All-Time Aircraft Listing

Click on aircraft type for more details

Aircraft Type Quantity Service Entry Retirement
Agusta-Bell AB.212 12 1980 current
Avro RJ85/RJ100 3 2001 current
BAE SYSTEMS Hawk Mk.129 6 2006 current
Bell 212 3+ ? current
Bell AH-1E/F Cobra 12/9 1994 current
Lockheed Martin F-16C Fighting Falcon 18 1990 current
Lockheed Martin F-16D Fighting Falcon 4 1990 current
MBB Bo 105C 3 1977 current
Northrop F-5E Tiger II 8 1985 current
Northrop F-5F Tiger II 4 1985 current
Sikorsky S-92A 1 2008 current
Sikorsky UH-60A/L Black Hawk 1/1 1995 current
Sikorsky UH-60M Black Hawk 9* - -
Slingsby T.67 Firefly 3 2003 current

* = on order
# = on delivery

Additional information is welcome

Military Air Bases and Airfields

This page gives details of the air bases and airfields which are, or have been, used by the Royal Bahraini Air Force.

(Google map to be added).

Click on each Name for more details

Location Name ICAO IATA Status
Muharraq Bahrain International Airport OBBI BAH active
Muharraq Muharraq Airfield OBBI - active
Riffa Riffa Air Base n/a - active
Sakhir Sakhir Air Base OBKH - active
Shaikh Isa Shaikh Isa Air Base OBBS - active

National Markings

This section describes and illustrates the various national insignia used by the Royal Bahraini Air Force since its formation:



Main MarkingFin Flash

1977-1985
The Bahrain Amiri Defence Force was formed in 1977. Fixed-wing aircraft carried the national flag as a fin flash. No national markings were carried on the wings. Helicopters carried the national flag on the fuselage sides.




Main MarkingFin Flash

1985-present
In 1985 a new roundel was introduced, featuring the national colours of brick red and white. The national flag fin flash was unchanged. The main marking is normally displayed on the fuselage sides of helicopters, and USAF-style positions on fixed-wing aircraft (i.e. fuselage sides and upper port wing and lower starboard wing). The abbreviation BAAF is carried on the upper starboard and lower port wing of fixed-wing aircraft. The service titles ROYAL BAHRAINI AIR FORCE in Arabic and English are carried on the fuselage sides of all aircraft and helicopters (replacing the previous BAHRAIN AMIRI AIR FORCE titles).

Aircraft Not Used


This page gives details of some of the aircraft types that were offered or promised to the Royal Bahraini Air Force but not delivered, cancelled official orders, and types have been falsely reported as being in service.

Boeing AH-64A Apache
In October 1990 the US Congress approved the supply of eight AH-64A attack helicopters to Bahrain, but the offer was declined. Sources: World Ar Power Journal Vol 5 Spring 1991 p.9, Worldmil (1996) p.51.

British Aerospace Hawk
In 1994, the BAAF came close to signing an order for the BAe Hawk, but chose to procure additional F-16s instead. Source: World Air Power Journal Vol 26 Autumn 1996 p.113

Lockheed C-130B Hercules
A deal to acquire two C-130B fell through in early 1994.

Lockheed Martin F-16N Fighting Falcon
During 1995-96 the BAAF considered buying 18 ex-US Navy F-16Ns, which had been retired from service in January 1995, but rejected the deal and eventually procured more new-build examples. Although much cheaper than surplus USAF F-16A/B aircraft, the F-16Ns had high fatigue counts and would require considerable upgrading to equip them to USAF F-16 standards. Source: World Air Power Journal Vol 23 Winter 1995 p.10 and World Air Power Journal Vol 27 Winter 1996 p.10.

Northrop F-20A Tigershark
Four F-20As were requested in 1982, along with two F-5Fs for conversion training, but the order size was insufficient to justify starting F-20 production and the US offered to supply F-5E aircraft instead. Source: World Air Power Journal Vol 25 Summer 1996 p.90.

