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Iraqi Air Force
Iraqi Air Force
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Iraqi Air Force
  • القوة الجوية العراقية
  • al-Qūwah al-jawwīyah al-ʻIrāqīyah
Seal of the Iraqi Air Force
Founded22 April 1931
Country Iraq
BranchAir force
RoleAerial warfare
SizeApproximately 5,000 (2024)[1]
ca. 192 aircraft[2]
Part ofIraqi Armed Forces
HeadquartersBaghdad
ColoursGrey & White   
AnniversariesApril 22 (Air Force Day)[3]
Engagements
Commanders
Current
commander
Lt. Gen. Muhannad Ghalib al-Asadi
Insignia
  • Roundel
  • (1931–2004)
  • (2019–present)
Fin flash
Flag
Aircraft flown
AttackSu-25, Aero L-159 Alca, KAI T-50, L-39 Albatros
BomberAntonov An-32
FighterF-16 Fighting Falcon
HelicopterMil Mi-17, Bell 212, Mil Mi-8, Eurocopter EC135
Attack helicopterBell OH-58 Kiowa, Mil Mi-24, Mil Mi-28, Aérospatiale Gazelle
ReconnaissanceCH 2000, Ce 208 ISR, KA 350 ISR, ScanEagle, Raven RQ-11B
TrainerCessna 172, Cessna 208, T-6A, Utva Lasta 95, Boeing 727, An-26
TransportC-130 Hercules, C-130J, An-32B, KA 350ER

The Iraqi Air Force (IQAF; Arabic: القوة الجوية العراقية, romanizedal-Qūwah al-jawwīyah al-ʻIrāqīyah) is the aerial warfare service branch of the Iraqi Armed Forces. It is responsible for the defense of Iraqi airspace as well as the policing of its international borders. The IQAF also acts as a support force for the Iraqi Navy and the Iraqi Army, which allows Iraq to rapidly deploy its military. It is headquartered in Baghdad, and the current commander is Lt. Gen. Muhannad Ghalib al-Asadi, who also serves as the commander of the Air Defence Command.

The Iraqi Air Force was founded in 1931, during the period of British control in Iraq after their defeat of the Ottomans in the First World War, with only a few pilots. The Iraqi Air Force operated mostly British aircraft until the 14 July Revolution in 1958, when the new Iraqi government began increased diplomatic relationships with the Soviet Union. The air force used both Soviet and British aircraft throughout the 1950s and 1960s. When Saddam Hussein came to power in 1979, the air force grew quickly when Iraq ordered more Soviet and French aircraft. The air force's peak came after the long Iran–Iraq War, which ended in 1988, when it consisted of 1029 aircraft of all types, including 550 combat aircraft,[4] becoming the largest air force in the region. Its downfall came during the Persian Gulf War (1990–91) and continued while coalition forces enforced no-fly zones. The remnants of Iraq's air force were destroyed during the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.

After the invasion, the IQAF was rebuilt, receiving most of its training and aircraft from the United States. In 2007, Iraq asked Iran to return some of the scores of Iraqi fighter planes that flew there to escape destruction during the Persian Gulf War in 1991.[5] As of 2014, Iran was receptive to the demands and was working on refurbishing an unspecified number of jets.[6][7]

History

[edit]

The first 10 years: 1931–1941

[edit]

The Iraqi Air Force considers its founding day as 22 April 1931. This day, the first Royal Iraqi Air Force (RIrAF) pilots returned to the country from training in the United Kingdom together with the air force's first aircraft: five de Havilland Gipsy Moths. These formed No. 1 Squadron, based at RAF Hinaidi.[8] Before the creation of the new air force, the RAF Iraq Command was in charge of all British Armed Forces elements in Iraq in the 1920s and early 1930s.[9] The RIrAF consisted of five pilots, aeronautics students trained at the RAF College Cranwell, and 32 aircraft mechanics. The original five pilots selected for aircraft training in 1929 were Natiq Mohammed Khalil al-Tay, Mohammed Ali Jawad, Hafdhi Aziz, Akrem Mushtaq, and Musa Ali. Later, Mahmud Salman and Atif Najib joined from the Army in 1931[3] The RIrAF saw its first combats as early as October 1931, against Kurdish insurgents in the north of the country. It was during operations against the Kurds that the air force suffered its first combat loss, when a DH.60 collided with a mountain near Barzan in April 1932, killing both crew members. That year, the Gipsy Moths were reinforced by three more DH.60Ts and three de Havilland Puss Moths.[10] The next year, eight de Havilland Dragons were delivered, and in 1934, the first out of a total of 34 Hawker Audaxes (named Nisr in Iraqi service) were acquired.[11]

In the years following Iraqi independence, the Air Force was still dependent on the Royal Air Force. The Iraqi government allocated the majority of its military expenditure to the Iraqi Army and by 1936 the Royal Iraqi Air Force had only 37 pilots and 55 aircraft. The following year, the Air Force showed some growth, increasing its number of pilots to 127.[12] This enabled it to purchase additional aircraft. In 1937, following high-level visits in Italy and Great Britain, Iraq placed orders for 4 Savoia-Marchetti SM.79s, 25 Breda Ba.65s, and 15 Gloster Gladiators.[13] In 1939, 15 Northrop 8As were bought.[14]

The RIrAF's first combat against another conventional military was in the 1941 Anglo-Iraqi War, when the Iraqi government made a bid for full independence following a coup by Rashid Ali against pro-British Iraqi leaders.[15] The war began in earnest on 2 May, when British aircraft started attacking the Iraqi troops that were encircling RAF Habbaniya. In response, the RIrAF started attacking the airfield, destroying two Hawker Audaxes and one Airspeed Oxford on the ground that day.[16] On 4 May, eight Vickers Wellington and two Bristol Blenheim bombers of the RAF attacked Rasheed Air Base, the RIrAF's main airfield. However, most Iraqi aircraft had been redeployed to Al-Washash and Baqubah. During the raid, a Wellington that had been hit by anti-aircraft fire was attacked by an Iraqi Gloster Gladiator, and was damaged to the point where it had to land in emergency outside Baghdad. This represented the first aerial victory for the RIrAF. However, on the same day an SM.79 was shot down by Iraqi ground fire over the airfield at Al Diwaniyah.[17] The RAF kept attacking Iraqi airfields; on 8 May, it claimed to have destroyed six aircraft on the ground at Baqubah, and shot down one Gladiator.[18] Around 15 May, Luftwaffe aircraft painted in Iraqi markings arrived in Iraq to help in the fight against the British.[19] However, the latter were meanwhile sending ever more reinforcements to Iraq, and support from the Axis powers could not change the course of the war. Losses and a lack of spares and replacement aircraft resulted in the Germans' departure at the end of May. On 31 May, a ceasefire was signed, thus ending the war.[20]

Reconstruction and growth: 1941–1967

[edit]

The Anglo-Iraqi War left the RIrAF shattered. Several squadrons had all of their aircraft destroyed, while lots of officers and pilots had been killed or had fled to neighbouring countries. Due to the destruction of the Flying School's entire aircraft inventory, training of new pilots only restarted six years after the war. Flying hours were also limited by the British authorities, which confiscated three of the remaining Gloster Gladiators in March 1942. Despite Iraqi attempts to buy some new aircraft, the only ones the British were ready to provide were some worn-out Gladiators: although 30 were delivered between September 1942 and May 1944, most of them were in such a state that they could only be used as sources of spare parts. From 1944 to 1947, 33 Avro Ansons were acquired. Despite these hurdles, the RIrAF helped put down the 1943 Barzani revolt.[21] In late 1946, the Iraqis reached an agreement with the British, under which they would return their surviving Avro Ansons, in exchange for the authorisation to order 30 Hawker Fury F.Mk.1 fighters and two Fury T.Mk.52 two-seat trainers. The next year, three de Havilland Doves and three Bristol Freighters were ordered.[22]

The RIrAF was still recovering from its destruction during the Anglo-Iraqi War[9] when it joined in the war against the newly created state of Israel in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.[9] The air force only played a small role in the first war against Israel. From 1948 to 1949 No. 7 Squadron operated Avro Anson training bombers from Transjordan from where they flew several attacks against the Israelis.[23] After a series of attacks on Arab capitals, flown by three Boeing B-17s that had been pressed into service by the Israeli Air Force, the governments of Transjordan and Syria demanded that the Iraqis replace their Ansons with Hawker Furies. However, only six Furies were sent to Damascus, and they never encountered any Israeli aircraft. Moreover, due to the limited amount of cannon ammunition supplied by the British, and the absence of bombs, they were only used for armed reconnaissance. In the end, the four surviving aircraft were handed over to Egypt in October 1948.[24] Despite these early problems, in 1951 the RIrAF purchased 20 more Fury F.Mk.1s, for a total of 50 F.Mk.1s single-seaters and 2 two-seaters, which equipped No. 1, No. 4 and No. 7 Squadrons.[25]

An Iraqi Air Force De Havilland Vampire FB.52, before delivery in 1953

In the early 1950s, thanks to increased income from oil and agricultural exports, the RIrAF was thoroughly re-equipped. In 1951, 15 each of de Havilland Canada DHC-1 Chipmunks, Percival Provosts and North American T-6s were bought to replace obsolete de Havilland Tiger Moth trainers. With these new aircraft, the RIrAF Flying School was expanded into the Air Force College. The training curriculum was improved, and the number of students graduating each year was increased. This allowed to form a solid basis for the RIrAF's long-term growth. Also in 1951, the RIrAF bought its first helicopters: three Westland Dragonflies.[26] The RIrAF's first jet fighter was the de Havilland Vampire: 12 FB.Mk.52 fighters and 10 T.Mk.55 trainers were delivered from 1953 to 1955. These were quickly supplemented by 20 de Havilland Venoms, delivered between 1954 and 1956.[27] Following the formation of the Baghdad Pact, the United States donated at least six Cessna O-1 Bird Dogs to the RIrAF. The RAF also vacated Shaibah Air Base, and the RIrAF took over it as Wahda Air Base.[28] In 1957, six Hawker Hunter F.Mk.6s were delivered. The next year, the United States agreed to provide 36 F-86F Sabres free of charge.[29]

However, this plan was never realised. Following the 14 July Revolution of 1958, which resulted in the end of monarchy in Iraq, the influence of the Iraqi Communist Party grew significantly. The first commander of the Iraqi Air Force (the "Royal" prefix was dropped after the revolution), Jalal Jaffar al-Awqati, was an outspoken communist, and encouraged prime minister Abd al-Karim Qasim to improve relations between Iraq and the USSR. The Soviets reacted quickly, and in the autumn of 1958 a series of arms contracts was passed between Iraq and the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia. These stipulated the delivery of MiG-15UTI trainers, MiG-17F fighters, Ilyushin Il-28 bombers, and Antonov An-2 and An-12 transports. The first aircraft arrived in Iraq in January 1959.[30] During the late 1960s and or early 1970s additional MiG-17s may have been purchased and then forwarded to either Syria or Egypt.[9]

Tom Cooper and Stefan Kuhn list the air force's squadrons in 1961 as:[31]

The IrAF received approximately 30 MiG-19S', 10 MiG-19Ps, and 10 MiG-19PMs in 1959 and 1960. However, only 16 MiG-19S' were ever taken up; the other aircraft were not accepted due to their poor technical condition, and remained stored in Basra. The accepted MiG-19S' were operated from Rasheed Air Base by the 9th Squadron. Their service in Iraq didn't last long however: the survivors were donated to Egypt around 1964.[32] Iraq also received MiG-21F-13 and Tupolev Tu-16 bombers starting in 1962.[33]

