Republic of China Air Force




Aviation branch of Taiwan's armed forces






























































Republic of China Air Force
中華民國空軍
Zhōnghuá Mínguó Kōngjūn (Mandarin)
Chûng-fà Mìn-koet Khung-kiûn (Hakka)

Republic of China Air Force (ROCAF) Logo.svg
Emblem of the Republic of China Air Force

Founded 1920; 99 years ago (1920)
Country
 Taiwan
Size 523 aircraft
Part of Ministry of National Defense
Commanders
Commander-General General Shen Yi-ming[1]
Insignia
Roundels
National Emblem of the Republic of China.svgRepublic of China Roundel (Low Visibility) 3.svg
Flag The flag of the Republic of China Air Force
Aircraft flown
Electronic
warfare

E-2T/C, C-130HE
Fighter
F-16A/B Block 20, Mirage-2000-5Di/Ei, F-CK-1A/B/C/D, F-5E/F
Helicopter
S-70C-1/1A, S-70C-6
Reconnaissance RF-5E, RF-16
Trainer
AT-3B, T-34
Transport
C-130H, Fokker 50, Beechcraft B-1900C, Boeing 737-800



Former ROC Air Force Commander-General Liu Chen-wu




ROCAF F-16 takes off from Chiayi Airbase in Southern Taiwan. These jets patrol the boundary in the strait across from China.


The Republic of China Air Force (ROCAF; Chinese: 中華民國空軍; pinyin: Zhōnghuá Mínguó Kōngjūn, lit. "Chinese Republic Air Military") is the military aviation branch of the Republic of China Armed Forces. The ROCAF's primary mission is the defense of the airspace over and around Taiwan. Priorities of the ROCAF include the development of long range reconnaissance and surveillance networks, integrating C4ISTAR systems to increase battle effectiveness, procuring counterstrike weapons, next generation fighters, and hardening airfields and other facilities to survive a surprise attack.


In May 2005, the Ministry of National Defense indicated its intention to transfer command of all defensive missile systems to the ROCAF, while future offensive missiles would be placed under a newly formed missile command. As of 2006, all medium and long range SAM units were transferred from ROC Army's Missile Command to ROCAF, while ROCAF's airbase security units were transferred to ROC Army Military Police. However, it was revealed that in January 2011, five years of problems of integrating those long range ex-ROC Army SAM units into ROCAF has forced ROCAF high command to return those units back to ROC Army's Missile Command. Missile Command is now directly under Defense Ministry's GHQ control.


In July 2010, former United States Air Force deputy under secretary for international affairs, Bruce Lemkin said that Taiwan's ability to defend its airspace had degraded due to its aging fighters and that the sale of new fighter aircraft to Taiwan was an urgent priority.[2] On 21 September 2011, it was announced that the US had agreed to a US$5 billion upgrade to the F-16s.[3] In 2012 Rob Nabors wrote that the United States was considering the sale of fighter aircraft to the ROC.[4]




Contents






  • 1 Organization


    • 1.1 Republic of China Air Force Command Headquarters




  • 2 History


    • 2.1 Humanitarian operations




  • 3 Equipment and procurement


    • 3.1 Domestic development


    • 3.2 Foreign procurement




  • 4 Rank and rating insignia


  • 5 Aircraft


    • 5.1 Current inventory


    • 5.2 Armament


    • 5.3 Air Defense




  • 6 ROCAF Squadron emblems


  • 7 See also


  • 8 Notes


  • 9 References


  • 10 External links





Organization


Like most of the other branches of the ROC armed forces, much of the ROCAF's structure and organization is patterned after the United States Air Force. Like the USAF, the ROCAF used to have a wing → group → squadron structure. After November 2004, tactical fighter wing switch to wing → Tactical Fighter Group, with some fighter squadrons stood down, with each tactical fighter group, still pretty much the same size as a squadron, now commanded by a full colonel.



Republic of China Air Force Command Headquarters


Air Force GHQ is subordinate to the Chief of the General Staff (military), the Minister of National Defense (civilian) and the President.

  • Internal Units: Personnel, Combat Readiness and Training, Logistics, Planning, Communications, Electronics & Information, General Affairs, Comptroller, Inspector General, Political Warfare.

