The Royal Jordanian Air Force was born in 1948 as the Arab
Legion Air Force, using British-supplied aircraft and organized along RAF
lines. Links with Britain were loosened considerably in the wake of the
1956 Anglo-French Suez operation when Jordan became more aligned with its
Arab neighbours, although relations with Iraq cooled following the murder
of the Iraqi Royal Family. The USA funded a Jordanian Hawker Hunter
purchase, and later oversaw the F-104A Starfighters from Taiwan under a
Mutual Defense Assistance Program in 1967. Having been the only nation to
hold territory (and even make gains) against Israel in 1948, Jordan was a
priority target when Israel launched the Six Day War against its Arab
neighbours in 1967. The war began with with pre-emptive and unprovoked
airstrikes, which virtually destroyed the RJAF on the ground. Losses in
the 1967 war were made up by transfers of Hunters from Iraq and Saudi
Arabia. Large numbers of F-5Es entered service from 1972, and they remain
numerically the most important type in the inventory. |
US refusals to supply F-16s or A-4s prompted the RJAF to
turn to Dassault for an eventual total of 36 Mirage F1s, delivered in
1981-1982. Generally pro-Western and politically moderate, Jordan remained
neutral during the Gulf War in 1991 and maintains closer links with Israel
than do most of its Arab neighbours.It has tradionally relied on Saudi funding for many of its
defense purchases, though this has dwindled in recent year. As a result,
some re-equipment programs have failed and the country's armed forces have
become the operators of increasingly obsolete equipment, and have failed
to keep up with either allies or potential enemies. |
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The failure of allies
to fulfill their funding obligations led to the cancellation of Jordanian
orders for both the Mirage 2000 and the Panavia Tornado. While it lacks
the most modern combat aircraft, the RJAF is exceptionally well trained
and keeps abreast of the latest tactical developments, making it a tougher
opponent than many-equipped air forces.Jordan signed a formal peace treaty with Israel in October
1994, opening the way to a resumption of unlimited US aid. The first
products of the new MDAP included 18 surplus Bell UH-1H helicopters,
delivered in December 1994, followed by another 18 in 1996 and a C-130H in
March 1997. |
Most significantly, the resumption of US aid has finally
allowed the delivery of 12 surplus ex-USAF F-16As and 4 F-16Bs to replace
the elderly Mirage F1CJs in the air-defence role.But these aircraft all had high time airframes and had been
put through the Falcon-Up/Service Life Improvement program, but they were
among the oldest F-16 variants still in service and no longer represent
the 'cutting edge' of Jordanian air defense. Today Jordan has a $7 billion
long-term military re-equipment requirement , which as far as the RJAF is
concerned focused on the need to replace its 55 F-5E/Fs and 31 Dassault
Mirage F1s. The preferred choice is for around 70-80 F-16s. |
Aircraft of the Royal Jordanian Air Force (RJAF) :
Fighter/Attack aircraft :
- F-16 A/B
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In July 1996 a $220 million agreement was signed known as
the F-16 Peace Falcon Program between the United States and Jordan
authorizing the lease of 16 F-16 fighter jets , 12 F-16A and 4 F-16B
aircraft which were Block 15 OCU aircraft that were modified into ADF (Air
Defense Fighters) versions for Jordan.
The Royal Jordanian Air Force took official delivery of its first F-16
aircraft in rollout ceremonies at Hill Air Force Base, Utah on October 28th
1997. The first four RJAF Fighting Falcons touched down at Muafaq Al-Salti
Air Base on 17 December of that same year. The last three F-16s arrived in
March 1998. Jordan became the 19th country to operate the Fighting Falcon,
and one of five in the Middle East that fly the F-16. The RJAF aircraft
made its first flight on October 14 following refurbishment by U.S. Air
Force personnel at Hill AFB. It is a Block 15 model F-16 Air Defense
Fighter taken from the USAF inventory.
They were given a service life improvement program known as Falcon-UP,
a structural modification program that expands the service life of the
airframe to 8,000 hours.The aircraft was also modified to accept the
upgraded Pratt & Whitney F100-PW-220E engine, featuring improved
reliability.More than 100 RJAF maintainers and eight pilots have received
training in the United States in recent months. Training will continue in
the Kingdom of Jordan. Eventually, The RJAF would like to acquire as much
as 70-80 F-16s (if possible C/D models). |
- Mirage F1 CJ/EJ/BJ
- F-5 E/F Tiger II
Trainer Aircraft :
- Casa C.101CC Aviojet
- Bulldog Mk 125/125A
Transport Aircraft :
- C-130H Hercules
Helicopters :
- Bell AH-1F Cobra
- AS 332M-1 Super Puma
- UH-1H Iroquois
Sources :
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