The November 1963 Iraqi coup d'état realigned Iraq with NATO powers, and as a result, more second-hand Hawker Hunters were delivered to the IQAF.[9] Aircraft imports from the Communist Eastern European nations had been suspended until 1966, when MiG-21PF interceptors were purchased from the Soviet Union.[9]

In 1966, Iraqi Captain Munir Redfa defected with his MiG-21F-13 to Israel which in turn gave it to the United States for evaluation under the code-name "Have Donut".[34]

Six-Day War

[edit]

During the Six-Day War, the IQAF bombed several air bases and land targets. On 6 June 1967, a group of four Tupolev Tu-16 bombers was sent to attack Ramat David Airbase. Two of them had to abort due to technical difficulties, and another was shot down by Israelis, killing the crew of five.[35] The IQAF also played a significant role in supporting Jordanian troops.[3] The Iraqi Air Force had one Pakistani pilot, Saiful Azam, who claimed two kills against Israeli aircraft over the H-3 air base in a Hawker Hunter.[36] Iraqi Hunter pilots were officially credited for shooting down a further four Israeli aircraft, and another one was credited to anti-aircraft guns.[37] Thanks to its Hunters and MiG-21s, the IQAF was successfully able to defend its bases in western Iraq from additional Israeli attacks.[9]

1970s and the Yom Kippur War

[edit]

Throughout this decade, the IQAF grew in size and capability, as the 20 year Treaty of friendship with the USSR signed in 1971 brought large numbers of relatively modern fighter aircraft to the air force. The Iraqi government was never satisfied with the Soviets alone supplying them, and while they were purchasing modern fighters like the MiG-21 and the Sukhoi Su-20, they began persuading the French to sell Mirage F1s fighters (which were bought) and later Jaguars (which were however never ordered).[9]

Before the Yom Kippur War, the IQAF sent 12 Hawker Hunters to Egypt where they stayed to fight; only 1 survived the war.[9] The IQAF first received their Sukhoi Su-7s in 1968; they were originally stationed in Syria. Aircraft deployed to Syria suffered heavy losses due to Israeli aircraft and SAMs.[citation needed] In addition, they were hit with friendly fire from Syrian SAMs.[38] A planned attack on 8 October was canceled due to these heavy losses as well as disagreements with the Syrian government.[citation needed] Eventually, all aircraft besides several Sukhoi Su-7s were withdrawn from bases in Syria. During the war in October 1973, the first air strike against Israeli bases in Sinai was composed of Iraqi planes; they hit artillery sites and Israeli tanks, and they also claimed to have destroyed 21 Israeli fighters in air combat.[39] Shortly after the war, the IQAF ordered 14 Tupolev Tu-22Bs and two Tu-22Us from the USSR as well as Raduga Kh-22 missiles and by 1975, 10 Tu-22Bs and 2 Tu-22Us were delivered.[40]

The 1970s also saw a series of fierce Kurdish uprisings in the north of the country against Iraq.[41] With the help of the Shah of Iran, the Kurds received arms and supplies including modern SAMs as well as some Iranian soldiers.[42] The IQAF suffered heavy casualties fighting the Kurds, so they began using their new Tu-22s in combat against them (using 3 tonne bombs from high altitude to avoid the Iranian HAWK SAM batteries that the Shah had set up near the Iraqi border to cover the Kurdish insurgents) as they were able to avoid a greater percentage of SAMs due to their higher bombing altitude and improved electronic countermeasures.[9] During the mid-1970s, tensions with Iran were high but were later resolved with the Algiers Treaty.[citation needed]

1980s and war with Iran

[edit]
Iraqi Air Force pilots during a pre-flight briefing beneath their Dassault Mirage F1 fighter-bombers at an airbase, 1980s.

Between the autumn of 1980 and the summer of 1990, the number of aircraft in the IQAF went from 332 to over 1000.[3] Before the Iraqi invasion of Iran, the IQAF had expected 16 modern Dassault Mirage F.1EQs from France and were also in the middle of receiving a total of 240 new aircraft and helicopters from their Eastern European allies. When Iraq invaded Iran in late September 1980, the Soviets and the French stopped delivering additional aircraft to Iraq but resumed deliveries a few months later.[43]

The IQAF had to instead fight with obsolete Su-20, MiG-21 Fishbeds and MiG-23 Floggers.[43] The MiG-21 was the main interceptor of the force while their MiG-23s were used for ground attack and interception.[citation needed] The Su-20 were pure ground attack aircraft. On the first day of the war, formations of Tu-16/22s, Su-20s, MiG-23s and MiG-21s, for a total of 166–192 aircraft, performed surprise airstrikes on 10 airbases of the Iranian Air Force, succeeding in destroying a large of number of fighter-bomber aircraft on the ground, but not enough to knock the Iranian Air Force out.[44] In retaliation for these aerial strikes, the Iranian Air Force launched Operation Kaman 99 a day after the war was launched.

During late 1981, it was soon clear that the modern Mirage F1s and the Soviet MiG-25s were effective against the Iranians.[43] The IQAF began to use their new Eastern weaponry which included Tu-22KD/KDP bombers, equipped with Kh-22M/MP air-to-ground missiles, MiG-25s equipped with Kh-23 air-to-ground missiles as well as Kh-25 and Kh-58 anti-radar missiles and also MiG-23BNs, equipped with Kh-29L/T missiles.[43] In 1983, to satisfy the Iraqis waiting for their upgraded Exocet-capable Mirage F1EQ-5s, Super Etendards were leased to Iraq. The Iranian oil tanker fleet (see Tanker War) and gunboats suffered severe damage at the hands of the 5 Super Etendards equipped with Exocet anti-ship missiles. One of these was lost during their 20-month combat use and 4 returned to the Aeronavale in 1985.[43]

USS Stark listing following two hits by Iraqi Exocet missiles

The IQAF generally played a major role in the war against Iran by striking airbases, military infrastructure, industrial infrastructure such as factories, powerplants and oil facilities, as well as systematically bombing urban areas in Tehran and other major Iranian cities (later came to be known as the War of the Cities). At the end of the war, in conjunction with the Army and special operations forces, the IQAF played a significant role in routing Iran's last military offensive.[3] (by that time, the role of the once superior Iranian Air Force had been reduced to missions in desperate situations only, performing critical tasks such as defending Iran's vital oil terminals). The air force also had a successful role attacking tankers and other vessels going to and from Iran, by using Exocet missiles on their Mirage F1s. On May 17, 1987, an Iraqi F1 mistakenly launched two Exocet anti-ship missiles into the American frigate USS Stark, crippling the vessel and killing 37 sailors.[3]

By 1987 the Iraqi Air Force had a large modern military infrastructure, with modern air logistics centers, air depots, maintenance and repair facilities, and some production capabilities.[45] By that time the air force consisted of 40,000 men, of whom about 10,000 were a part of the Air Defense Command.[3] Its main bases were in Tammuz (Al Taqqadum), Al Bakr (Balad), Al Qadisiya (Al Asad), Ali Air Base, Saddam Airbase (Qayarrah West Air Base) and other major bases including Basra. The IQAF operated from 24 main operating bases and 30 dispersal bases, with 600 aircraft shelters including nuclear-hardened shelters, with multiple taxiways to multiple runways.[3] Iraq also had 123 smaller airfields of various kinds (reserve fields and helicopter fields).[45]

Notable Iraqi pilots of the Iran–Iraq War

[edit]

Unlike many other nations with modern air forces, Iraq was engaged in an intense and protracted war. The 8 year long conflict with Iran gave the Air Force the opportunity to develop some battle-tested and hardened fighter pilots. Though information about the IQAF is, at best, hard to access, two men stand out as the best Iraqi fighter aces.

Mohammed Rayyan, nicknamed "Sky Falcon," who flew MiG-21MF in 1980–81, and claimed two confirmed kills against Iranian F-5Es in 1980. With the rank of Captain, Rayyan qualified on MiG-25P in late 1981 and went on to claim another eight kills, two of which are confirmed, before being shot down and killed by IRIAF F-14s in 1986.[46]

Captain Omar Goben was another successful pilot. While flying a MiG-21 he scored air kills against two F-5E Tiger IIs and one F-4E Phantom II in 1980. He later transferred to the MiG-23 and survived the war, but was killed in January 1991 flying a MiG-29 versus an American F-15C.[46]

Captain Salah I. was also a distinguished pilot during this period flying a Mirage F1, achieving a double kill against two F-4Es on 2 December 1981 while he was part of the 79th Squadron.[47]

1990s – Persian Gulf War and no-fly zones

[edit]
Iraqi Air Force MiG-29A

In August 1990, Iraq had the largest air force in the region even after the long Iran–Iraq War. The air force at that time had 934 combat-capable aircraft (including trainers) in its inventory. Theoretically, the IQAF should have been 'hardened' by the conflict with Iran, but post-war purges of the IQAF leadership and other personnel decimated the air force, as the Iraqi regime struggled to bring it back under total control.[43] Training was brought to a minimum during the whole of 1990.

The table below shows the Iraqi Air Force at the start of the Persian Gulf War, its losses, damaged aircraft, flights to Iran and remaining assets at the end of the Persian Gulf War. A portion of the aircraft damaged may have been repairable or else used for spare parts. This is a combination of losses both in the air (23–36 aircraft)[48] and on the ground (227 aircraft) and exclude the helicopters and aircraft that belonged to Iraqi Army Aviation, Iraqi Navy and the Aviation wing of the Iraqi Department of Border Enforcement.[49]

Iraqi losses, flights to Iran and remaining aircraft after war.[49][50]
Aircraft 1990 destroyed damaged to Iran survived
Mirage F1EQ/BQ 88 23 6 24 35
Mirage F1K (Kuwaiti) 8 2 2 0 4
Su-7BMK 54
Su-20 18 4 2 4 8
Su-22R 10 1 0 0 9
Su-22M2 24 2 6 5 11
Su-22M3 16 7 0 9 0
Su-22UM3 25 3 1 0 21
Su-22M4 28 7 0 15 6
Su-24MK 30 5 0 24 1
Su-25K/UBK 72 31 8 7 26
MiG-19C/Shenyang J-6 45
MiG-21MF/bis/F-7B 236 65 46 0 115
MiG-23BN 38 17 0 4 18
MiG-23ML 39 14 1 7 17
MiG-23MF 14 2 5 0 7
MiG-23MS 15 2 4 0 9
MiG-23UM 21 8 0 1 12
MiG-25U 7 3 2 0 2
MiG-25RB 9 3 3 0 3
MiG-25PD/PDS/PU/R 19 13 1 0 5
MiG-29B 42 17 4 3 18
MiG-29UB 8 0 0 1 7
Tu-16/KSR-2-11 3 3 0 0 0
Tu-22B/U 4 4 0 0 0
Xian H-6D 4 4 0 0 0
An-26 5 0 3 0 2
Ilyushin Il-76 19 3 1 15 0
Dassault Falcon 20 2 0 0 2 0
Dassault Falcon 50 3 0 0 3 0
Lockheed Jetstar 6 4 0 1 1
Aero L-39 Albatros 67 0 1 0 66
Embraer Tucano 78 1 6 0 64
FFA AS-202 Bravo 34 5 5 0 17
Eloris trainer 12 0 0 0 12
BAC Jet Provost 20 5 0 0 15
MBB/Kawasaki BK 117 14 1 6 0 6

During the 1991 Persian Gulf War, the Iraqi Air Force was devastated by coalition airpower, notably the aerial forces of the United States, the United Kingdom and their allies. Most airfields were heavily struck, and in air combat Iraq was only able to obtain four confirmed kills (and four damaged along with one probable kill), while sustaining 23 losses.[48] All of the out of service (six) Tupolev Tu-22s that Iraq possessed were destroyed by bombing at the start of Operation Desert Storm. However, they had already been withdrawn from the inventory of the Iraqi Air Force and were simply used as decoys and do not appear on the operational list of lost aircraft from the Iraqi Air Force (like all other old aircraft which were used solely to deflect raids from operational assets).

