes him an ace and the most successful F 5 fighter pilot but his greatest claim to fame happened on August 6 1983 when he shot down an Iraqi MiG 25 This was a significant achievement for an F 5 pilot as the MiG 25 is a much bigger and faster aircraft with a substantial altitude advantage His other confirmed kill was an Su 20 on October 17 1980 7 Inventory 1920 1979 editInventory of the Imperial Iranian Air Force IIAF Aircraft Number Origin ImageAvro Anson Mk I nbsp United KingdomBeechcraft F 33A Bonanza 10 nbsp United States nbsp Beechcraft F 33C Bonanza 39 nbsp United StatesBell 206 JetRanger nbsp United StatesBell 212 nbsp United StatesBell AH 1J International nbsp United StatesBoeing 707 368C nbsp United States nbsp Boeing 707 3J9C nbsp United StatesBoeing 747 100 nbsp United StatesBoeing 747 100F nbsp United StatesBoeing 747 200F nbsp United StatesBoeing Vertol CH 47C Chinook nbsp United States nbsp Breguet 14 nbsp French Third RepublicBreguet 19 A2 nbsp French Third Republic nbsp Canadair CL 13B Sabre nbsp CanadaCessna O 2A Skymaster 12 nbsp United States nbsp Curtiss H75A 9 nbsp United StatesDassault Falcon 50 nbsp Francede Havilland Canada DHC 2 Beaver nbsp Canada nbsp de Havilland Canada DHC 4 Caribou 1 nbsp Canada nbsp de Havilland Tiger Moth 109 nbsp Canada nbsp Fokker F27 400M 2 nbsp Netherlands nbsp Fokker F27 600 25 nbsp NetherlandsGeneral Dynamics F 16A Fighting Falcon 160 were ordered and 140 were ready to be shipped but were not delivered due to the severance of Iran US relations nbsp United States nbsp Grumman F 14A Tomcat 79 nbsp United States nbsp Hawker Fury Mk I nbsp United KingdomHawker Fury Mk II nbsp United KingdomHawker Hart nbsp United KingdomHawker Hind 55 nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Hawker Audax 66 nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Hawker Hurricane Mk I nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Hawker Hurricane Mk II nbsp United KingdomHawker Hurricane Mk T IIC 2 nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Kaman HH 43 Huskie 12 nbsp United States nbsp Lockheed C 130E Hercules 28 nbsp United States nbsp Lockheed C 130H Hercules 32 nbsp United StatesLockheed RC 130 Hercules nbsp United StatesLockheed P 3F Orion 6 nbsp United States nbsp Lockheed JetStar 8 3 nbsp United StatesLockheed T 33 Shooting Star nbsp United States nbsp McDonnell Douglas F 4D Phantom II 32 nbsp United States nbsp McDonnell Douglas F 4E Phantom II 177 nbsp United States nbsp McDonnell Douglas RF 4E Phantom II 16 nbsp United StatesNorthrop F 5A Freedom Fighter 104 nbsp United States nbsp Northrop F 5B Freedom Fighter 23 nbsp United StatesNorthrop F 5E Tiger II nbsp United StatesMcDonnell Douglas F A 18 Hornet 200 250 was on the shopping list but remained incomplete due to the severance of relations between Iran and the United States nbsp United States nbsp Northrop F 5F Tiger II nbsp United StatesNorth American F 86F Sabre nbsp United States nbsp Polikarpov DH 4Polikarpov DH 9A nbsp Polikarpov R 1 nbsp Pilatus PC 7 Turbo TrainerPolikarpov R 5Republic P 47D Thunderbolt 50 nbsp United States nbsp Republic F 84F Thunderstreak nbsp United StatesRepublic RF 84F Thunderstreak nbsp United StatesRepublic F 84G Thunderjet nbsp United States nbsp Rockwell 681 nbsp United StatesRockwell 690A nbsp United StatesGallery edit nbsp A Boeing 707 of the Imperial Iranian Air Force refuels a Boeing 747 of the IIAF References edit Nassirkhani Farhad ed IIAF History Imperial Iranian Air Force Archived from the original on 2019 12 05 Alibabaie Gholamreza 2004 History of Iranian Air Force Tehran Ashian pp 98 99 ISBN 964 7518 19 6 Project Dark Gene 15 February 2009 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 3 February 2011 Fire in the Hills Iranian and Iraqi Battles of Autumn 1982 by Tom Cooper amp Farzad Bishop Sept 9 2003 Archived 2014 08 22 at the Wayback Machine Dead link Arabian Peninsula amp Persian Gulf Database Iranian Air to Air Victories 1982 Today Sept 16 2003 Archived 2010 03 23 at the Wayback Machine Dead link Imperial Iranian Air Force Samurai in the skies Arabian Peninsula amp Persian Gulf Database Iranian Air to Air Victories 1976 1981 Sept 16 2003 Archived 2010 03 23 at the Wayback Machine Dead linkBibliography editAndersson Lennart July 1998 Histoire de l aeronautique persane 1921 1941 La premiere aviation du Chah d Iran History of the Persian Air Force 1921 1941 The First Aircraft of the Shah of Iran Avions Toute l aeronautique et son histoire in French 76 2 12 ISSN 1243 8650 Further reading editDeurenberg Ruud March April 2001 Round Out Iranian Open Top Hurricanes Air Enthusiast 92 77 ISSN 0143 5450 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Air force of Iran Historical memorial site for the Imperial Iranian Air Force Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Air force history of Iran amp oldid 1180793671, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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