The following aircraft types have been reported as serving with the BAAF, but actually serve with the Royal Flight:
Gulfstream II, Boeing 727, Boeing 747SP, Gulfstream III.

The following aircraft types have been reported as serving with the RBAF, but actually serve with the Bahrain Public Security Force: Westland Scout, Hughes 369D (‘Hughes 500D’), Sikorsky S-76, Bell 412, Bell 427 (‘Bell 430′).

Broken Arrows: The B-36 Log


By Raul Colon
rcolonfrias@yahoo.com

The B-36 Peacemaker was one of the largest bombers ever to take to the air. Its story is unique in American aviation history. Conceived during the final days of the Second World War as the first true intercontinental bombing platform, the Convair Corporation biggest program endured a tumults short life span despite huge investments. Develop as a purely deterrence weapon, the massive plane barely booked on the United States Air Force’s active arsenal ten years. At a cost of just under 300 million dollars, the B-36 would go down in the record books as one the most expensive aviation program of all time.

Despite it, the B-36 achieved its mission profile with astonish success. During the four years the Pacemaker was assigned full operational status, no major incident erupted between East and West. But by 1955, the Pentagon decided that its ‘ultimate bomber’ could not longer be expected to penetrate the ever more sophisticated Russian air defense system, thus the decision to axe the entire program was made. Delays in the development of the B-52 project extended the life of several Pacemaker airframes well into the early 1960s.

Now, almost five decades since its conception, a downfall of details regarding this amazing piece of engineer is becoming available. From its traditional role as the ultimate heavy bomber platform, to its position as America’s first and only true nuclear powered plane, the B-36 has seen it all, including the active deployment of nuclear weapons.

The United States Department of Defense (DoD) has several terms to address a number of nuclear weapon incidents or mishaps. They are stated on the Nuclear Weapon Accident DoD Directive 5230.16. The incidents involving an un-sanctioned release of a nuclear ordinance includes the accidental or unauthorized launching of a weapon, an unauthorized nuclear detonation, the non-nuclear burning of an atomic warhead or one of its components, radioactive contamination and the jettison of a nuclear payload due to accidental causes.

DoD utilized several terms and definitions to classify an incident involving a peacetime atomic weapon deployment. They are as follow:

• Broken Arrow: Term that identify an accident involving a nuclear payload.
• Bent Spear: Term that identifies a significant incident involving a nuclear weapon.
• Empty Quiver: Term use to report the seizure or loss of a nuclear weapon.
• Faded Giant: Term involving a nuclear reactor or radiological incident.

On a cloudy April afternoon in 1981, the DoD and the US Department of Energy, released to a waiting world its once top-secret Narrative Summaries of Accidents Involving US Nuclear Weapons: 1950 to 1980. In a gripping and detailing matter, the report described thirty two (32) incidents involving an atomic warhead releases during those three decades. Of that number only two (2) involved B-36 operations.

The first one occurred over the Canadian Pacific Ocean coast, near British Columbia. On February 14th 1950, a B-36B (tail number 44-92075), member of the 7th Bomb Wing stationed out of Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska, was on a routine, cross continent simulated combat flight pattern from Eielson to Carswell AFB, Texas when, six hours into its profile, the massive bomber began developed serious engine problems that forced the crew to shut down three of its power plant.

Flying at 12,000 feet with icing conditions forming on its wing structures and with half of its engines out of commission, 44-92075 commenced experimented problems maintain level flight. Under those strenuous conditions, the pilot decided to turn the big bomber away from land and towards the relative safeness of the ocean in order to drop its nuclear ordinance, an Mk 4, Fat Man-type of system, over open waters. Release of the weapon occurred from 8,000 feet. At around 3,800 feet, the altitude on which the weapon’s detonator was pre-set, the high explosive (HE) on the warhead detonated causing a bright flash followed by a robust sound and a shock wave. After release, the aircraft turned south east, towards Princess Royal Island where the crew of 17 bailed out, just one mile outside Island’s coastline. Two days later, the entire wreckage of the plane washed up on Vancouver Island.