The MiG-25 force (NATO reporting name 'Foxbat') recorded the first air-to-air kill during the war. A MIG-25PDS, piloted by Lt. Zuhair Dawood of the 84th Fighter Squadron, shot down a U.S. Navy F/A-18 Hornet from VFA-81 on the first night of the war. In 2009 the Pentagon announced they had identified the remains of the pilot, U.S. Navy Captain Michael "Scott" Speicher, solving an 18-year mystery. Captain Speicher, who was a Lieutenant Commander at the time, was apparently buried by nomadic Bedouin tribesmen close to where his jet was shot down in a remote area of Anbar province.

The second air-air kill was recorded by a pilot named Jameel Sayhood on January nineteenth. Flying a MIG-29, he shot down a Royal Air Force Tornado GR.1A with R-60 missiles. Flight Lieutenant D J Waddington piloted the RAF aircraft serial ZA396/GE, and Flight Lieutenant R J Stewart, and crashed 51 nautical miles southeast of Tallil air base.[51]

On 30 January 1991, an IQAF MiG-25 hit and damaged a USAF F-15C with an R-40 missile in the Samurra Air Battle. Iraq claims it was shot down (pilot ejected) and subsequently the aircraft crashed in Saudi Arabia.[52]

An Iraqi Mirage F-1 piloted by Capt. Nafie Al-Jubouri successfully downed an American EF-111 Raven through aerial maneuvering as it crashed while attempting to avoid a missile fired by Al-Jubouri.[53][54]

In another incident, an Iraqi Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-25 eluded eight USAF F-15C Eagles, firing three missiles at a USAF EF-111 electronic warfare aircraft, forcing them to abort their mission. In yet another incident, two MiG-25's approached a pair of F-15 Eagles, fired missiles (which were evaded by the F-15s), and then out-ran the American fighters. Two more F-15s joined the pursuit, and a total of ten air-to-air missiles were fired at the Iraqi aircraft; none of which could reach them.

In an effort to demonstrate their own air offensive capability, on 24 January the Iraqis attempted to mount a strike against the major Saudi oil refinery in Abqaiq. Two Mirage F-1 fighters laden with incendiary bombs and two MiG-23s (along as fighter cover) took off. They were spotted by USAF Boeing E-3 Sentry AWACS aircraft, and two Royal Saudi Air Force F-15s were sent to intercept. When the Saudis appeared the Iraqi MiGs turned tail, but the Mirages pressed on. Captain Ayedh Al-Shamrani, one of the Saudi pilots, maneuvered his jet behind the Mirages and shot down both aircraft. After this episode, the Iraqis made no more air efforts of their own, sending most of their jets to Iran in hopes that they might someday get their Air Force back. (Iran returned seven Su-25s in 2014.)[55]

During the Persian Gulf War, most Iraqi pilots and aircraft (of French and Soviet origin) fled to Iran to escape the bombing campaign because no other country would allow them sanctuary. The Iranians impounded these aircraft after the war and returned seven Su-25s in 2014, while putting the rest in the service of the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force[56] – claiming them as reparations for the Iran–Iraq War. Because of this Saddam Hussein did not send the rest of his Air Force to Iran just prior to Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003, instead opting to bury them in sand. Saddam Hussein, preoccupied with Iran and regional power balance, is reported to have commented: "The Iranians are even stronger than before, they now have our Air Force."[57]

These included: Mirage F1s EQ1/2/4/5/6, Su-20 and Su-22M2/3/4 Fitters, Su-24MK Fencer-Ds, Su-25K/UBK Frogfoots, MiG-23ML Floggers, MiG-29A/UB (product 9.12B) Fulcrums and a number of Il-76s, including the one-off AEW-AWACS prototype Il-76 "ADNAN 1". Also, prior to Operation Desert Storm, 19 Iraqi Mig-21s and MiG-23s were sent to Yugoslavia for servicing, but were never returned due to international sanctions.[58] In 2009, the Iraqi government briefly sought the return of the fighters, but they were disassembled and would have been costly to repair and return.[58][59]

An Iraqi MiG-29 aircraft lies in ruins after it was destroyed by coalition forces during the Persian Gulf War's Operation Desert Storm.

Persian Gulf War aircraft losses by coalition forces

[edit]
Aircraft Origin No. Shot Down No. To Iran
MiG-21 Soviet Union 4 0
MiG-23 9 12
MiG-25 2 0
MiG-29 6 4
Su-7 4
Su-17
Su-20 0 4
Su-22 2 40
Su-24 0 24
Su-25 2 7
Ilyushin Il-76 1 15
Mil Mi-8 1 0
Mirage F-1 France 9 24
Total Number Loss[60] 36 137

The Iraqi Air Force itself lists its air-to-air losses at 23 airframes[48] compared to the US claims of 44. Similarly, the Allies initially acknowledged no losses in air combat to the Iraqi Air Force, and only in 1995 acknowledged one loss. After 2003 the Allies acknowledged a second loss, but a further two Iraqi claims and one probable are still listed by the Allies as lost to "ground fire" rather than an Iraqi fighter. Generally at least three Iraqi pilots are relatively agreed upon to have scored victories against coalition aircraft in aerial combat.

As well as the Persian Gulf war, the IQAF was also involved in the 1991 uprisings in Iraq. Alongside Army aviation, Mi-8, Mi-24, Gazelle, Alouette and Puma helicopters were used to counter the attempted Shi'ite and Kurdish revolts between 1991 and 1993.

After the Persian Gulf War, the Iraqi Air Force consisted only of a sole Su-24 (nicknamed "waheeda" in the Iraqi Air Force which translates to roughly "the lonely") and a single squadron of MiG-25s purchased from the Soviet Union in 1979. Some Mirages, MiG-23MLs and SU-22s also remained in use, with the MiG-29s being withdrawn from use by 1995 due to engine TBO limits, and the MiG-21s withdrawn due to obsolescence. During the period of sanctions that followed, the Iraqi Air Force was severely restricted by no-fly zones established by the coalition and by restricted access to spare parts due to United Nations sanctions. Many aircraft were unserviceable and a few were hidden from American reconnaissance to escape potential destruction. In patrols of the no-fly zones, three Iraqi MiGs were lost. Despite several attacks from U.S. F-15s and F-14s firing AIM-54 and AIM-120 missiles at the Iraqi fighters, the Iraqi maneuvers ensured they were able to avoid any casualties in their dispute over Iraqi airspace. The last recorded air-to-air kill was on 23 December 2002, when a MiG-25 Foxbat shot down an armed American RQ-1 Predator.[61]

In 2008, the Defense Technical Information Center released the top-secret archives of the Saddam-era Iraqi Air Force, shedding light on the true losses and operations of the Air Force during 1991.[49]

Inventory in the 1991 Persian Gulf War

[edit]

[citation needed]

Aircraft Origin Type Variant In service Notes
Combat aircraft
Mirage F1 France Fighter Mirage F1EQ/BQ 88
Sukhoi Su-20 Soviet Union Ground attack 18
Sukhoi Su-22 Soviet Union Ground attack Su-22R/Su-22M2/M3/M4 133
Sukhoi Su-24 Soviet Union Interdiction/Strike Su-24MK 30
Sukhoi Su-25 Soviet Union Ground attack Su-25K/UBK 72
MiG-21 Soviet Union/China Fighter MiG-21MF/bis/F-7B 236
MiG-23 Soviet Union Ground attack MiG-23BN 38
MiG-23 Soviet Union Fighter MiG-23MS/MF 29
MiG-23 Soviet Union Fighter MiG-23ML 39
MiG-25 Soviet Union Interceptor MiG-25PD/PDS/PU/R/RB 35
MiG-29 Soviet Union Fighter MiG-29B/MiG-29UB 50
Tupolev Tu-16 Soviet Union Bomber Tu-16/KSR-2-11 3
Tupolev Tu-22 Soviet Union Bomber Tu-22B/U 4
Xian H-6 China Bomber Xian H-6D 4
BAC Jet Provost United Kingdom Attack 20
Transport
Antonov An-26 Soviet Union Transport 5
Ilyushin Il-76 Soviet Union Cargo 19
Dassault Falcon 20 France VIP Transport 2
Dassault Falcon 50 France VIP Transport 3
Lockheed Jetstar USA VIP Transport 1
Trainers
Aero L-39 Albatros Czechoslovakia Trainer/COIN
Embraer Tucano Brazil Trainer/COIN
FFA AS-202 Bravo Switzerland Trainer

2003 US-led invasion of Iraq

[edit]
An Iraqi MiG-25 Foxbat found buried under the sand west of Baghdad.

By early 2003, Iraq's air power numbered an estimated 180 combat aircraft, of which only about half were flyable.[62] In late 2002, a Yugoslav weapons company provided servicing for the MiG-21s and MiG-23s, violating UN sanctions.[62] An aviation institute in Bijeljina, Bosnia and Herzegovina, supplied the engines and spare parts.[63] These however, were too late to improve the condition of Iraq's air force.

On the brink of the US-led invasion, Saddam Hussein disregarded his air force's wishes to defend the country's airspace against coalition aircraft and ordered the bulk of his fighters to be disassembled and buried. Some were later found by US excavation forces around the Al Taqqadum and Al Asad air bases, including MiG-25s and Su-25s.[64] The IQAF proved to be totally non-existent during the invasion; a few helicopters were seen but no fighters flew to combat coalition aircraft.[65]

During the occupation phase, most of Iraq's combat aircraft (J-7, MiG-23s, MiG-25s, SU-20/22, Su-25 and some MiG-29s) were found by American and Australian forces in poor condition at several air bases throughout the country while others were discovered buried.[66] Most of the IQAF's aircraft were destroyed during and after the invasion, and all remaining equipment was junked or scrapped in the immediate aftermath of the war. None of the aircraft acquired during Saddam's time remained in service.[60]

Post-invasion

[edit]
Members of the Iraqi Air Force unload 920 AK-47 assault rifles and uniform items from a C-130 Hercules at Mosul, Iraq on Feb. 16, 2008.
Iraqi Air Force Mirage F1BQ

The Iraqi Air Force, like all Iraqi forces after the 2003 Invasion of Iraq, was rebuilt as part of the overall program to build a new Iraqi defense force.[67] The newly created air force consisted only of 35 people in 2004 when it began operations.[68]

In December 2004, the Iraqi Ministry of Defense signed two contracts with the Polish defence consortium BUMAR.[69] The first contract, worth US$132 million, was for the delivery of 20 PZL W-3 Sokół helicopters and the training of 10 Iraqi pilots and 25 maintenance personnel.[69] They were intended to be delivered by November 2005, but in April 2005 the company charged with fulfilling the contract announced the delivery would not go ahead as planned, because the delivery schedule proposed by PZL Swidnik was not good enough.[69] As a result, only 2 were delivered in 2005 for testing.

The second contract, worth US$105 million, was to supply the Iraqi air force with 24 second-hand Russian-made, re-worked Mi-17 (Hips).[69] As of 2008, 8 had been delivered and 2 more were on their way. The Mi-17s were reported to have some attack capability.[70]

On 18 November 2005, the Coalition Air Force Transition Team (CAFTT), part of Multi-National Security Transition Command - Iraq was established to guide the recreation of the new Iraqi Air Force.[71] During this period, the Air Force primarily served as a light reconnaissance and transport operation.[72] A report of February 2006 detailed the 3rd, 23rd, and 70th Squadrons busy on these missions.[71] The air force also included the IAF Operational Air Headquarters in Baghdad with a major-general commanding and just over 100 staff in staff cells A1-A6, and A7 (Training), A8 (Finance) and A9 (Engineering); the two reconnaissance squadrons (3rd and 70th); 2nd and 4th Squadrons planned to receive Huey II helicopters; 12th Squadron with Bell JetRangers (training) and 15th Squadron due to receive Mi-17 helicopters in early 2006, all at Taji Air Base; and 23rd Squadron flying the C-130s.

