The Indonesian Air Force (
Indonesian: Tentara Nasional Indonesia Angkatan Udara, (TNI-AU),
lit. 'Indonesian National Military-Air Force') sometimes shortened as IDAF / IdAF, is the
aerial branch of the
Indonesian National Armed Forces. The Indonesian Air Force is headquartered in
Jakarta, Indonesia, and is headed by the
Chief of Staff of the Air Force (Kepala Staf Angkatan Udara – KSAU or KASAU). Its
order of battle is split into three Air Operations Commands (
Indonesian: Komando Operasi Udara). Most of its airbases are located on the island of
Java.[4] The Indonesian Air Force also has its ground force unit, called Air Force Quick Reaction Force Command (
Kopasgat). The corps is also known as the "Orange Berets" (Baret Jingga) due to the distinctive color of their service headgear.
Indonesian War of Independence / Netherlands 'Police Action' (1945–1949)
After the Japanese announced their surrender at the end of WWII, Indonesian nationalist leader
Sukarno declared
Indonesian Independence on 17 August 1945. Several days later, the Indonesian People's Security Bureau (Badan Keamanan Rakyat) was formed to undertake security duties. The Air Division of this force was also formed, using ex-Japanese planes scattered everywhere, especially in the island of Java, including Bugis Air Base in Malang (Established on 18 September 1945). The most numerous of these aeroplanes were the
Yokosuka K5Y1 Willow (Cureng) trainers, which were hastily used to train newly recruited cadets. At the time of the founding, there was only one Indonesian holding a multi-engine pilot license from the pre-war Dutch Flying School, Flying Officer
Agustinus Adisucipto (but did not have an opportunity to fly during the 3.5-year Japanese occupation). He was assisted by a few Japanese pilots who decided to stay in the newly born country. The new roundel was created simply by painting white on the lower part of the Japanese Hinomaru, reflecting the red and white of the
Indonesian flag. The People's Security Bureau was then, in October, re-organized to form the nascent formal armed forces. This marked the birth of the Indonesian Air Force on 9 April 1946. However, tensions rose as the Dutch tried to re-claim their former colony and launched an assault on 21 July 1947, destroying most of the planes on the ground. Some planes survived though and were hidden in remote bases.
29 July 1947 was date of the first air operation by the newborn air force as three surviving aircraft, comprising two Yokosuka K5Y1 Willow (Cureng) and a
Mitsubishi Ki-51 Sonia (the fourth aircraft, a
Nakajima Ki-43 Oscar (Hayabusa) flown by Air Cadet Bambang Saptoadji, should also have been involved in the raid as an escort, but as of when it was launched, the aircraft was not airworthy due to engine troubles)[10] conducted air raids at dawn on the Dutch Army barracks in Semarang, Salatiga and Ambarawa, dropping incendiary bombs. Tactically, these raids did not have any effect on the Dutch positions, but psychologically, it was a great success as it proved that the Indonesian Air Force still existed. The Dutch had previously claimed the destruction of Indonesian Air Force in their assault before and they never expected any attack from the sky. Dutch
Curtiss P-40E Warhawks tried to find all the guerrillas' planes, but they were too late to find those "ghost" aircraft which landed quickly in Maguwo Air Base, near Yogyakarta (now,
Adisucipto International Airport). Indonesian pro-independence guerrillas tried to save captured aircraft in a number of remote areas, including examples of the
Mitsubishi A6M Zero-Sen "Zeke",
Aichi D3A "Val", and
Mitsubishi G4M "Betty".
Under pressure from the
United Nations, the Dutch finally agreed to acknowledge Indonesian independence. Following the 1949
Round Table Conference, sovereignty was officially transferred to the
United States of Indonesia. The Dutch armed forces left (but remained in
West Papua until 1963) and the aeroplanes were handed over to the Indonesians. These comprised, among others,
North AmericanP-51 Mustang, North American
B-25 Mitchell, North American
T-6 Texan,
DouglasA-26 Invader, Douglas
C-47 Dakota and
ConsolidatedPBY-5A Catalina, which served as the main forces of the Indonesian Air Force for the following decade. During this era, Indonesia received its first jet aircraft; De Havilland DH-115 Vampire. It was also during this era that the national roundels were changed to the red and white pentagon (which was supposed to signify Indonesia's national ideology of "Panca Sila", or the "Five Principles", created by Sukarno in 1945).
