No. 5 Flight RAAF

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No. 5 Flight RAAF
One of No. 5 Flight's Herons on display at the Centenary of Military Aviation 2014 airshow
One of No. 5 Flight's Herons on display at the Centenary of Military Aviation 2014 airshow
Active 2010–current
Country Australia
Branch Royal Australian Air Force
Role Training
Part of No. 92 Wing RAAF
Current base RAAF Base Amberley
Engagements War in Afghanistan (2001–present)
Aircraft flown
Reconnaissance Heron RPA

No. 5 Flight is a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) aircraft flight equipped with IAI Heron unmanned aerial vehicles.

History

No. 5 Flight was raised on 18 January 2010 at RAAF Base Amberley as part of No. 82 Wing.[1][2] The flight is responsible for operating the RAAF's small fleet of IAI Heron remotely piloted aircraft which are based at Kandahar in Afghanistan.[2][3]

On 13 April 2013 the responsibility for Heron RPA transferred to the Royal Australian Air Force's Surveillance and Response Group.[4] The flight's responsibilities include training personnel from all branches of the Australian Defence Force to operate the Herons in Australia, and maintaining a detachment of personnel at Kandahar who operate the RPAs as part of Operation Slipper, Australia's contribution to the war in Afghanistan.[5][6] The RAAF acquired a third Heron during 2011 which No. 5 Flight uses to train RPA operators in Australia; prior to this time Heron operators were trained in Canada.[1][3] The RAAF's Air Force newspaper reported in May 2011 that No. 5 Flight comprised a "handful of members".[3] On 4 April 2013 the flight transferred to No. 92 Wing; at this time it had a strength of 18 full-time personnel and three reservists, and operated four Herons. Three of the UAVs were deployed to Afghanistan and the fourth was in Australia.[2] As of 2013, most of No. 5 Flight's UAV operators had been fixed-wing aircraft pilots from the RAAF, Army and Navy.[7]

After a further extension of their mission, the Heron detachment was scheduled to remain in Afghanistan until the end of 2014.[8] It was announced in October 2014 that two Herons will be retained in Australia for a six-year period; at this time one of the UAVs was based at Woomera, South Australia and the other will be transported from Afghanistan. It is planned that the two Herons will eventually operate from other Australian military and civilian airfields.[9] The final Heron UAV detachment left Afghanistan in December 2014.[10]

See also

References

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