Incident No. 2 occurred almost seven years later. Not as detailed as the previous deployment, the report did relates the story of a B-36A ferrying a Mk 17 nuclear bomb from Biggs, AFB in Texas, to Kirtland AFB, New Mexico. On May 22 1957, this particular Pacemaker (no tail number posted on the incident memo) took off from Biggs for its mission envelop. At exactly 11:50 am Mountain Standard Time and while on approach to Kirtland at an altitude of 1,700 feet, the aircraft’s bomb bay door began to gave way releasing the weapon, along with the entire bay structure two minutes later 4.6 miles south of Kirtland’s control tower. The weapon’s parachute mechanism open, but due to the low operational ceiling, it did not completely retarded.

The HE material inside the Mk 17 detonated on impact. The explosion completely destroyed the weapon and left a gapping crater of 12 feet deep and 25 in overall diameter. Such was the violence of the detonation that the Armed Forces Special Weapons Program, the assessment unit assigned the investigation of the accident, found debris fields as far as a mile outside the contact zone. The final incident report blamed the crewman who removed the weapon’s firing pin (a procedure use to secure the ordinance before final bomb run) with snagging a piece of his cloth against the bomb’s parachute release wire for its partial deployment.

Historical Order of Battle: 2002

Click on unit title for more details

Squadron Type Base
1st Fighter Wing
1st Fighter Squadron Lockheed Martin F-16C/D Block 40 Shaikh Isa AB
2nd Fighter Squadron Lockheed Martin F-16C/D Block 40 Shaikh Isa AB
6th Fighter Squadron Northrop F-5E/F Shaikh Isa AB
Helicopter Wing
3 Squadron Agusta-Bell AB.212 Rifa’a AB
5 Squadron* MBB Bo 105CBS-MSS Rifa’a AB
7 Squadron MBB Bo 105C Rifa’a AB
8 Squadron Bell AH-1E Rifa’a AB
9 Squadron Sikorsky UH-60A/L Rifa’a AB
10 Squadron Bell AH-1E Rifa’a AB

* = Bahrain Amiri Navy unit.

Historical Orders of Battle

Historical orders of battle for the BAAF are listed for the following dates:
1976   1986   1991   1995   2002   Table of Current Order of Battle



1976

Click on unit title for more details

Squadron Type Base
Bahrain Defense Force
Air Wing MBB Bo 105C Bahrain Intl. Airport (Manama)


1986

Click on unit title for more details

Squadron Type Base
1st Fighter Wing
6th Fighter Squadron Northrop F-5E/F Bahrain Intl. Airport (Manama)
Helicopter Wing
3 Squadron Agusta-Bell AB.212 Bahrain Intl. Airport (Manama)
7 Squadron MBB Bo 105C Bahrain Intl. Airport (Manama)


1991

Click on unit title for more details

Squadron Type Base
1st Fighter Wing
1st Fighter Squadron Lockheed Martin F-16C/D Block 40 Shaikh Isa AB
6th Fighter Squadron Northrop F-5E/F Shaikh Isa AB
Helicopter Wing
3 Squadron Agusta-Bell AB.212 Bahrain Intl. Airport (Manama)
7 Squadron MBB Bo 105C Bahrain Intl. Airport (Manama)


1995

Click on unit title for more details

Squadron Type Base
1st Fighter Wing
1st Fighter Squadron Lockheed Martin F-16C/D Block 40 Shaikh Isa AB
6th Fighter Squadron Northrop F-5E/F Shaikh Isa AB
Helicopter Wing
3 Squadron Agusta-Bell AB.212 Rifa’a AB
5 Squadron* MBB Bo 105CBS-MSS Rifa’a AB
7 Squadron MBB Bo 105C Rifa’a AB
8 Squadron Bell AH-1E** Rifa’a AB

* = Bahrain Amiri Navy unit.
** = unit forming.