  • Air Force Combatant Command




  • Weather Wing: Tamsui, New Taipei City

  • Communications, Air Traffic Control & Information Wing : Taipei City

  • Air Tactical Control Wing


  • Ground fixed and mobile long-range air search radar sites, consist of various TPS-117, TPS-75V, FPS-117, GE-592 and HADR radars, plus 1 PAVE PAWS (Phased Array Warning System) early warning radar site in northern Taiwan, will enter service late 2012.


  • Air Defense Artillery Command


  • 4 Air Defense Missile & Artillery brigades, 951st (Taipei), 952nd (Taichung), 953rd (Kaohsiung), 954th (Hualien)


  • 4 Air Defense Missile I-HAWK battalions, 621st, 622nd, 662nd, and 664th battalions, with Phase III and 7 Phase I batteries.

  • 1 TK-1/2 Air Defense Missile battalion, 951st Brigade, 611st battalion with 6 companies/batteries.

  • 1 Patriot PAC-2+ GEM/PAC-3 Air Defense/Anti-Ballistic Missile battalion, with 3 mixed companies/batteries that are all upgrading to PAC-3 standard, with 7 more PAC 3 companies/batteries on order.

  • 1 Skyguard Short Range Airbase Air Defense battalion, with 6 companies/batteries and radar sub units with OTO 35mm AAA, s

  • 2 Antelope Short Range Airbase Air Defense battalions, with unknown companies/batteries.

  • At least 2 AAA Air Defense Artillery battalions, with 40mm/L60 and 12.7mm AAA guns.


  • Air Defense Artillery Training Center: Pingtung

    • Target Service Squadron

    • Education Service Support Company

    • First training company

    • Second training company

    • Third training company




  • Education, Training & Doctrine Command



History





Air Force hero killed during the Second Sino-Japanese War/WWII, fighter pilot Colonel Gao Zhihang


Formally established in 1920 as the Aviation Ministry, the ROCAF was active during the tenure of the ROC on Mainland China. In this period, various airplanes were purchased and deployed by warlords in their struggle for power until nominal Chinese reunification in 1928. In February 1932, US Reserve Lt. Robert McCawley Short, who was transporting armed Chinese aircraft, shot down an IJN aircraft on February 19, 1932, and downed another on February 22 before he was killed (he was posthumously raised to the rank of colonel in the Chinese Air Service).


During the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945), the ROCAF participated in attacks on Japanese warships on the eastern front and along the Yangtze river including support for the Battle of Shanghai in 1937. The Chinese frontline fighter aircraft initially were mainly the Curtiss Hawk II and III and the Boeing P-26 model 281, and engaged Japanese fighters in many major air battles beginning on August 14, 1937, when Imperial Japanese Navy warplanes raided Chienchiao airbase; "814" has thus become known as "Air Force Day". Chinese Boeing P-26/281 fighters engaged Japanese Mitsubishi A5M fighters in what is among the world's first aerial dogfighting between all-metal monoplane fighter aircraft. A unique mission in May 1938 saw two Chinese B-10 bombers fly a mission over Japan, but dropping only propaganda leaflets over the Japanese cities of Nagasaki and Saga, four years before 1942 Doolittle Raid on Japanese home islands. It was a war of attrition for the Chinese pilots, as many of their most experienced ace fighter pilots, such as Lieutenant Liu Tsui-Kang and Colonel Kao Chih-Hang were lost early in the war. Code breaking operations played a role in the conflict. A Japanese radio intercept unit was attached to the landing forces at Shanghai. IJN Lt. Commander Tsunezo Wachi and a Lt. Yamada, an expert in Chinese codes, enabled Japanese to make preemptive strikes against ROCAF airfields.[5]


In the latter half of the Sino-Japanese War, part of World War II, the ROCAF was augmented by a volunteer group of American pilots (the Flying Tigers) in 1941.[6] Throughout the war, the ROCAF was involved in attacks on Japanese air and ground forces in the Chinese theatre.


ROCAF General HQ was established in June 1946. From 1946 to 1948, during the Chinese Civil War, the ROCAF participated in combat against the People's Liberation Army engaging in air-to-air combat on at least eleven occasions in the areas surrounding the Taiwan Strait. The ROCAF reportedly enjoyed a 31:1 kill ratio against the PLA. GHQ was evacuated to Taiwan along with the rest of the ROC Government in April 1949 following the Communist victory in the Chinese Civil War. [7]The ROCAF assisted in halting the PLA advance at the Battle of Kuningtou on Kinmen the same year.


The ROCAF regularly patrolled the Taiwan Straits and fought many engagements with its Communist counterpart (the PLAAF). The ROCAF received second hand equipment from the US at that time, such as the F-86, F-100 and F-104.