Several Indonesian pilots scored their first kills, including
Captain Ignatius Dewanto with his
North American P-51 Mustang, who in 1958 shot down a Permesta
Douglas B-26 Invader over Ambon. Its pilot,
Allen Pope, an American
CIA agent, was captured and tried in Jakarta, thus revealing the significant involvement of the CIA's "Operation Haik" in the rebellion.
The most famous Indonesian fighter pilot in this era was
Rusmin Nurjadin, who became
Chief of Staff of the Air Force from 1966 to 1969. Nurjadin commanded
MiG-21 squadrons in 1962–65 and founded an acrobatic team in 1962 that flew the
MiG-17F/PF Fresco over some cities in Indonesia. Small numbers of Indonesian Air Force pilots gained their reputation as aces in this era.
Soviet influence (1962–1965)
The need to prop up to what became
Operation Trikora in
Netherlands New Guinea and the rise of the
Communist Party of Indonesia drew Indonesia closer to the
Eastern Bloc. Several Soviet-built aircraft began to arrive in the early 1960s including the
MiG-15UTI from
Czechoslovakia,
MiG-17F/PF,
MiG-19S and MiG-21F-13, in addition to
Ilyushin Il-28,
Mil Mi-4,
Mil Mi-6,
Antonov An-12 and
Avia 14 also from Czechoslovakia. Indonesia also received
Lavochkin La-11, as well as
Tupolev Tu-2 from China, intended to replace the B-25, but they never reached operational status. These aircraft served along with the remaining American aircraft such as
North American B-25 Mitchell, Douglas A-26 Invader,
Douglas C-47 Dakota and North American P-51 Mustang. It was during this period that the Indonesian Air Force became the first Air Force in Southeast Asia which acquired the capability of strategic bombing by acquiring the new
Tupolev Tu-16 in 1961, before the acquisition of Ilyushin Il-28 by
Vietnam People's Air Force. Around 25 Tu-16KS were delivered complete with
AS-1 air-surface missiles. One crashed at the end of 1962.[11][12] To add with all these purchases was the first ever surface to air defence missile operated by Southeast Asians, the Soviet-designed
S-75 Dvina, which were acquired in 1961.
This era also marked the last confrontation with the Dutch in Papua, before the Dutch, again under pressure of the United Nations, left in 1963. Several missions of Taiwan-based
Lockheed U-2s from
35th Squadron flew over
Maluku (Moluccas) and reported to Dutch military that there was a strong possibility that the Dutch would lose their air superiority over Papua if they continued the war.[13][14] During Operation Trikora, the air force was deployed as follows:
7 P-51Ds based at
Laha airbase,
Ambon. One aircraft piloted by Second Lieutenant (AF) Prasetyo lost due to engine failure during the ferry flight from
Makassar to Ambon. Prasetyo died after bailing out from the aircraft, landing in high-tide seas and could not be rescued by the Air Force's
PBY-5 Catalina due to the extreme weather after his accident.[14]
40 MiG-17F/PF aircraft on three airfields:
Morotai (in northern Maluku),
Amahai (in Seram) and
Letfuan (in
Kai Islands, located in the southwest of Papua). The aircraft had been stationed at Morotai before Operation Trikora for actions against
PRRI-
Permesta and the
Republic of South Maluku separatists. The primary role of these aircraft were to provide air cover for the airlift and logistics aircraft during the early infiltration to Papua.[15] If the war broke out, these MiG-17F/PF would provide the air cover for Tu-16 anti-shipping missions and Il-28 bombing missions,[16] also for intercepting Dutch
Hawker Hunters based in Numfor,
Biak.[17]
4 B-25 Mitchells and two
A-26 Invaders at Letfuan airbase. Their primary role was for transport and providing air cover for the airlift, until this role was assumed by the
P-51Ds and
MiG-17F/PFs.[15] Dutch
Lockheed P2V Neptunes were known as the strongest rival for these Letfuan-based units.[18]
18
Il-28s stationed first at Laha airbase, but then moved to Amahai airbase, due to the shortness of runway at Laha for the landing of the aircraft.[19]
26
Tu-16s stationed in
Iswahyudi Air Force Base near Ngawi,
East Java in 41st and 42nd Squadron. Six aircraft were scrambled to Morotai airbase for the operation. These units were to threaten the Dutch naval fleet in Papua including
HNLMS Karel Doorman (R81), the only aircraft carrier of the Dutch naval fleet.