Current Order of Battle

Click on unit title for more details

Squadron Type Base
1st Fighter Wing
1st Fighter Squadron Lockheed Martin F-16C/D Block 40 Shaikh Isa AB
2nd Fighter Squadron Lockheed Martin F-16C/D Block 40 Shaikh Isa AB
6th Fighter Squadron Northrop F-5E/F Tiger II Shaikh Isa AB
4th Squadron Slingsby T.67 Firefly Shaikh Isa AB
Helicopter Wing
3 Squadron Agusta-Bell AB.212 Rifa’a AB
5 Squadron* MBB Bo 105CBS-MSS Rifa’a AB
7 Squadron MBB Bo 105C Rifa’a AB
8 Squadron Bell AH-1E Rifa’a AB
9 Squadron Sikorsky UH-60A/L Rifa’a AB
10 Squadron Bell AH-1E Rifa’a AB

* = Royal Bahraini Navy unit.

Current Inventory

F-16C serial 101 seen at Muharraq
in 1991 (photo, John Cotterill)

Click on aircraft type for more details

Aircraft Type Total
Ordered
Total
Del’d
Total
Now
Stored Role
Agusta-Bell AB212 12 12 12 0 Transport
Avro RJ85/RJ100 3 3 3 0 Transport
BAE SYSTEMS Hawk Mk.129 6 6 6 0 Training
Bell 212 3+ 3+ 3 0 Transport
Bell AH-1E/F Cobra 12/9 12/9 12/9 0 Anti-Tank
Lockheed Martin F-16C 18 17 17 0 Interception
Lockheed Martin F-16D 4 4 4 0 Training
MBB Bo 105C 3 3 3 0 Transport
Northrop F-5E Tiger II 8 8 8 0 Interception
Northrop F-5F Tiger II 4 4 4 0 Training
Sikorsky S-92A 1 1 1 0 VIP Transport
Sikorsky UH-60A/L Black Hawk 1/1 1/1 1/1 0 VIP Transport
Sikorsky UH-60M Black Hawk 9* 9* 0 0 Utility Transport
Slingsby T.67 Firefly 3 3 3 0 Training

* = on order
# = on delivery

Royal Bahraini Air Force

 

Key Facts

Current Title: Not known
English Title: Royal Bahraini Air Force
Abbreviation: RBAF

History

Narrative Summary

Upon the independence of Bahrain in 1971, the primary security force in the country was Bahrain Public Security, formerly known as the Bahrain State Police. This organisation possessed a small Flying Wing which operated two helicopters.

An all-service military organisation called the Bahrain Defense Force (BDF) was established soon after independence. The BDF formed an Air Wing in 1976, in order to operate two MBB Bo 105C helicopters for liaison and communications duties. A third Bo 105C was later acquired. The BDF and Bahrain Public Security maintained close relations, with personnel and helicopters frequently working together. Bell 412 and Sikorsky S-76 helicopters were specifically acquired for a dual Police/Air Wing role. All flying was conducted from Bahrain International Airport at Manama.

Plans were soon formulated for an expansion into jet fighter operation, but an initial application to the USA for F-5E aircraft was refused by the Carter administration. The incoming Reagan administration took a different view. Bahrain’s interest in the Northrop F-20A Tigershark was welcomed, but the proposed order was too small to justify starting production of this new type and the F-5E was offered instead. An agreement for the procurement of a squadron of F-5E/F Tiger II fighters was signed in 1985, and deliveries commenced before the end of the same year.

In the meantime, in 1984, the Gulf Co-operation Council had agreed to fund the construction of a large modern air base in the south of Sitra island, which would be ideal for the new fighter unit and also available for the use of other GCC members. Unfortunately, economic difficulties in Saudi Arabia – the main contributor to the GCC – caused delays in funding for the project. It wasn’t until the US stepped in with material assistance in 1987 that construction got underway. The F-5s were moved to the new base, known as a Shaikh Isa Air Base, as soon as it was completed.