During the Cold War, the ROCAF was involved in combat air patrols over the Taiwan Strait and engaged the PLAAF and PLAN-AF on several occasions. The ROCAF was also the testbed of American technology at this time. The first successful kill scored by an air-to-air missile was accomplished by a ROCAF F-86 Sabre with then experimental AIM-9 Sidewinder. ROCAF pilots also flew U-2 recon overflights of the PRC during this time with assistance from the USAF. Known as the Black Cat Squadron they flew a total of 220 missions, with 102 missions over mainland China, losing 5 aircraft. All five were shot down by SA-2 surface-to-air missiles, the same type of surface-to-air missile that shot down Gary Powers over the USSR in 1960. The 34th "Black Bat Squadron" flew low level missions into China as part of its mapping PRC growing air defense networks, conducting ESM and ECM missions, inserting agents behind enemy lines, and air drop resupply missions.


Starting in November 1967, the ROC secretly operated a cargo transport detachment to assist the US and the ROV. It was based on existing formation of the 34th squadron of ROC Air force. The unit's strength included two cargo aircraft, seven flight officers and two mechanics, even though a higher number of military personnel was involved through rotation. It was tasked with air transportation, airdrop and electronic reconnaissance. Some 25 members of the unit were killed, among them 17 pilots and co-pilots, and three aircraft were lost. Other ROC involvement in Vietnam included a secret listening station, special reconnaissance and raiding squads, military advisers and civilian airline operations (which cost a further two aircraft due to Vietnamese individually operated AA missiles).[1]



Humanitarian operations


The ROCAF has also taken part in numerous humanitarian operations. Some of the more major ones include the following:




  • Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, December 2004[8][9]


  • Haiti earthquake, January 2010[10][11]


  • Typhoon Haiyan, November 2013[8][12]



Equipment and procurement




Retired ROCAF aircraft on permanent display at the ROC Air Force Academy




IDF F-CK-1B Display in Chiayi AFB




Republic of China Air Force C-130H 1307 Taxiing at Songshan Air Force Base


Current ROCAF inventory includes over 400 combat aircraft, the mainstays being the AIDC F-CK-1 Ching-kuo IDF (Indigenous Defense Fighter) and F-16 while the Mirage 2000-5 provides the most formidable air-defense capabilities. Older F-5 fighters are gradually being phased out but remain in service.


The United States serves as the ROCAF's main supplier of equipment and also provides training for ROCAF and ROC Navy pilots at Luke AFB in Arizona. This base which is between Phoenix and Tucson has an instrumented flight area for training approximately the size of the State of Connecticut. German Air Force (Luftwaffe) and German Naval Aviation (Marineflieger) who used to train at Luke AFB from 1957-1983 now train at NATO facilities at CFB Goose Bay in Canada and also alongside the USAF at Holloman AFB in New Mexico.



Domestic development


Prior to 1984, ROCAF fighters were almost exclusively American-made aircraft sold under terms of a mutual defense treaty between the Republic of China and the United States. Development of the F-CK-1 Ching-kuo Indigenous Defense Fighter (IDF) began in 1984 due to U.S. refusal to sell F-16s to the ROCAF as a result of changes in national policy between the U.S. and the People's Republic of China. After a successful maiden flight in 1989, the domestically produced fighter entered service in 1994. However, the ROCAF was subsequently able to obtain F-16s from the United States as well as Mirage 2000-5 fighters from France, resulting in delays to later IDF development that had been anticipated.


In response to American refusals to supply "smart bombs", Taiwan is developing their own equivalent of the Joint Direct Attack Munition for attacks against the PRC mainland in case of invasion preparations.[13]



Foreign procurement


In January 2006, the ROCAF announced interest in procuring aircraft with VSTOL capability, especially the F-35. The ROCAF also sought next-generation upgrades to its current F-16s and Mirage 2000-5s and, in mid-2006, announced plans to buy 66 F-16 C/D Block 52 aircraft from the US for $3.1 billion USD.[14] Later that year, however, the U.S. delayed the purchase; according to sources cited by National Defense Minister Lee Jye, the American stance was that, until a long-stalled arms purchase package consisting of six Patriot Missile Batteries, 12 P-3C Orion anti-submarine aircraft and 8 conventional submarines cleared the legislature, it did not see the ROC as having a consistent military procurement plan.[15]