On March 4, 2007, the air force carried out its first medical evacuation in the city of Baghdad when an injured police officer was airlifted to a hospital.[73] Also in 2007, the USAF's Second Air Force, part of Air Education and Training Command, was given responsibility to provide curricula and advice to the Iraqi Air Force as it stood up its own technical training and branch specific basic training among others.[67][72]

In 2009 the first of several Iraqi officers completed their flying training at RAF Cranwell, a development with echos of the Iraqi Air Force's early beginnings.[74]

It was reported in December 2007 that a deal had been reached between the Iraqi government and Serbia for the sale of arms and other military equipment including 36 Lasta 95 basic trainers.[75] It was speculated that Iraq might buy 50 Aérospatiale Gazelle attack helicopters from France.[76] In July 2008, Iraq had formally requested an order for 24 light attack and reconnaissance helicopters. The aircraft would either be the U.S. Army's new ARH-70 helicopter or the MH-6 Little Bird.[77]

On October 14, 2008, Aviation Week reported that two Hellfire-equipped Cessna 208Bs were spotted at an ATK facility in Meacham Airport, Fort Worth, Texas. The Iraqi air force was due to receive 3 armed Cessna 208Bs in December 2008, with two more to be delivered in 2009. This represented the first IQAF strike capability since the start of the war in 2003.[78] The Iraqi government announced in November 2008 that the Iraqi Air Force would purchase 108 aircraft through 2011. Ultimately the force was to have consisted of up to 516 total aircraft by 2015, then 550 total aircraft by 2018. Specific types being purchased included Eurocopter EC635 and Bell ARH-70 type helicopters. Additionally, 24 T-6 Texan II aircraft would be purchased for the light attack role.[79]

Over the summer of 2008, the Defense Department announced that the Iraqi government wanted to order more than 400 armored vehicles and other equipment worth up to $3 billion, and six C-130J transport planes, worth up to $1.5 billion.[80]

Iraq was due to buy 28 Czech-made L-159 training jets valued at $1 billion (770 million euros). Twenty-four of the planes would be new, while four would come from Czech surplus stocks. Later the deal fell through. However afterwards the Czech aviation company Aero Vodochody reportedly agreed to sell 12 of the jets, although the deal wasn't yet approved by both countries' governments.[81] There were talks to buy Czech made combat aircraft Aero L-159 Alca with possible sale or oil trade of either 24 or 36 aircraft from Czech Air Force surplus.[82][83] The purchase was not done and as of 2013, the Czech Republic has not been able to secure its first export deal for its L-159 Alca fighter aircraft.[84] The deal for 24/36 Czech L-159 aircraft was cancelled; instead South Korea supersonic KAI T50 have been chosen (24 aircraft). But in April 2014, Iraq decided to buy 12 second-hand (conserved) L-159 for $200 million.[85]

2010s

[edit]
An Iraqi Air Force Commander at an F-16 training session in Arizona.

Throughout 2010 and 2011, the Iraqi government and the MoI announced intentions to buy Dassault Mirage F1 and F-16C Block 52 fighters.[86][87][88] The Iraqi cabinet specified a sum of $900m as a first installment of $3b worth of aircraft, equipment, spare parts, and training.

The deal to buy the F-16 fighters seemed to teeter as the GoI reversed its decision on 12 February and wanted to divert the initial sum of $900m to economic reconstruction.[89][90] However, on the 12 July 2011, the GoI re-iterated its interest in the F-16s due to the pending withdrawal of American forces from Iraq, and later the number of fighters to be purchased was doubled to 36.[91][92][93][94]

Iraq's air space was unguarded from December 2011 until 18 F-16IQ Block 52 jet fighters and their pilots were ready.[95][96][97] The first Iraqi F-16 made its inaugural flight in May 2014.[98] It was officially delivered to the IQAF in a ceremony at Fort Worth, Texas, on 5 June 2014.[99]

In October 2012, it was reported that Russia and Iraq may sign a $4.2–$5.0 billion weapons contract, including 30 Mi-28N helicopters.[100] The deal was reportedly cancelled due to Iraqi concerns of corruption,[101] but that concern was addressed, and the Iraqi defense minister stated that "the deal is going ahead".[102] Despite early complications, all parts of the $4.2 billion contracts were signed, and are being executed. The first contract for 10 Mi-28NE helicopters for Iraq will begin delivery in September 2013.[103] A batch of 13 Mi-28NE helicopters was delivered in January 2014.[104]

On 26 June 2014, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said that they "should have sought to buy other jet fighters like British, French and Russian", describing the order of American F-16s as "long-winded" and "deluded".[105] The IQAF instead acquired second-hand jet aircraft from Russia and Belarus to combat ISIS militants in Northern Iraq, with the first batch arriving on 28 June.[105][106] The Iraqi Ministry of Defense confirmed the purchase of 5 Russian Sukhoi Su-25, uploading a video on its YouTube channel of their arrival.[107] The Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force also delivered seven Su-25s on 1 July, the majority of which were ex-Iraqi aircraft that fled to Iran during the Gulf War.[108]

An Iraqi Air Force T-6A Texan II

On 13 July 2015, the Iraqi Air Force received its first batch of F-16 fighters.[109] In addition to the F-16's which are due to be delivered to the Iraqi Air Force throughout the upcoming years, 24 KAI T-50 Golden Eagles are expected to begin deliveries by April 2016 boosting the Iraqi Air Force's defense capabilities.[110] On 5 November 2015, the first two Czech Aero L-159 light combat aircraft were delivered to Iraq.[111][112] The first group of Iraqi pilots completed training in the Czech company Aero Vodochody on 9 February 2016. Iraq will gain a total of 15 Aero L-159s and Aero Vodochody will make 12 aircraft operable for the Iraqi Air Force. Two other planes will be used for the reconstruction of two aircraft into two-seaters, one will be used for spare parts.[113] For nearly three years, United Kingdom has blocked the sale of L-159s because they contain British radar warning receiver. However, Prime Minister David Cameron agreed to overturn the ban in February 2016 and the sale to Iraq is proceeding.[114]

In December 2014, during a meeting between leaders of Iraq and the United Arab Emirates, the UAE offered up to 10 Mirage 2000 fighters to the Iraqi Air Force. The aircraft could have been delivered by March 2015.[115]

Night flying certification for the UH-1 crews of the Iraqi 2nd Squadron

On 6–7, April 2019, IQAF received six new F-16s.[116] According to Brigadier Yahya Rasool, Ministry of Defence (Iraq)'s Security Media Cell spokesperson, the latest delivery brought Iraq's F-16 fleet to 27.[117]

Among operating squadrons of the air force today are: 3rd Squadron; 9th Squadron (F-16s); 23rd Squadron; 70th Squadron; 87th Squadron (B 350ER); 109th Squadron (Sukhoi Su-25); 115th Squadron (L-159); and possibly 2nd Squadron.

Air Force commanders

[edit]

Aircraft

[edit]

Current inventory

[edit]
Iraqi Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcon flies over an undisclosed location July 18 2019
Iraqi C-130 on take off
Aircraft Origin Type Variant In service Notes
Combat aircraft
F-16 Fighting Falcon United States Multirole F-16C/D/IQ 34[129] 8 D variants provide conversion training
Aero L-159 Czech Republic Light attack L-159A 14[129] One T1 variant used for conversion training
Sukhoi Su-25 Russia Attack 19[129] 5 used for conversion training
KAI T-50 South Korea jet trainers, light combat aircraft and light fighter T-50IQ 24
Cessna 208 United States Attack AC-208 2[2] Modified for ground attack
Reconnaissance
Cessna 208 United States Reconnaissance RC-208 6[2] Four provide training
AMD Alarus United States Surveillance SAMA CH2000 7[2]
Super King Air United States Surveillance 350ER 6[2]
DHC-6 Twin Otter Canada Surveillance 2[2] STOL capable aircraft
Transport
Super King Air United States Utility / Transport 350 1[2]
C-130 Hercules United States Tactical airlifter C-130E 3[2] In store[129]
C-130J Super Hercules United States Tactical airlifter 6[2]
Antonov An-32 Ukraine Transport An-32B 6[2] Two are combat capable[129]
Helicopters
Bell 412 United States Utility 12 on order[2]
Mil Mi-8 Russia Transport 2[2]
Aérospatiale Gazelle France Scout / Anti-armor SA342 6[2]
Trainer aircraft
Bell 206 United States Rotorcraft trainer 9[2]
Lasta 95 Serbia Light trainer 19[2]
T-6 Texan II United States Trainer T-6A 15[2]
MFI-17 Mushshak Pakistan Trainer MFI-395 4 8 on order[2]

Squadrons

[edit]

Rank insignia

[edit]

Commissioned officer ranks

[edit]

The rank insignia of commissioned officers.

Rank group General / flag officers Senior officers Junior officers
 Iraqi Air Force[130]
مشیر
Mushir
فريق أول‎‎
Fariq 'awal
فريق
Fariq
لواء
Liwa
عميد
Amid
عقيد
Aqid
مقدم
Muqaddam
رائد
Ra'id
نقيب
Naqib
ملازم أول
Mulazim awwal
ملازم
Mulazim

Other ranks

[edit]

The rank insignia of non-commissioned officers and enlisted personnel.

Rank group Senior NCOs Junior NCOs Enlisted
 Iraqi Air Force[130]
نائب دابيت
Nayib dabit
رقيب أول
Raqib 'awal
رقیب
Raqib
عريف
Earif
جندي أول
Jundiun awwal
جندي
Jundiun‎‎

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

The Iraqi Air Force (IQAF; Arabic: القوة الجوية العراقية) is the aviation branch of the Iraqi Armed Forces, charged with defending national airspace, conducting aerial surveillance, providing close air support to ground units, and facilitating transport and reconnaissance missions. Established on 22 April 1931 with initial training and equipment from Britain, the IQAF initially comprised a small cadre of pilots and mechanics operating basic aircraft.
Over its history, the IQAF expanded significantly under Soviet influence during the mid-20th century, amassing one of the region's largest fleets by the , which enabled offensive operations in the Iran-Iraq War including thousands of sorties for bombing and air superiority efforts. However, it suffered catastrophic losses in the 1991 , where coalition airstrikes destroyed much of its infrastructure and aircraft, reducing operational capacity to near zero. Following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, the force was disbanded and rebuilt from remnants, transitioning to Western platforms with U.S. assistance, culminating in the acquisition of F-16 Fighting Falcons as its primary multirole fighters. As of 2025, the IQAF maintains an active inventory of approximately 175 aircraft, encompassing fighters, attack platforms like Su-25s, trainers such as T-6As and T-50s, transport types including C-130Js, and helicopters for utility roles, enabling enhanced , , and capabilities amid ongoing modernization.