In 1987, the BDF was reorganised into separate Army, Navy and Air force branches with the Air Wing becoming the Bahrain Amiri Air Force (BAAF). The delivery of a squadron of F-16s from 1990 marked a further increase in the capabilities of the air arm. The new F-16 unit was based at Shaikh Isa AB alongside the F-5s. On 2 August 1990 several aircraft from the Kuwait Air Force were evacuated to Bahrain during the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. During the subsequent Gulf War, BAAF F-5s and F-16s first flew defensive missions on 25 January 1991 and began offensive operations the following day. The Gulf War ended on 28 February 1991.

A second batch of F-16s commenced delivery in 2000. The new aircraft were equipped to carry the AIM-120 AMRAAM missile, first used by the USAF in the Gulf War. The original batch of F-16s received will be upgraded to carry the AMRAAM also. In July 2000, Bahrain signed a deal with BAE SYSTEMS to establish a pilot academy based around the Hawk trainer – similar to the NFTC in Canada. Subsequently, orders were placed for Slingsby T.67 Fireflys and BAE Hawk 100 trainers. Following constitutional changes in the country, in February 2002 the official name of the air force was changed to Royal Bahraini Air Force (RBAF).

Key Dates

1976    Bahrain Defense Force Air Wing established
December 1985    First jet fighters delivered
1987    BDF Air Wing renamed Bahrain Amiri Air Force
1987    Construction of Shaikh Isa Air Base started
1990    First F-16s delivered
26 January 1991    First offensive missions flown by BAAF in Gulf War
October 2000    Second batch of F-16s delivered
January 2002    BAE SYSTEMS contracted to establish Flying Training School for RBAF
February 2002    Official name changed to Royal Bahraini Air Force

Current Status

To be added.

Future Plans

No future procurement plans known.

F-16C serial 111 photographed
at Muharraq in 1991 (photo, John Cotterill)

Markings

National Insignia

Current — Historical

Aircraft Serial Numbers

1976-1985
Helicopers procured for the BDF Air Wing carried a three figure serial number prefixed by the letters BDF, eg: BDF-761, where the first two numbers represent the year of procurement, in this case 1976, and the last number was taken from an overall sequence which did not reset at the start of each year.

1985-Present
From 1985, a new military serialling system was introduced. This comprised a three-digit serial number without any prefix letters. The numbers are not issued sequentially and feature ‘blackout’ blocks of skipped-over numbers, eg: 152 and 154 are consecutive deliveries of F-16Ds.

Unit/Base Codes

Coding system not used

Aircraft

Aircraft Designations

None – Manufacturers designations used.

Current Aircraft Inventory

Table of Current Service Aircraft

All-Time Aircraft Used List

Alphabetical Order — Chronological Order

Aircraft NOT Used

False reports of aircraft on order or in service

Organisation

Main Headquarters

Royal Bahraini Air Force, Air Operations Centre, P.O. Box 245, Bahrain.

Organisational Structure

The Royal Bahraini Air Force is divided ten squadrons of aircraft and helicopters, located at two main air bases. Fixed wing aircraft are based at Shaikh Isa AB and rotary wing aircraft at Rifa’a.

Current Order of Battle

Table of Current Order of Battle

Historical Orders of Battle

Table of Historical Orders of Battle

All-Time Flying Units List

1st Fighter Squadron
2nd Fighter Squadron
3 Squadron
4 Squadron
5 Squadron [Navy]
6th Fighter Squadron
7 Squadron
8 Squadron
9 Squadron
10 Squadron

Air Bases

Current Air Bases

Air bases currently used are Shaikh Isa and Rifa’a.

All-Time Air Bases Used List

Air bases currently used are Shaikh Isa and Rifa’a. Prior to the opening of Shaikh Isa, Manama Airport was used by the Air Force.
Military Air Bases Listing

More Information

Books

Bahrain Aviation Bibliography – to be added

Magazines

World Air Power Journal Vol 26 Autumn 1996 p.112-115 (photo feature)

Websites

Bahrain Air Force

wikipedia: Royal Bahraini Air Force

militaryphotos.net

Any further photographs illustrating this air arm would be welcome.

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