On February 28, 2007, the US Defense Department approved an order made by the ROC for 218 AIM-120C-7 AMRAAM missiles, as well as 235 AGM-65G2 Maverick missiles, associated launchers and other equipment. The total value of this order was revealed to be $421 million USD.[16]


In June 2007, the Legislative Yuan also approved the upgrade of the existing PAC-2 batteries to PAC-3 standard, and, in November, the Pentagon notified the U.S. Congress of the Patriot upgrade order.[17] On August 10, 2007, a shipment of Harpoon anti-ship missiles, valued at an estimated $125 million, was also authorised by the U.S. Defense Department, including 60 AGM-84L Block II missiles and 50 upgrade kits to bring the ROCAF's existing Harpoons up to Block II, Mark L standard.[18]




A EC225 on display at the Hsinchu Air Base open house


On October 3, 2008, arms notifications were sent to Congress concerning, amongst other things, the sale of 330 PAC III missiles, 4 missile batteries, radar sets, ground stations and other equipment valued up to $3.1 billion USD, the upgrade of 4 E-2T aircraft to the Hawkeye 2000 standard and $334 million USD worth of spare parts for the ROCAF's F-16s, IDFs, F-5E/Fs and C-130s.[19] Late in January 2010, ROCAF received the first batch of new TC-2(V) BVR missiles ordered from CSIST, believed to have new radar seeker and improved performance from the original missile which entered service over 10 years ago.[20] The U.S. government also announced 5 notifications to Congress for additional arms sales totaling some $6.39 Billion USD, under which the ROCAF will receive 3 PAC-3 batteries with 26 launchers and 114 PAC-3 missiles.[21] On February 3, 2010, ROCAF also announced at a Singapore Airshow that it had signed a new contract for 3 EC-225 SAR (Search-And-Rescue) helicopters that was awarded to Eurocopter back in December 2009 for $111 million USD, along with options for 17 more EC-225s.[22][23] On November 26, 2011, the 3 EC-225 C-SAR helicopters were loaded on board an An-124 cargo aircraft and delivered to Chai-yi AB in Taiwan, and should enter service on July 1, 2012.[24]


On August 31, 2010, it was announced for next year's defense budget, ROCAF's "Medium Transport aircraft" plan to replace 12 B-1900 VIP/transport training aircraft, believed to be 6-8+ Lockheed C-27J, has been put on hold and might be axed, due to lack of budget, but will allocate 20+ million US dollars over next 4 years for quick runway repair.[25] Other items mentioned including increases in runways from 3 to 6 at Eastern Taiwan's 3 airbases, moving 2 I-HAWK batteries to Eastern Taiwan to protect those airbases, which will double to 4 batteries, and others.[26] On November 8, 2011, a second pair of E-2T Hawkeye AEW(s/n 2501 and 2502) were loaded on a ship and sent to the US for upgrade to the E-2C 2000 standard. The first pair of E-2T (s/n 2503 and 2504) were sent to the US in June 2010 and returned to Taiwan on December 18, 2011, and will be return to service by end of the year.[27][28]


On August 15, 2011, the United States again deferred the ROCAF request to purchase 66 new F-16C/Ds but offered a retrofit package for older F-16A/B's.[29] A $5.3 billion upgrade package for ROCAF's existing F-16A/B fighters was announced on 21 September 2011.[26] The upgrade budget was to be spread over 12 years, though the Ministry of Defense indicated that it would try to reduce the period.[30] In November 2011, the United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission recommended that new fighters be sold to the ROCAF.[31] Nonetheless, as of 2012, the MND was still haggling with the Pentagon over cost and local industry participation on the upgrade.[32] After denying the RoC Air Force the funds needed to upgrade their jet engines, President Ma Ying-jeou said that he hoped that the upgraded fighters would have on par performance.[33][34] Taiwan is also balking at the cost of the radar upgrade, as it does not want to be the lead customer who pays to develop the upgrade and also because they will be unable to afford both the upgrade and the new fighters, should these be offered.[35] In response to a U.S. vote in the House of Representatives to force the sale of the C/D models, the ROC MND said that the upgrade package offered some superior capabilities over the C/D model aircraft and some defense officials have said that in light of the PRC's increasing capabilities, only the F-35 would be sufficient.[36] In July 2012, Taiwan's Aerospace Industrial Development Corp. and Lockheed Martin announced plans to establish a maintenance and overhaul center to upgrade and maintain the F-16s in place without having to ship them back to the United States.[37] In 2012 a letter of acceptance was agreed on for a US$3.8 billion deal that included the radars, electronic warfare, structural improvements and new weapons.[38][39] The high cost of the fighter upgrade is causing other modernization priorities such as tanks to be pushed back.[40] A Pentagon report has corroborated that claim, asserting that the PRC would probably seek to destroy ROCAF airfields in the first stages of any attack, making a STOVL fighter such as the F-35B vital for effective defense.[41]