History

Establishment and Early Development (1931–1941)

The Royal Iraqi Air Force (RIrAF) was officially established on 22 April 1931, during the , as the first indigenous military aviation service in the . Formed as the air arm of the Iraqi Army, it initially comprised five Iraqi pilots—trained at the Royal Air Force College Cranwell in Britain since 1927—and 32 aircraft mechanics, operating surplus British biplanes from RAF Hinaidi airfield near . These early aircraft, including de Havilland DH.9 light bombers, were suited primarily for reconnaissance, training, and limited ground support roles amid resource constraints and British oversight. Throughout the 1930s, the RIrAF underwent gradual expansion under British advisory influence, with additional pilots graduating from RAF training programs and the acquisition of army cooperation aircraft such as Atlas and Hawker Audax biplanes. The force focused on internal security missions, including aerial patrols to suppress tribal unrest in remote areas, reflecting its subordination to British strategic interests under the 1930 Anglo-Iraqi Treaty. By the decade's end, it had formed multiple squadrons totaling around 50-60 aircraft and several dozen pilots, though operational effectiveness was hampered by maintenance challenges and reliance on imported parts. The early development culminated in the 1941 Anglo-Iraqi War, triggered by the pro-Axis coup led by . The RIrAF, numbering approximately 55 aircraft and 37 pilots, supported Iraqi ground forces in besieging and conducting bombing raids on British positions, but proved ineffective against superior RAF tactics and reinforcements, resulting in the near-total destruction of its operational capability.

World War II Era and Initial Expansion (1941–1958)

In April 1941, a coup led by Rashid Ali al-Gaylani established a pro-Axis government in Iraq, prompting British intervention to secure oil supplies and strategic routes. The Royal Iraqi Air Force (RIrAF), comprising about 63 aircraft including Hawker Audax reconnaissance bombers and Gloster Gladiator fighters, supported the regime by conducting bombing and strafing attacks on the British Royal Air Force base at Habbaniya starting on 2 May. British forces responded with air strikes from Habbaniya and reinforcements, achieving air superiority and destroying the majority of Iraqi aircraft on the ground and in combat by mid-May, which crippled the RIrAF's operational capacity. The campaign concluded on 31 May 1941 with the fall of Baghdad and Rashid Ali's flight, leaving the RIrAF shattered with most squadrons losing their entire fleets. Following the British victory and restoration of the pro-Allied under Regent , the RIrAF underwent reconstruction with direct British assistance, including pilot training and provision of replacement aircraft to rebuild operational strength. This effort focused on re-equipping with British types, emphasizing loyalty to the and integration into regional defense aligned with Allied interests. By the late , the force had recovered sufficiently to incorporate advanced piston-engine fighters, such as squadrons established at bases like Rasheed, enhancing its capabilities for internal security and border patrols. The initial expansion phase accelerated in the 1950s as Iraq sought to modernize its air arm under the monarchy. In 1953, the RIrAF received its first jet fighters, the de Havilland DH.100 FB.52s, marking the transition from propeller-driven aircraft and forming the core of No. 5 Squadron for fighter-bomber roles. Between 1954 and 1956, an additional 19 Vampires were delivered, supplemented by transport aircraft like four Bristol 170 Freighters for logistical support. In 1956, the funded the acquisition of 14 ex-RAF , further bolstering fighter strength amid growing regional tensions. This buildup, reliant on Western suppliers, positioned the RIrAF as a modestly capable force by 1958, though limited by pilot numbers and maintenance challenges.

Monarchical and Republican Periods (1958–1967)

The 14 July 1958 revolution overthrew Iraq's Hashemite , leading to the execution of King Faisal II and Prime Minister , and the proclamation of a under General . The Royal Iraqi Air Force was promptly redesignated the Iraqi Air Force, severing formal ties to the British-influenced and aligning with Qasim's anti-Western, pro-Soviet orientation. This political upheaval triggered extensive purges within the armed forces, with approximately 2,000 of the military's 8,000 officers dismissed for perceived loyalties to the old regime, disrupting institutional continuity and expertise in the air force. Post-revolution procurement shifted toward the Soviet bloc, with the first MiG-17 fighters and Il-28 bombers arriving on 27 November 1958 to bolster capabilities for internal security and regional deterrence. British-supplied Hawker Hunter jets, numbering around 60 in total and acquired starting in the mid-1950s with pilot training in Britain, remained in frontline service despite the ideological pivot, supported initially by British advisors for maintenance. The air force's early republican years emphasized ground support roles, including deployments of Hunters against Kurdish insurgents led by starting in September 1961, where they conducted strafing and bombing missions to suppress the revolt. Deep involvement in domestic power struggles defined the period, as air force officers, often from pro-Nasserist or Ba'athist factions, leveraged for political ends amid Qasim's isolationist rule. In the February 1963 Ramadan Revolution, Hunter jets bombed Qasim's presidential palace in , facilitating the coup that installed the in power until November 1963, when ousted them in a counter-coup. A failed 1965 plot against Arif's regime again implicated air force elements, resulting in further executions and purges that eroded pilot cadres and maintenance proficiency, leaving squadrons understrength and reliant on foreign technicians. These recurrent interventions prioritized regime survival over professional development, fostering a culture of factionalism. By 1967, the Iraqi Air Force fielded approximately 88 fighters, blending Soviet MiG-17s with lingering Hunters, but suffered from chronic readiness shortfalls due to purges, spare parts shortages, and divided loyalties. In the June 1967 , Iraq dispatched two Hunter squadrons to bases in and for Arab coalition support, conducting limited ground attacks and one notable Tu-16 Badger bomber strafing run on Ramat David airfield using defensive machine guns after missing its primary target. Poor inter-Arab coordination, late arrivals, and Israeli preemptive strikes yielded negligible gains, with several aircraft lost on the ground at H-3 airfield and in sparse dogfights, underscoring the force's operational limitations.

Involvement in Arab-Israeli Wars (1967–1973)

During the of June 5–10, 1967, the Iraqi Air Force deployed two squadrons of fighter-bombers to on June 1 in response to rising tensions, following an agreement reached on May 30 to send three squadrons. On June 4, Iraqi pilots received briefings to target Israeli airfields, relying on intelligence later described as poor. The following day, June 5, Iraqi Hunters conducted strikes on targets in the , , and Kfar Sirkin , inflicting minimal damage due to the rapid achievement of Israeli air superiority earlier that morning through . In retaliation, Israeli Vautour bombers raided the Iraqi at H-3 in western on June 5, destroying six Iraqi on the ground (with Israeli claims of twelve). Additional Israeli strikes hit H-3 on , destroying one more Iraqi plane (Israeli claims ranged from 16 to 24 total). Iraqi operations continued with limited effectiveness; on June 6, Hunters failed to locate intended targets near , mistakenly bombing an Iraqi installation and nearby towns, resulting in the loss of one bomber to ground fire. By June 7, Iraqi defenses at H-3 repelled an Israeli incursion, with Iraqi pilots claiming three Israeli jets downed while losing two of their own. Overall Iraqi losses in the included approximately 12 MiG-21s, five Hunters, three Il-28 Beagles, and one Tu-16 Badger, primarily from ground attacks and limited engagements, though exact figures vary due to discrepancies between Iraqi reports and Israeli claims. In the of October 6–25, 1973, prepositioned Hawker Hunters in as early as April 6 and deployed MiG-21 squadrons to by October 7 for air patrols and engagements against Israeli aircraft. On October 6, Iraqi Hunters struck Israeli anti-missile sites in the as part of the initial Arab air efforts. The next day, October 7, MiG-21s from clashed with Israeli forces over , marking early combat involvement. Iraqi Hunters achieved ground attack successes, destroying an Israeli armored column on October 8 (losing two aircraft, one to Egyptian ) and the 329th Reserve Artillery Battalion on October 13. Further sorties included Su-7 attacks on two Israeli columns in the on , during which Iraq lost two Su-7s. Iraqi MiG-21 losses were limited but notable, including the first Iraqi pilot , Sultan al-Khafaji, during operations against Israeli targets. Total confirmed Iraqi aircraft losses encompassed two Su-7BMKs, one MiG-21, and several MiG-17Fs, reflecting a more sustained but still auxiliary role compared to primary Arab combatants and , with Iraqi forces withdrawing after the UN ceasefire on October 24.

Buildup and Iran-Iraq War (1973–1988)

In the 1970s, Iraq pursued a policy of military modernization, significantly expanding the Iraqi Air Force through diversified arms procurement to reduce dependence on Soviet suppliers. From 1972 to 1979, the proportion of Soviet-supplied military equipment declined from 95% to 63%, with increased acquisitions from France, which provided high-technology aircraft aligning more closely with Iraqi air warfare doctrine than Soviet models. Key purchases included Soviet MiG-23 variable-geometry fighters, MiG-25 interceptors, and Sukhoi Su-20 fighter-bombers for ground attack roles, enhancing strike capabilities against potential regional threats. France supplied Dassault Mirage F1 multi-role fighters starting in the late 1970s, with deliveries accelerating after 1980, bolstering interception and precision strike options. By September 1980, at the outset of the Iran-Iraq War, the Iraqi Air Force maintained an inventory of several hundred combat , including over 100 MiG-21s and MiG-23s for air superiority and . The war began with Iraqi airstrikes on targeting ten Iranian airfields, oil refineries, and ports in an effort to cripple Iranian air power and economic infrastructure. These initial operations achieved partial success in disrupting runways but failed to destroy most Iranian on the ground, as many had been dispersed or sheltered beforehand. retaliated the next day with , deploying approximately 140 sorties from F-4 Phantoms and F-5 Tigers against Iraqi targets, including airfields and oil facilities, exposing vulnerabilities in Iraqi air defenses. Throughout the eight-year conflict, the Iraqi Air Force prioritized ground support for army advances, interdiction of Iranian supply lines, and attacks on economic targets like oil terminals, though coordination with ground forces remained inconsistent. Iranian F-14 Tomcats, equipped with advanced radars and Phoenix missiles, inflicted heavy attrition, with reports indicating over 30 Iraqi aircraft downed by January 1981 alone. In the Persian Gulf "Tanker War" from 1984 onward, Iraqi Mirage F1s armed with French anti-ship missiles conducted strikes on neutral and Iranian vessels to disrupt oil exports, achieving notable successes but also errors. On May 17, 1987, an Iraqi Mirage F1 fired two missiles at the U.S. Navy in the , mistaking it for an Iranian target; the attack killed 37 American sailors and wounded 21, highlighting operational risks in the crowded theater. Despite foreign training programs and equipment upgrades, Iraqi pilots demonstrated limited effectiveness in beyond-visual-range engagements and sustained campaigns, attributable to inadequate training depth and doctrinal rigidity. By 1988, cumulative losses exceeded 200 from , accidents, and attrition, severely degrading force readiness despite prewar numerical advantages.

Persian Gulf War and Sanctions Regime (1990–2003)

The Iraqi Air Force (IQAF) supported the invasion of Kuwait on August 2, 1990, with limited airstrikes and air cover for ground forces, utilizing its inventory of approximately 750 combat aircraft, including MiG-29s, Mirage F1s, Su-24s, and MiG-25s, making it the sixth-largest air force globally at the time. However, during the subsequent coalition air campaign starting January 17, 1991, the IQAF mounted minimal resistance, with most aircraft destroyed on the ground or in early engagements; coalition forces claimed over 400 Iraqi aircraft neutralized, including 254 destroyed on airfields and 36 shot down in air-to-air combat. To evade total destruction, Iraq flew 115 to 140 aircraft to Iran between January and March 1991, comprising types such as 24 Mirage F1s, 24 Su-24s, 44 Su-20/22s, and several MiG variants, where they were impounded and later integrated into Iranian service. Following the ceasefire on February 28, 1991, 687 established a sanctions regime and no-fly zones, with in the north and Southern Watch in the south enforced by U.S., U.K., and French aircraft from 1991 onward, severely restricting IQAF operations south of the 32nd parallel and north of the 36th. The ongoing UN sanctions under Resolution 661, maintained due to Iraq's non-compliance with weapons inspections, prohibited imports of military spare parts and technology, leading to rapid deterioration of the remaining fleet through lack of maintenance, cannibalization, and obsolescence; by the mid-1990s, operational combat aircraft numbered fewer than 300, with sortie generation rates plummeting. Iraq attempted to circumvent sanctions via smuggling networks through , , and other routes for parts and , but these efforts yielded limited results, sustaining only sporadic patrols and occasional challenges to no-fly zones, such as MiG-25 and MiG-29 incursions that resulted in shootdowns by fighters in 1992–2003. By 2003, the IQAF was effectively non-functional, with estimates of around 100 nominally serviceable but fewer than 50 fully operational due to chronic shortages, poor training, and prior war damage, posing no significant threat during the U.S.-led invasion. Prior to the March 2003 invasion, Iraq buried many surviving airframes in desert sands at bases to conceal them, further evidencing the force's degraded state.

