201 Squadron (Portugal)

Esquadra 201
201 Squadron

F-16 Fighting Falcon of 201 Squadron
Active February 4, 1958 — June 1, 1981, as 50 and 51 Squadron
October 4, 1993
Country  Portugal
Branch Air Force
Type Fighter squadron
Home Base Air Base No. 2 (1958—1959)
Air Base No. 5 (1959—present)
Nickname(s) Falcões (Falcons)
Motto(s) "Guerra ou paz tanto nos faz" (War or peace, it doesn't matter to us)
Anniversaries October 4
Commanders
Current
commander
Lt. Col. João Filipe Vitorino Rosa[1]
Insignia
Badge Diving Falcon
Aircraft flown
Fighter F-86 Sabre (1958—1980)
Fiat G-91 (1965—1974)
F-16 Fighting Falcon
Trainer T-33 Silver Star (1961—1970)
T-38 Talon (1977—1980)

201 Squadron "Falcões" (Esquadra 201) is a fighter squadron of the Portuguese Air Force, operating the F-16 Fighting Falcon.

Roles and missions

201 Sqn has as its primary mission the execution of air defense operations and conventional attack:

History

Portuguese F-86F displayed at Monte Real Air Base. Note the blue nose scheme used by aircraft of 51 Squadron

The origins of 201 Squadron "Falcões" date back to the creation of 50 Squadron "Falcões" (Falcons) in 1958, based at Ota (then designated Air Base No. 2), operating the F-86F Sabre. On September 11, 1958 the squadron's designation was changed to 51 Squadron and it was later transferred to Air Base No. 5, in Monte Real, on October 4, 1959. The squadron became part of 501st Operational Group.[2]

The first F-86F flight by a Portuguese pilot took place on September 22, 1958, by 50 Squadron. Two days later, on September 24, a F-86F breaks for the first time the sound barrier in Portugal.[2]

In the beginning of the 1960s, the flight demonstration team "Dragões" (Dragons) was reactivated with the F-86F as part of 51 Squadron.

On August 15, 1961, a detachment of eight F-86F fighters was deployed to Guinea-Bissau until October 1964, in what was called Operation Atlas (Portuguese: Operação Atlas), during which they flew 577 sorties, of which 430 were ground-attack missions.[2][3]

From 1961 to 1970 51 Squadron also operated five T-33 AN Silver Star aircraft; having also operated the Fiat G-91 R4 from November 1965 to 1974. These were used in the transition and conversion of fighter pilots from the F-86F to the G.91 that were in the Portuguese African colonies.[2][3]

PoAF T-38A Talon, nicknamed "Falcão Branco" (White Falcon)

Starting in 1977, 51 Squadron additionally operated six T-38A Talon in advanced combat training, with a second batch of six T-38A aircraft being delivered and operated by 1980. Later that year all T-38 trainers were transferred to 103 Squadron, also based at Monte Real.[3]

With further reorganizations of the Air Force, the operational group of which the squadron was part of was re-designated as Operational Group 51 (Portuguese: Grupo Operacional 51), and in 1978 the squadron's own designation was changed to 201 Squadron.[2][3]

The F-86F Sabre ended its service in the Portuguese Air Force officially on July 31, 1980, and 201 Squadron was later disbanded on June 1, 1981.

In 1981, 302 Squadron, to which the missions of tactical air support for maritime operations (TASMO) and air interdiction were assigned, was activated and the squadron continued to serve with the traditions of the "Falcões".[2]

201 Squadron was reactivated on October 4, 1993, with aerial defense as its mission, the first F-16 Fighting Falcon arriving in June 1994. In 1997 the squadron initiated its qualification in air-to-ground missions and in July 1998 it was attributed the primary mission of air defense operations and close air support and air interdiction as secondary missions. In 1999, the tactical air support for maritime operations (TASMO) was also assigned as one of its secondary missions.[2][3]

On May 26, 2011, the squadron officially started operating the upgraded F-16 MLU fighter.[2]

Lineage

Aircraft

Notable pilots

Deployments

A PoAF F-16 armed with four Sidewinder air-to-air missiles and equipped with an AN/ALQ-131 ECM pod, prepares to refuel from a USAF KC-10 while conducting a CAP, during Operation Allied Force, March 1999.

References

  1. "Biografia do Comandante da Esquadra 201" [Biography of the commander of 201 Squadron]. 201 Squadron. Retrieved April 17, 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Sobre" [About]. 201 Squadron. Retrieved April 17, 2014.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "Base Aérea Nº 5" [Air Base No. 5]. Portuguese Air Force. Retrieved April 17, 2014.

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/17/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.