Taiwan's 144 craft F-16 A/B fleet is currently being upgraded to the F-16V variant by Lockheed Martin in an upgrade program worth 1.85 billion USD. The F-16V is equipped with the Northrop Grumman Scalable Agile Beam Radar (SABR) and has enhanced mission computers, vehicle systems, aircraft structure, cockpit and electronic warfare systems.[42]



Rank and rating insignia


Officers













































Equivalent
NATO Code
OF-10 OF-9 OF-8 OF-7 OF-6 OF-5 OF-4 OF-3 OF-2 OF-1
OF(D) and student officer

Taiwan Republic of China
(Edit)

No equivalent

Taiwan-airforce-OF-9b.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OF-9a.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OF-8.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OF-7.svg

No equivalent

Taiwan-airforce-OF-5.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OF-4.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OF-3.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OF-2.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OF-1b.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OF-1a.svg

None.svg

Full General
一級上將
Yījí Shàngjiàng

General
二級上將
Èrjí Shàngjiàng

Lieutenant General
中將
Zhōngjiàng

Major General
少將[note 1]
Shàojiàng

Colonel
上校[note 1]
Shàngxiào

Lieutenant Colonel
中校
Zhōngxiào

Major
少校
Shàoxiào

Captain
上尉
Shàngwèi

First Lieutenant
中尉
Zhōngwèi

Second Lieutenant
少尉
Shàowèi

Officer cadet
軍校生
Jūnxiào shēng

Enlisted





































Equivalent
NATO Code
OR-9 OR-8 OR-7 OR-6 OR-5 OR-4 OR-3 OR-2 OR-1

Taiwan Republic of China
(Edit)

Taiwan-airforce-OR-9.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OR-8.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OR-7.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OR-6.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OR-5.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OR-4.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OR-3.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OR-2.svg

Taiwan-airforce-OR-1.svg

Master Sergeant First Class
一等士官長
Yīděng shìguānzhǎng

Master Sergeant Second Class
二等士官長
Èrděng shìguānzhǎng

Technical Sergeant
三等士官長
Sānděng shìguānzhǎng

Staff Sergeant
上士
Shàngshì

Sergeant
中士
Zhōngshì

Corporal
下士
Xiàshì

Specialist
上等兵
Shàngděngbīng

Airman
一等兵
Yīděngbīng

Airman Basic
二等兵
Èrděngbīng


Aircraft



Current inventory




A ROCAF Dassault Mirage 2000-5Ei on the taxi way




A S-70C-1A Bluehawk fly over at the Hsinchu Air Base open house




AIDC AT-3 at the open house on Hsinchu Air Base





Boeing 737-800 Presidential Jet at Songshan Airport



















































































































































































Aircraft
Origin
Type
Variant
In service
Notes

Combat Aircraft

F-16 Fighting Falcon

United States

multirole

F-16A
115[43]
being upgraded to the F-16V with the AN/APG-83 radar[42]

Northrop F-5

United States
fighter / reconnaissance

F-5E/RF-5E
23[43]
7 airframes were upgraded to the RF-5E

AIDC F-CK-1

Taiwan
fighter

F-CK-1A/C
102[43]


Mirage 2000

France
multirole

2000-5EI
46[43][44]


AEW

E-2 Hawkeye

United States
early warning and control

E-2K
6[43]


Electronic Warfare

C-130 Hercules

United States

ELINT

C-130HE[45]
1[43]


Maritime Patrol

P-3 Orion

United States

ASW-maritime patrol

P-3C
8[43]


Grumman S-2

United States

maritime patrol

S-2T[45]
11[43]


Reconnaissance

Beech 1900

United States
surveillance / reconnaissance

2[45]
also provides multi engine training

Transport

Boeing 737

United States

VIP

1[45]


Fokker 50

Netherlands

VIP

1[45]


C-130 Hercules

United States
transport

C-130H
19[43]


Helicopters

Eurocopter EC225

France

SAR / utility

3[43]