2003 Invasion and Force Dissolution

The Iraqi Air Force (IqAF) entered the coalition invasion in a severely degraded state, with most of its combat aircraft non-operational due to the effects of the 1991 Gulf War, subsequent UN sanctions, and no-fly zone enforcement that had grounded or destroyed much of its fleet over the prior decade. By early , operational fighters numbered in the low dozens at best, with many airframes hidden, buried in desert sands to evade detection, or cannibalized for parts amid chronic maintenance shortages. Iraqi leadership anticipated aerial bombardment and ordered limited dispersal of assets, but the force lacked pilots trained for sustained operations and fuel reserves constrained by international restrictions. The invasion commenced on March 20, 2003, with coalition air forces achieving immediate supremacy; the IqAF mounted no significant fixed-wing sorties or challenges to coalition during the major combat phase, which concluded by mid-April. strikes targeted airfields, command centers, and dispersed , destroying dozens on the ground via precision-guided munitions, while a handful of Iraqi MiG-21s and MiG-29s reportedly fled to to avoid capture or destruction. Sporadic helicopter operations occurred in support of ground forces, but these were quickly neutralized; no Iraqi achieved air-to-air engagements, reflecting the force's obsolescence against advanced coalition systems like F-117s, B-2s, and fourth-generation fighters. By the fall of Baghdad on April 9, 2003, the IqAF had effectively collapsed, with surviving assets captured intact at bases like Al Asad and , including buried MiG-23s and F1s uncovered by coalition troops. Following the regime's overthrow, the (CPA), under Administrator L. Paul Bremer, issued Order Number 2 on May 23, 2003, formally dissolving the Iraqi Ministry of Defense, Army, , Navy, and other security entities associated with Saddam Hussein's rule. This decree suspended all financial obligations of the dissolved entities, vested their property in the CPA, and prohibited their reconstitution without approval, effectively ending the IqAF as a standing and demobilizing its personnel. The dissolution aimed to dismantle Ba'athist structures but resulted in the abrupt unemployment of thousands of airmen, many of whom lacked alternative skills, contributing to post-invasion instability though not directly attributed in official CPA rationale. Remaining were impounded or scrapped under oversight, marking the complete disbandment of Iraq's air arm until reconstitution efforts began later in 2003.

Post-Invasion Reconstitution (2003–2013)

Following the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, Order No. 2 dissolved the Iraqi military, including the air force, leading to the of approximately 400,000 personnel and the abandonment of most . Reconstitution commenced in mid-2004 under the Multi-National Security Transition Command-Iraq, prioritizing basic pilot training and light rotary-wing assets to support internal amid ongoing . Initial efforts involved vetting former pilots while excluding high-ranking Baathists, with U.S. advisors establishing rudimentary programs at Taji and bases. By June 2004, the first cohort of 19 Iraqi personnel completed helicopter training in Jordan, focusing on UH-1 Huey operations with donated Royal Jordanian Air Force aircraft, marking the initial step toward operational capability. The 2nd Squadron was reestablished at Taji in 2004–2005, equipped with these UH-1s for transport and reconnaissance missions, though limited by maintenance shortages and pilot inexperience. U.S. Marine and Air Force advisors provided instruction, emphasizing night operations and basic tactics, but progress was hampered by security threats and the need to rebuild ground support infrastructure from near-zero. By early 2005, the nascent force comprised about 35 personnel and 9 helicopters, including 4 UH-1s, 3 Bell 407s, and 2 Mi-17s. A milestone occurred in January 2006 when No. 23 Squadron relocated to the newly constructed Al Muthanna Air Base, followed by its formal activation on March 7–8, 2006, as the first post-invasion Iraqi air base and squadron, equipped for light transport and training. That March, Iraq independently procured 10 Russian Mi-17 transport helicopters, the first major acquisition without direct coalition funding, with deliveries commencing in 2007 and expanding the rotary fleet. By late 2008, the air force operated over 50 rotary-wing aircraft, including additional Mi-17s received on October 31, enabling limited combat support roles despite persistent logistical challenges like spare parts scarcity. Fixed-wing capabilities advanced slowly; in July 2008, the U.S. transferred 8 trainers and 3 Cessna 208 Caravans for and light attack, bolstering pilot proficiency at bases like . The arrival of 15 T-6A Texan II advanced trainers in 2009 enabled structured primary flight training, with U.S. Air Force instructors from the 52nd Expeditionary Flying Training Squadron conducting courses starting in 2010 at , graduating Iraqis toward independent operations by 2011. No. 70 Squadron activated on November 23, 2010, at Tallil (later Ali), flying SAMA CH-2000 for intelligence, surveillance, and over southern oil , achieving its first operational mission on October 25, 2010. Through 2011–2013, emphasis shifted to transport and sustainment, with three Lockheed Martin C-130J Super Hercules delivered by December 2012, supported by 7 newly trained pilots, 16 maintainers, and 1 loadmaster. A $5 billion deal signed in 2011 for 36 F-16C/D fighters aimed at fighter capability, but deliveries did not occur until 2014 due to production delays and political hurdles. By 2013, the Iraqi Air Force had grown to approximately 6,000–8,000 personnel, operating 20–30 and over 100 helicopters, focused on rather than high-end air superiority, with U.S. advisors critical for maintenance and advisory roles amid corruption and attrition issues. Challenges included aging pilot cadres (many from the Saddam era, averaging 40+ years old), insurgency disruptions to training, and dependency on foreign contractors, limiting full operational independence.

Operations Against ISIS (2014–2019)

In June 2014, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) rapidly overran northern Iraq, capturing on June 10 and prompting the collapse of in the region. The Iraqi Air Force (IqAF), hampered by years of underinvestment and operational limitations following the 2003 invasion, initially responded with limited airstrikes using Mi-35 helicopters and a small number of available . Russia delivered six ground-attack aircraft to the IqAF on June 29, 2014, enabling intensified missions against ISIS convoys and positions. These early efforts, however, were constrained by maintenance shortages, pilot inexperience, and the need for intelligence, resulting in modest impact compared to the subsequent U.S.-led air campaign. The IqAF's capabilities expanded in 2015 with the operationalization of U.S.-supplied F-16C Fighting Falcons, marking a shift toward more precise strikes. During the March–April 2015 operation to retake , IqAF Su-25s conducted ground support missions but suffered a friendly-fire incident on March 28, striking Iraqi headquarters due to coordination failures. The first combat use of IqAF F-16s occurred on September 6, 2015, targeting positions in central Iraq, as confirmed by Iraqi commanders and U.S. officials. This integration allowed the IqAF to contribute to offensives in Anbar Province, including the December 2015–February 2016 recapture of , where air strikes disrupted logistics. By 2016, the IqAF supported major urban clearances, notably in (May–June) and the prolonged Battle of Mosul (October 2016–July 2017). On June 30, 2016, IqAF helicopters, coordinated with coalition forces, destroyed over 150 vehicles fleeing , preventing a tactical withdrawal and inflicting heavy casualties. In Mosul, F-16 strikes targeted command nodes and supply lines, with the IqAF dropping leaflets on January 31, 2017, to guide civilians away from combat zones. Operations in (August–September 2017) saw IqAF bombings precede ground assaults, aiding the liberation of the city. Despite these advances, the IqAF flew a limited number of sorties relative to the coalition's tens of thousands, relying on U.S. refueling and targeting data. From 2017 to 2019, as 's territorial crumbled, the IqAF demonstrated growing independence, conducting its first cross-border strikes into on February 24, 2017, and repeated F-16 missions in April 2018 that killed dozens of militants. These efforts supported the final clearance of remnants in , culminating in the territorial defeat by March 2019. However, persistent challenges including aircraft shortages—only about 10–12 F-16s operational at peak—and vulnerability to antiaircraft fire underscored the IqAF's dependence on airpower for decisive effects. The campaign highlighted causal factors in 's defeat: overwhelming aerial of reinforcements and supplies, enabled primarily by U.S. precision strikes, with IqAF augmentation bolstering Iraqi ground momentum.

Modernization and Regional Challenges (2020–2025)

Following the defeat of territorial control by 2019, the Iraqi Air Force pursued modernization through sustainment of its existing F-16IQ fleet and exploration of new acquisitions. In July 2025, signed a $118 million contract with U.S. firm V2X (formerly Vectrus) under the program to provide base support, maintenance, training, and logistics for its F-16 fighters at over five years. This effort addressed persistent maintenance challenges, as many F-16s had become grounded due to spare parts shortages and technical issues since initial deliveries in 2014-2015, rendering them "hangar queens" despite their role as the most reliable combat aircraft amid disruptions in Russian parts supplies for legacy platforms. also expressed interest in acquiring French Dassault fighters, with reports in 2023 of plans for 14 jets valued at $240 million payable in oil, escalating to negotiations for 12 aircraft in a $3 billion package including support by April 2025, though no deliveries had occurred by late 2025. The IQAF emphasized (UAV) development as a cost-effective modernization path, intensifying domestic drone production for by April 2025 with plans to arm them for strike missions. This included enhanced pilot training and integration of U.S.-supported platforms like C-172 and AC/RC-208 for intelligence, , and , approved in a $140 million deal in April 2024. Additionally, pursued advanced air defense systems, signing a $2.8 billion agreement with in September 2024 for missile defenses, potentially influenced by pro-Iran priorities amid broader procurement shifts. Regional challenges persisted, including ISIS remnants conducting low-level attacks and risking resurgence without sustained coalition support, as U.S. forces transitioned toward withdrawal by September 2024. Iran-backed militias within Iraq's complicated operations, launching drone and rocket strikes on bases hosting U.S. advisors, while unidentified drones—possibly from internal factions or external actors—targeted Iraqi systems, such as TPS-77 at Taji and AN/TPS-77 at other sites in June 2025, exposing vulnerabilities in air defense. To counter such threats, the Air Defense Command initiated specialized drone interception training in August 2025, focusing on practical counter-UAV tactics. Border tensions with over PKK activities and Iranian incursions further strained resources, limiting the IQAF's ability to project power amid dependence on U.S. totaling $13.8 billion from 2015-2023. Overall, modernization advanced incrementally but faced hurdles from maintenance backlogs, delays, and hybrid threats in a volatile regional environment.

Organization and Structure

Command Hierarchy and Headquarters

The Iraqi Air Force (IqAF) functions as the branch of the , operating under the authority of the Ministry of Defense. Its command structure integrates with the national military hierarchy, where the Minister of Defense exercises overall civilian oversight, delegating operational control through the of the , currently General Abdul Amir Rashid Yarallah as of October 2025. The IqAF's direct leadership falls to the Commander of the Air Force, a position held by a who reports to the and directs air operations, training, logistics, and maintenance. As of September 2025, Muhannad Ghalib Muhammad Radi al-Asadi serves in this role, concurrently commanding the separate Air Defence Command to coordinate ground-based air defenses with IqAF assets. This combined command arrangement stems from post-2003 restructuring efforts to streamline resource allocation amid limited capabilities, though it has drawn assessments of potential overload on a single officer during high-threat scenarios. Headquarters for the IqAF are situated in Baghdad, facilitating proximity to the Ministry of Defense and central government coordination. From this base, subordinate directorates manage squadrons, bases, and specialized units, with authority cascading to base commanders and squadron leaders under the air force commander's directives. The structure emphasizes operations with ground and naval forces, reflecting Iraq's defense posture against regional threats like non-state actors and neighboring states.

