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Haitian Aviation Corps

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aviation Corps of the Armed Forces of Haiti
Corps d'Aviation des Forces Armées d'Haiti (French)
Kò Avyasyon Fòs Lame d'Ayiti (Haitian Creole)
Sleeve Patch of the Aviation Corps of the Armed Forces of Haiti
Sleeve Patch of the Aviation Corps
Founded1942–1995
2017–present
Country Haiti
TypeAir force
RoleAerial warfare
Part ofArmed Forces of Haiti
Primary GarrisonMilitary Aviation Base
Clercine, Port-au-Prince,Haiti
Commanders
Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces Lt.Gen. Derby Guerrier (acting)
Commander of the Aviation Corps Lt.Col. Brière Mars
Notable
commanders
Colonel Serge Bourdeau

The Aviation Corps of the Armed Forces of Haiti (French: Corps d'Aviation des Forces Armées d’Haïti) is the air force component of the Armed Forces of Haiti. The air corps was disbanded along with the rest of the armed forces after Operation Uphold Democracy, the US invasion of 1994.

Since the remobilization of the Armed Forces in 2017, the ranks are slowly being filled, and it has reclaimed its main garrison at the Military Aviation base in Clercine (near Toussaint Louverture International Airport)

History & pre-1995 force

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The formerly named Haitian Air Corps was founded in 1942 with aircraft supplied by the US.[1] The main task for this new air force was transport and communication.[1] The Haitian Air Corps was headquartered at Bowen Field which was a former US marine corps airfield.[1] Môle-Saint-Nicolas Airport was a secondary airfield. During World War 2 the Haitian Air Corps was engaged in the Caribbean anti submarine warfare campaign against the German Navy.[2] In 1950 the Haitian Air Corps received its first combat aircraft: six F-51D Mustangs which were active during the Duvalier period. In October 1970 the Mustangs were replaced by T-28 Trojans from France. The T-28s were then replaced by O-2As in 1975. In the 1980s the Haitian Air Corps received its first jet aircraft: the SIAI-Machetti S-211 and these were accompanied by SF-260s to replace the O-2s which were sold for parts. In 1990 the SIAI-Machetti S-211s were sold, 2 were sold to United States private companies and the other two were sold to the Singapore Air Force.[3] During operation Uphold Democracy the Haitian Air Corps played almost no role in Haitian defence, the Haitian inventory at the time included: Two O-57 Grasshopper scout planes, Three BT-13 Valiant trainer planes, One C-78 Bobcat transport plane, and one C-46 Commando transport plane.[4] Almost all of the inventory at the time of the invasion dated back to World War Two and was in very poor condition at the time, the air corps was disband along with the rest of the armed forces in 1994.

Lynn Garrison with Haitian Corps d'Aviation Marchetti and crew, September 1990

Past Inventory

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A Haitian Air Corps SF.260

At the time of the disbandment of the Haitian Air Corps this was the inventory:

Aircraft Origin Type Variant In service Notes
Liaison
Taylorcraft O-57 Grasshopper United States Liaison 2[4]
Transport
Cessna C-78 Bobcat United States Light Transport 1[4]
Curtiss C-46 Commando United States Heavy Transport 1[4]
Trainers
Vultee BT-13 Valiant United States Trainer 3[4] In service since 1940s

Many of Haiti's air force aircraft were donated second hand from the United States and France:

Mission

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Organization

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Command Structure

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Base

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The main Garrison of the Aviation Corps is the Military Aviation base (Aviation Militaire) in Clercine, Port-au-Prince (next door to Toussaint Louverture International Airport). It previously housed a Chilean Air Force battalion of the MINUSTAH.

Personnel

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Officers

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Rank group General/Flag/Air officers Senior officers Junior officers
Haitian Aviation Corps
Colonel Lieutenant-colonel Major Capitaine Lieutenant Sous-lieutenant
Kolonèl Lyetnan kolonèl Majò Kapitèn Lyetnan Soulyetnan

Enlisted

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Rank group Senior NCOs Junior NCOs Enlisted
Haitian Aviation Corps

Uniform

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Work and Combat Uniform

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Service Uniform

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Aviation Corps troops in Battle of Vertières day parade (18 November 2023)

Dress Uniform

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Equipment

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Haiti Air Force". Aeroflight.
  2. ^ Hagedorn, Dan (2006). Latin American Air Wars and Aircraft 1912-1969. Hikori Publications. p. 119. ISBN 9781902109442.
  3. ^ "Haiti - Forces Armées d'Haïiti [FAd'H]". globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 2021-03-23.
  4. ^ a b c d e jwh1975 (2015-06-09). "Uphold Democracy 1994: WWII weapons encountered". wwiiafterwwii. Retrieved 2021-03-23.