Sikorsky S-70

United States

SAR / utility

S-70C-1A
13[43]


Trainer Aircraft

AIDC AT-3

Taiwan
jet trainer

49[43]


Northrop F-5

United States
conversion trainer

F-5F
25[43]


F-16 Fighting Falcon

United States
conversion trainer

F-16B
28[43]
being upgraded to the F-16V with the AN/APG-83 radar[42]

AIDC F-CK-1

Taiwan
conversion trainer

F-CK-1B/D
25[43]


Mirage 2000

France
conversion trainer

2000-5DI
9[43]


T-34 Mentor

United States
basic trainer

37[43]



Armament




AIM-120A AMRAAM




Illustration of an AGM -65 Maverick






















































Name
Origin
Type
Notes

Air-to-air missile

AIM-120C AMRAAM

United States

beyond-visual-range missile
200 missiles obtained in 2004[46]218 missiles obtained in 2007[47]

AIM-7 Sparrow

United States
medium-range, semi-active radar
1,200 AIM-7M’s obtained[47]

MBDA MICA

France
medium-range, semi-active radar
960 missiles obtained[47]

AIM-9 Sidewinder

United States
short-range IR guided
(200) AIM-9B’s - (2,216) 9J/P's - (1092) 9L/M’s[47]9x Block II’s - (196)[48]

Magic II

France
short-range IR guided
480 missiles obtained[47]

Air-to-surface missile

AGM-65 Maverick

United States

(500) AGM-65’s – (40) 65G’s – (235) 65G2’s[47]

Anti-ship missile

AGM-84 Harpoon

United States
anti-ship missile
(183) AGM-84’s – (60) 84L’s[47]


Air Defense




Taiwan has acquired the Patriot missile systems like this one




RIM-7 SAM towed launchers















































Name
Origin
Type
In service
Notes

SAM

Patriot (PAC-2)

United States

SAM system
3[47]
receiving upgrade to PAC-3 (7 on order)[49]

Sky Bow

Taiwan

SAM system
6

Sky Bow I missiles phased out by 2015, Sky Bow III missiles to be introduced

MIM-23 HAWK

United States

SAM system
19[47]
to be phased out between 2015 and 2017 by Sky Bow system.[50]

Anti-aircraft artillery

Skyguard

Switzerland
towed anti-aircraft gun
24
twin gun, 35mm rounds

RIM-7 Sea Sparrow

United States

SAM system
500 missiles
the RIM-7 SAM is used on towed launchers as part of the Skyguard Air Defense System. Five hundred entered service in 1991.[51]


ROCAF Squadron emblems




See also



  • Development of Chinese Nationalist air force (1937–45)

  • Flying Tigers

  • Black Bat Squadron

  • Black Cat Squadron

  • 21st Fighter Squadron

  • Republic of China Air Force Academy

  • Air Force Institute of Technology

  • Republic of China Air Force Museum

  • Ministry of National Defense (Republic of China)


  • Republic of China Armed Forces

    • Republic of China Army


    • Republic of China Navy
      • Republic of China Marine Corps


    • Republic of China Military Police



  • People's Liberation Army Air Force

  • Political status of Taiwan



Notes





  1. ^ ab Rank of wing (聯隊) commanders




References


Citations




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  2. ^ Reuters Editorial (5 July 2010). "INTERVIEW - Taiwan overdue for F-16 jets, ex U.S. official say". Reuters India. Retrieved 30 January 2016.


  3. ^ US confirms $5bn Taiwan F-16 fighter jet upgrade. BBC News, 21 September 2011, retrieved 21 September 2011.


  4. ^ "US raises hope of sale of new fighter jets to Taiwan." AP, April 28, 2012.


  5. ^ RADM. Layton USN, Edwin T.; Pineau, with Roger; Costello, John (1985). "And I was there" : Pearl Harbor and Midway--breaking the secrets (1st ed.). New York: W. Morrow. p. 47. ISBN 0-688-04883-8.


  6. ^ Rossi, J.R. "History: The Flying Tigers - American Volunteer Group - Chinese Air Force".


  7. ^ "Taiwan in Time: The great retreat - Taipei Times". www.taipeitimes.com. Retrieved 2018-07-31.


  8. ^ ab "Taiwan C-130 aircraft deliver relief supplies to the Philippines". AsiaOne. Retrieved 30 January 2016.


  9. ^ Humanitarian response to the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake


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External links







  • ROCAF website


  • ROC active aircraft (in English)











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