Operational Bases and Squadrons

The Iraqi Air Force maintains operations from a network of air bases supporting fighter, attack, transport, reconnaissance, and training squadrons, with primary hubs concentrated in central and western Iraq for rapid deployment against internal threats and border security. Balad Air Base (also known as Martyr BG Ali Flaih Air Base), located approximately 70 km north of Baghdad, serves as the principal fighter base, hosting the 9th Fighter Squadron ("Black Panthers") and 11th Fighter Squadron ("Cobras"), both equipped with F-16C/D Block 52 Fighting Falcons for multirole combat missions. These squadrons, totaling around 32 operational F-16s as of mid-2025, conduct air superiority and ground support operations, though maintenance challenges have grounded up to 10 aircraft at times. Additionally, Balad houses the 115th Tactical Squadron with L-159 Alca light attack jets and the 3rd Assault/Reconnaissance Squadron operating Cessna 208B ISR variants for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR). Al Asad Air Base in Al Anbar Province, about 180 km west of Baghdad, functions as a forward operating hub for close air support, primarily hosting the 109th Attack Squadron with Sukhoi Su-25 Frogfoot aircraft, including upgraded Su-25K and Su-25UBK variants donated from Russian, Belarusian, and Iranian stocks since 2019. A detachment of the 109th operates Su-25s from Baghdad's Al Rasheed Air Base for supplementary ground attack roles. In southern Iraq, Imam Ali Air Base at Nasiriyah (Tallil) supports the 70th Reconnaissance Squadron with SAMA CH2000M light aircraft for tactical reconnaissance. Transport and surveillance operations center on Al Muthanna Air Base in , established in April 2025, which accommodates the 23rd Tactical Airlift Squadron (C-130E and C-130J-30 Hercules) and 33rd Transport Squadron (An-32B), alongside the 87th Surveillance Squadron using Beechcraft 350 and 350ER ISR platforms. Training activities have consolidated at As Suwayrah Air Base since October 2023, where the Iraqi Air Force College oversees multiple squadrons: the 201st (Lasta 95N, largely stored), 202nd ( 172S and 208B), 203rd (T-6A Texan II), 204th (KAI T-50IQ), and 205th (MFI-395 Mushshak), with the latter's headquarters relocating there in February 2025. This structure reflects post-2014 rebuilding priorities, emphasizing dispersed operations to mitigate vulnerabilities exposed during the ISIS conflict, though reliance on U.S. and support persists at bases like Al Asad.
BaseProvince/LocationKey SquadronsPrimary Aircraft
Balad (Martyr BG Ali Flaih)Salah al-Din, north of Baghdad9th FS, 11th FS, 115th TS, 3rd ARSF-16C/D, L-159, Ce208B ISR
Al AsadAl Anbar, west of Baghdad109th ASSu-25K/UBK
Al MuthannaBaghdad23rd TAS, 33rd TS, 87th SSC-130, An-32B, Beech 350/ER
As SuwayrahWasit, southeast of Baghdad201st-205th TSTrainers (T-6A, T-50IQ, etc.)
Imam Ali (Tallil)Dhi Qar, south70th RSSAMA CH2000

Training and Personnel

The Iraqi Air Force (IQAF) conducts personnel training primarily through the Iraqi Air Force College, which handles officer commissioning, pilot instruction, and technical training for aircrew and maintenance personnel. Established post-2003 invasion to rebuild capabilities from near dissolution, the college initially relied heavily on U.S. advisors for and instruction. By 2010, it began primary using T-6A Texan II at facilities like Tikrit's Contingency Operating Base Speicher, where 157 cadets underwent initial programs. Pilot candidates must first demonstrate English proficiency, essential for operating Western-sourced equipment and integrating with coalition partners, before advancing to flight school at sites such as Kirkuk Air Base. Initial training emphasizes basic flight skills on trainers like the T-6A, with U.S. Air Force instructors providing side-by-side guidance until Iraqi-led operations matured around 2009. Advanced programs, including F-16 qualification, occur through partnerships like the Arizona Air National Guard's cadre, which trains over 70 international pilots annually, including Iraqis. The Air Force College headquarters relocated to Imam Ali Air Base (al-Suwayrah) in October 2023, consolidating squadrons for fighter, reconnaissance, and transport pilot training alongside maintenance courses. Earlier sites included , reopened in 2018 for practical aviation instruction, and for foundational flying school operations starting in 2007. By 2022, contractor support from firms like Spartan Air Academy sustained T-6A logistics, enabling sustained Iraqi instructor-led classes. Recruitment targets high school graduates and experienced ex-personnel, but faces persistent hurdles including insurgent threats deterring enlistment and competition from irregular militias offering better incentives. Post-2003 purged many skilled aviators, necessitating accelerated programs to qualify new pilots—over 60 by 2011—while retention issues persist due to limited operational tempo and funding constraints. U.S.-led efforts, ongoing into , emphasize self-sufficiency, with Iraqi squadrons achieving independent training milestones, though advanced and lag behind due to experience gaps.

Equipment and Inventory

Current Aircraft Fleet (as of 2025)

The Iraqi Air Force's aircraft fleet in 2025 centers on U.S.-origin multirole fighters and trainers, supplemented by light attack platforms, transports, and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) assets, with limited rotary-wing capabilities. The core combat element comprises 34 F-16C/D Block 52 Fighting Falcons operated by the 9th and 11th Fighter Squadrons at Balad Air Base, enabling air superiority, ground attack, and reconnaissance missions. These aircraft, delivered starting in 2014, represent the most advanced platforms in the inventory, supported by ongoing U.S. maintenance contracts valued at $118 million as of July 2025. Light attack and roles are fulfilled by approximately 14 Frogfoots and 12 aircraft, including both single-seat L-159A and two-seat L-159T1 variants assigned to the 115th Tactical Squadron at Balad. Transport capabilities include 9 C-130 Hercules variants—3 C-130E and 6 C-130J-30 Super Hercules—in the 23rd Tactical Airlift Squadron, alongside 6 Antonov An-32B tactical transports in the 33rd Transport Squadron, all based at Baghdad/Al Muthanna Air Base. Training forms the largest segment of the fleet, with 24 KAI T-50IQ advanced jet trainers in the 204th Training Squadron, 15 Beechcraft T-6A Texan II basic trainers in the 203rd, and additional primary trainers such as 12 Pakistan Aeronautical Complex MFI-395 Super Mushshak and 12 Cessna 172S aircraft. Approximately 20 Lasta 95N trainers remain in storage. ISR and utility missions rely on platforms like 8 SAMA CH2000 surveillance aircraft in the 70th Reconnaissance Squadron, up to 10 Cessna 208 variants (including AC-208 Combat Caravan, RC-208, and TC-208B models), and 7 Beechcraft King Air 350/350ER aircraft. Rotary-wing assets are modest, focusing on training and utility, with recent additions including 15 Bell 505 Jet Ranger X helicopters received in October 2025 for pilot training. The fleet includes legacy Mi-8/17 transports, with plans to replace aging Mi-17s through a 2024 order for 12 Airbus H225M helicopters, deliveries commencing in 2025. Overall, the active inventory totals approximately 170-175 aircraft, with readiness rates estimated at 50-80% based on U.S. standards.
RolePrimary TypesApproximate Numbers
FightersF-16C/D Block 5234-36
Attack/CASSu-25, L-159A/T1, AC-20814 Su-25; 12 L-159; 4 AC-208
TransportsC-130E/J, An-32B9 C-130; 6 An-32B
Trainers (Fixed-Wing)T-50IQ, T-6A, MFI-395, Cessna 172S24 T-50IQ; 15 T-6A; 12 MFI-395; 12
ISR/SurveillanceCH2000, King Air 350/ER, Cessna 208 variants8 CH2000; 7 King Air; ~10
Helicopters/TrainersBell 505, Mi-17/8, others15 Bell 505; unspecified Mi-17 (fleet replacement underway)

Historical Acquisitions and Losses

The Iraqi Air Force, established in 1931, initially relied on British-supplied aircraft, transitioning to jet fighters with the acquisition of 19 DH.100 FB.52s between 1953 and 1956, marking its entry into the jet age. These were supplemented by fighters and jets in the late 1950s and 1960s, with 14 ex-RAF Hunters delivered around 1956 to enhance interceptor capabilities amid regional tensions. By the , Iraq shifted toward Soviet suppliers, procuring MiG-21 fighters for frontline squadrons, followed by MiG-23 variable-geometry interceptors numbering approximately 90–120 aircraft by the early 1980s, intended for multi-role operations. During the Iran-Iraq War (1980–1988), Iraq expanded its fleet aggressively to counter Iranian air superiority, acquiring 24 fighters from France starting in 1980 for high-speed interception and ground attack, alongside MiG-25 Foxbat reconnaissance and interceptor variants (around 20–30 delivered) and early MiG-29 Fulcrums from the late 1980s. Soviet deliveries included Su-20/22 Fitter ground-attack aircraft (over 40 by war's end) and Su-24 Fencer bombers for deep strikes. Losses were substantial, with Iraq suffering approximately 200 fixed-wing aircraft destroyed in combat by mid-war, primarily to Iranian F-14 Tomcats and surface-to-air missiles, though exact figures vary due to underreporting and ground attrition. Post-war, Iraq added Su-25 Frogfoots and more MiG-29s (totaling about 30–40), but sanctions limited sustainment. In the 1991 , the Iraqi Air Force faced near-total devastation from coalition air campaigns, losing around 35 aircraft in air-to-air combat and over 100 on the ground to precision strikes, with an additional 115–140 fleeing to —including 24 Mirage F1s, 40 Su-20/22s, 7 MiG-25s, 4 MiG-29s, and 7–12 MiG-23s—to evade destruction. Pre-war inventory exceeded 700 combat aircraft, but operational readiness was hampered by poor and pilot training deficiencies. No-fly zones and UN sanctions from 1991–2003 prevented acquisitions, leading to further degradation through attrition and covert smuggling failures. The 2003 U.S.-led invasion resulted in the force's dissolution, with surviving aircraft—estimated at fewer than 100 operational—destroyed on runways or captured, ending the pre-reconstitution era.
Aircraft TypeMajor Acquisition PeriodEstimated Peak NumbersKey Losses
MiG-23 Flogger1970s–1980s90–120~20–30 in Gulf War (combat/ground); many in Iran-Iraq War
Mirage F11980s24+24 fled to (1991); others destroyed on ground
MiG-25 Foxbat1980s20–307 fled to (1991); reconnaissance losses in wars
MiG-29 FulcrumLate 1980s30–404 fled to (1991); limited combat use
This table summarizes major types based on declassified assessments, highlighting how acquisitions fueled temporary expansions but were offset by high wartime attrition rates exceeding 50% in prolonged conflicts.

