Page 14 - World Airnews September 2020 Edition_intro
P. 14
FEATURE
bombers and Ju-52 transports.
Once the campaign in the Western Desert wound down, the SAAF
regrouped for the campaign in Sicily and Italy. SAAF squadrons flew
reconnaissance, spotter, fighter-bomber, bomber and escort missions,
now also with Mustangs, Mosquitos, Marauders and Liberators. The
Mosquitos flew reconnaissance missions over the Ploesti oil fields
in Romania, and the Liberators dangerous 2 750 km supply missions
during the 1944 Warsaw uprising. Three squadrons with Beaufighters
and Marauders flew with the Balkan Air Force to support partisans in
Greece and Yugoslavia. By the end of the war the SAAF had flown 82
401 sorties in this theatre.
At war’s end the SAAF had 35 operational squadrons, 29 in Italy,
one at Gibralter and one in West Africa. Most of the aircraft were
left behind, while transport squadrons, by now flying Dakotas, fer- Kittyhawk P-40
ried troops home.
The tight fist of Treasury again closed on the SAAF, and it quickly
shrank to just four squadrons, Nos 1 and 2 with Spitfires, 28 with Da-
kotas and 35 with Sunderlands. The Berlin Airlift in 1948 saw 20 SAAF
crews fly RAF Dakotas taking supplies into Berlin, and then in July 1950
the government made a fighter squadron available to the UN forces
in Korea. 2 Squadron deployed to Japan in September to convert to
Mustangs and then to Korea as part of the USAF’s 18th Fighter-Bomb-
er Wing. 2 squadron flew 10 373 close support and armed recon-
naissance sorties with its Mustangs, losing 74 of 95 shot down and
12 pilots killed and 30 missing, before converting to the Sabre, with
which it flew fighter sweeps and close support, adding more than 2
000 sorties by war end.
After the Korean War came an expansion of the Citizen Force
element, with seven reserve squadrons established with Harvards
and two with Dakotas for maritime and transport tasks, but sev-
eral closed in 1957 due to budget cuts. The 1950s brought some
positive developments, with Vampires (1950/53) and Canadair Sikorsky S-55
Sabres (1956) replacing the Spitfires and Shackletons replacing the
Sunderlands in 1957. The SAAF also received its first helicopters, 3
Sikorsky S-55s and one S-51, in 1957.
The 1960s brought expansion, 26 aircraft types entering service
over 16 years: Alouette IIs and IIIs, Mirage IIICZs, BZs, EZs, DZs and
RZs, Canberra B(1)12s and T4s, Buccaneers, Mirage F1AZs and F1CZs,
Mirage D2Zs and R2Zs, Impala Mk 1 jet trainers and Mk 2 light attack
aircraft, Piaggio P-166 Albatross for coastal patrol, Super Frelons and
Pumas, Wasps for the Navy’s destroyers and frigates, C-130 and C-160
transports, Cessna 185 (ex Army) and Bosbok spotters and Kudu light
utility aircraft, as well as VIP types. The SAAF had become by far the
most modern and powerful air force in the region.
The first operations of the border war era saw Alouette IIIs
and Cessna 185s the Police in northern Namibia and Alouette IIIs
support Portuguese forces in Angola and the Rhodesian forces. In
1973 the Defence Force took over security in the north of Namibia
from the Police, which brought expanded SAAF deployment. Air
bases were established at Ondangwa, Ruacana, Rundu and Mpa-
cha, and a major air base and logistic base at Grootfontein, with C-130BZ Hercules 28 Squadron
Alouette IIIs, Pumas and Impalas being deployed on a permanent
basis, and others as required.
Operations within Namibia SWA involved mainly Alouette III gun-
ships in support of Army and Police patrols, Pumas for reaction force
and casualty evacuation tasks and spotters flying day and night mis-
sions. Transalls and Hercules flew transport missions to Grootfontein
and to Ondangwa; Dakotas and Transalls within the border area.
Two Dakotas were armed with 20 mm cannon (Dragon Dak), and a
Dakota and a DC4 were fitted as communications/electronic intelli-
gence aircraft. Among the more interesting concepts were moonlit
night operations with Bosbok spotters, Dakotas carrying paratroops
and Pumas to deploy follow up forces or simply to recover the
paratroops. Meanwhile Impala Mk 2s began flying day and later also
night interdiction against Swapo logistics in southern Angola.
The first major operation into Angola was Operation Savannah in
1975/76 in support of Unita and the FNLA. This did not receive much
air support other than supply flights by Dakotas and Hercules. There
was some use of spotter aircraft, one being shot down, and of Pumas
World Airnews | September 2020
— 19 —