Maintenance and Foreign Assistance

The Iraqi Air Force's capabilities remain constrained by limited indigenous infrastructure, heavy reliance on foreign contractors for sustainment of advanced platforms, and ongoing logistical bottlenecks, particularly for its F-16 Fighting fleet acquired through U.S. (FMS). As of 2025, the service operates contractor logistics support (CLS) programs at bases like , where U.S. firms provide , , and technical expertise to achieve partial operational readiness amid chronic spare parts shortages and funding shortfalls. U.S. assistance forms the cornerstone of IQAF sustainment, with over $1.25 billion in Foreign Military Financing (FMF) allocated since 2015 to support aircraft logistics, including F-16 depot-level repairs, munitions integration, and CLS contracts. In June 2025, Iraq signed a $118 million deal with Vectrus Systems Corporation—fully funded by Baghdad—for F-16 fleet support, encompassing phased maintenance and operational upgrades, while V2X Inc. secured a separate cost-plus-fixed-fee contract in July 2025 for similar services on an undefinitized basis. Annual sustainment costs for the F-16s alone approach $130 million, reflecting the high dependency on imported components and expatriate technicians, though Iraqi maintainers have received U.S.-led training to transition toward self-sufficiency. Additional U.S. approvals in 2024 extended CLS to light aircraft like Cessna C-172s and AC/RC-208s, bolstering ISR and training fleets. Despite these inputs, maintenance efficacy is undermined by systemic issues, including corruption scandals that diverted funds from spares and technical expertise, resulting in grounded and readiness rates below 50% for key assets as reported in 2020-2021 assessments. Iraq's fiscal strains, exacerbated by oil revenue volatility, have strained financing for U.S.-sourced equipment upkeep into 2025, prompting warnings of potential fleet degradation without sustained bilateral commitments post-coalition drawdown. Efforts to indigenize , such as Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) exchanges teaching best practices to Iraqi officers in 2024, aim to mitigate this, but progress lags due to institutional weaknesses and militia influence over . Limited diversification includes Russian support for legacy helicopters, though it pales against U.S. dominance in fixed-wing sustainment.

Ranks and Insignia

Commissioned Officer Ranks

The commissioned officer ranks in the Iraqi Air Force mirror those of the broader , employing Arabic nomenclature with equivalents aligned to officer codes (OF-1 to OF-10), and featuring blue shoulder boards distinctive to air force personnel. denote through stars, bars, and eagles on epaulets, with no substantive structural differences from ranks beyond service-specific adaptations. The rank structure emphasizes seniority in command roles, from entry-level lieutenants leading small units to general officers overseeing squadrons, bases, or the force as a whole. Promotions require demonstrated competence in aviation operations, leadership, and loyalty to the chain of command, often influenced by political stability within Iraq's military leadership.
ArabicTransliterationEnglish EquivalentNATO Code
مشيرMushirOF-10
فريق أولFariq AwwalGeneralOF-9
فريقFariqOF-8
لواءLiwaOF-7
عميدAmidOF-6
عقيدAqidOF-5
مقدمMuqaddamOF-4
رائدRa'idMajorOF-3
نقيبNaqibOF-2
ملازم أولMulazim AwwalOF-1
ملازمMulazimOF-1
The Mushir rank, equivalent to a field marshal, is ceremonial and rarely active in the Air Force, typically reserved for supreme wartime command. Fariq Awwal and Fariq ranks correspond to senior air marshals responsible for strategic operations, while lower field-grade officers (Aqid through Ra'id) manage tactical aviation units. Company-grade ranks (Naqib through Mulazim) focus on pilot training and squadron-level execution. This system persists as of 2025, reflecting continuity from pre-2003 structures with minor post-invasion adjustments for interoperability with coalition forces.

Enlisted and Non-Commissioned Officer Ranks

The enlisted and (NCO) ranks of the Iraqi Air Force mirror those of the , standardized after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion to incorporate NATO-aligned pay grades (OR-1 to OR-9) while retaining nomenclature rooted in historical Ottoman and British influences. This structure emphasizes progression from basic enlisted service to senior NCO leadership roles responsible for training, discipline, and operational supervision. typically feature sleeve stripes or collar devices, with variations for air force-specific roles in and support. Junior enlisted personnel handle entry-level duties such as aircraft ground support and logistics, advancing to NCO positions involving squad-level command and technical expertise. The hierarchy lacks direct equivalents for some mid-tier ranks (e.g., OR-3 and OR-5), resulting in compressed advancements compared to U.S. or Western models. Senior NCOs, up to , advise officers and manage enlisted training amid ongoing challenges in retention and post-reform.
Arabic NameEnglish EquivalentNATO Code
جندي (Jundi)PrivateOR-1
جندي أول (Jundi Awwal) / OR-2
عريف (Arif)OR-4
رقيب (Raqib)OR-6
رقيب أول (Raqib Awwal) / OR-7
نائب ضابط (Na'ib Dabit)OR-9
These ranks apply uniformly across Iraqi services, including the , with promotions tied to service length, performance evaluations, and specialized training in areas like or airbase security. As of the mid-2010s, efforts to align and promotion criteria with international standards continued under U.S. advisory programs, though implementation varied due to security disruptions.

Controversies and Assessments

Political Purges and Leadership Instability

Under Saddam Hussein's rule, the Iraqi Air Force (IrAF) experienced recurrent political purges driven by the regime's paranoia toward potential coups, particularly among officers with foreign training or combat exposure. Saddam's distrust of senior military leaders, including air force personnel who interacted with Soviet or Western advisors, resulted in limited and operational autonomy to prevent organized dissent; pilots averaged fewer than 100 hours annually by the , compared to over 200 for peers in regional forces. Following the 1991 , where coalition forces destroyed or neutralized much of the IrAF's 750 combat and generated no effective sorties after initial days, Saddam executed at least two top commanders, blaming them for the loss of and 26 Scud missiles. Broader military purges in 1990–1991 saw 126 officers, including six generals, executed for perceived dissent over the invasion, with leaders particularly vulnerable due to their visibility in failed defenses. These actions, alongside burying in desert revetments to preserve assets amid sanctions, entrenched leadership instability by prioritizing loyalty over competence, rendering the IrAF a "pathetic shadow" by 2003 incapable of generating sorties during the U.S.-led invasion. After the 2003 invasion, policies under Order No. 1 barred senior members—pervasive in the IrAF—from public sector roles, purging experienced officers and creating a in the nascent force rebuilt from remnants. This exacerbated instability, as the policy displaced thousands of mid-level personnel without adequate vetting alternatives, fueling resentment and recruitment among former aviators. The IrAF's first post-invasion commander, Lieutenant General al-Tikriti, was captured in June 2003, symbolizing the collapse of prior structures. Post-Saddam further destabilized leadership through targeted assassinations of former IrAF officers, often attributed to Iranian-backed militias seeking revenge for the 1980–1988 Iran-Iraq War. By 2010, U.S. diplomatic cables reported 182 such killings of Iraqi pilots, with widows describing systematic hits as payback for bombing Iranian cities. In alone, nearly two dozen ex-pilots were murdered in a "witchhunt," deterring experienced personnel from rejoining the rebuilding effort and perpetuating reliance on foreign training. Political interference in appointments, amid Iraq's fragmented governments, continued to rotate commanders frequently, hindering doctrinal cohesion despite U.S. advisory support through 2025.

Combat Performance and Strategic Shortcomings

During the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988), the Iraqi Air Force (IQAF) achieved initial tactical successes through preemptive strikes on Iranian airfields and infrastructure, flying an average of 65 sorties per day early on and escalating to 150 by 1984, with minimal Iranian aerial opposition allowing strikes on military and industrial targets. However, its overall combat impact remained limited, providing negligible to ground forces and failing to decisively influence the stalemated ground campaign, as Iraqi doctrine prioritized runway cratering over direct aircraft destruction or integrated operations. In the 1991 , the IQAF suffered catastrophic losses, with coalition forces destroying over 400 aircraft—36 fixed-wing in air-to-air engagements alone—while the Iraqis flew 122 planes to for shelter and achieved no confirmed coalition air-to-air kills. Iraqi pilots, constrained by rigid command structures and outdated tactics, rarely challenged coalition air superiority, which was enabled by advanced suppression of enemy air defenses (SEAD), airborne warning systems, and precision strikes that neutralized IQAF bases within days. The 2003 U.S.-led invasion exposed further deficiencies, as the IQAF mounted virtually no effective resistance; many aircraft were buried underground to preserve them post-conflict rather than deployed, and surviving elements were swiftly eliminated by airstrikes with negligible impact on invading forces. Post-invasion rebuilding efforts saw the IQAF participate in operations against from 2014 onward, conducting strikes with U.S.-supplied F-16s and helicopters, but its contributions were marginal compared to , which delivered the decisive blows while Iraqi forces focused on ground roles under a U.S. strategy emphasizing partner-led operations. ![MiG-29 wreck from Gulf War][float-right] Strategic shortcomings stemmed from systemic issues under Saddam Hussein's regime, including political purges that instilled fear-driven obedience over initiative, resulting in pilots avoiding engagements to evade perceived risks of execution for failure. Doctrinal rigidity emphasized quantity of Soviet-era acquisitions (e.g., MiG-29s, Mirage F1s) over qualitative training, maintenance, or joint operations, exacerbated by post-1991 sanctions that grounded much of the fleet due to parts shortages. Even inadvertent successes, like the 1987 Exocet missile strike on USS Stark by an Iraqi Mirage F1, highlighted poor command-and-control and friendly-fire vulnerabilities rather than operational prowess. In the ISIS era, persistent corruption, inadequate pilot proficiency, and dependence on foreign advisors perpetuated these flaws, limiting independent sustainment of air campaigns.

Rebuilding Challenges and Corruption Allegations

The Iraqi 's post-2003 rebuilding efforts encountered severe obstacles stemming from the near-complete devastation of its pre-invasion infrastructure and personnel base, with most aircraft rendered inoperable by strikes, intentional burial to evade capture, and prolonged UN sanctions that had eroded maintenance and training capacities since the . By mid-2003, U.S. engineers had excavated over 30 buried jets at bases like Al-Taqaddum, but salvageable assets were minimal, numbering fewer than 20 flyable helicopters and trainers amid a pilot corps depleted by purges and defections. training programs, initiated under the Multi-National Transition Command-Iraq, prioritized basic flight operations over advanced combat skills, resulting in chronic shortages of qualified maintainers and logisticians; as of , the force operated only about 30 aircraft with readiness rates below 50 percent due to dependency on foreign contractors for sustainment. These challenges intensified during the 2014 ISIS offensive, when the air force's operational fleet—bolstered by U.S.-supplied Hellfire-equipped Cessnas and a handful of Turkish T-129 helicopters—failed to deliver sustained , with sortie rates hampered by grounded F-16s (only 10 of 36 delivered by 2020 were combat-ready) and inadequate integration with ground forces. Despite approximately $26 billion in total U.S. assistance to from 2003 to 2014, including $5.6 billion earmarked for aviation modernization, systemic deficiencies in supply chains and pilot proficiency—exacerbated by rapid expansion without proportional institutional reforms—left the service vulnerable to collapse, as evidenced by the abandonment of bases like Tikrit Air Base. Corruption allegations have further undermined rebuilding, with Iraqi Ministry of Defense processes marred by and kickbacks that diverted funds from aircraft maintenance and training. At , a key F-16 hub, U.S. Department of Justice probes since 2018 have examined schemes involving American contractors and Iraqi officials, including inflated logistics contracts worth tens of millions that allegedly funneled kickbacks while enabling infiltration. In August 2021, former commander General Anwar Hamad Amine was convicted by an Iraqi of graft for misappropriating over $30 million in funds, prompting his armed escape attempt from custody amid claims of political targeting, though pointed to falsified for spare parts. Iraqi pilots have reported "ghost squadrons" and siphoned budgets leading to F-16 cannibalization for parts, contributing to a 2020 readiness rate of under 30 percent; such practices, rooted in patronage networks within the defense sector, mirror broader Iraqi military vulnerabilities documented by , where corruption risks directly erode operational capabilities. To mitigate this, the U.S. shifted toward channels by 2025, channeling $2.5 billion in direct procurements to bypass endemic Iraqi graft, though integration delays persist.

References

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