24
Douglas C-47 Dakotas stationed at three airfields; Laha, Amahai and Letfuan. During an operation at Papua, one aircraft piloted by Captain (AF) Djalaludin Tantu and co-pilot Second Lieutenant (AF) Sukandar, was downed by a Dutch P2V.[15] All crews bailed out safely from the aircraft, but were then captured by the Dutch forces.[18]
10
Lockheed C-130 Hercules stationed at
Halim Perdanakusuma airbase at Jakarta. Despite the warning from United States to not use the aircraft for the operation, it soon scrambled over the Papua for the airlift mission, due to the loss of C-47s, to Dutch Hawker Hunters and P2V Neptunes. The C-130's high altitude flying capability made it less vulnerable to interception.[15]
6 anti-submarine
Fairey Gannet AS.4s, several PBY-5 Catalinas and two Grumman
HU-16 Albatross (UF-1 variant). These aircraft belonged to the
Indonesian Naval Aviation, but supporting the air forces for the Operation. Aircraft were stationed in Liang airbase at
Seram, then moved to Morotai airbase. One Gannet AS.4 was lost due to an accident when it crashed into a mountain in Seram island, killing three crew members.[19]
Several
Bell 47s,
Mil Mi-4 and
Mil Mi-6 helicopters were planned to be used for the operation, but were not ready during the early phase of infiltration of the operation.[19]
Indonesian MiG pilots received training to fly their fighter aircraft in
Egypt before the infiltration campaign.[20] During the infiltration of the airlift campaign, the air forces' special forces, Pasukan Gerak Tjepat (PGT) (now known as
Kopasgat) landed in Klamono-Sorong, Papua.[21]
Also during this period, the Indonesian Air Force also took part in the
confrontation against Malaysia (which was backed by the
United Kingdom) along the border of Kalimantan, the Malacca Strait and near the Singapore maritime border, wherein Air Force aircraft faced their counterparts in the
Royal Air Force and the young
Royal Malaysian Air Force.
30 September movement and the overthrow of Sukarno (1966–1970)
The coup attempt led by the
30 September Movement in 1965 changed everything and a new anti-communist regime from the Army, led by
Major GeneralSuharto, took power. The Chief of Staff of the Air Force,
Air MarshallOmar Dani was removed from his position and court-martialed for his purported involvement in the coup. Ties with the Eastern bloc countries were cut, and thus support and spare parts for the planes became short. Unlike other branches of the Indonesian Armed Forces, the Air Force was broadly not implicated in the
Indonesian mass killings of 1965–1966, due to the purported leftist sympathies of its members.[22] By August 1968 the situation was critical, and in early 1970, the Chief of Staff of the Air Force, Suwoto Sukandar, said that the spare parts situation meant that only 15–20 percent of aircraft were airworthy.[23] The MiG force made its farewell flight with a flypast of
Jakarta in 1970. The relatively new MiG-19s were sold to
Pakistan. By October 1970, only one Tu-16 was still flying, but after an in-flight engine failure, it too was grounded.[24] But despite the problems, the Air Force still served with distinction in fighting militant remnants of the CPI in Java's provinces, particularly in Central and East Java.
With Suharto's assumption of the presidency and the office of Commander in Chief in 1967, the focus shifted to fighting the communist
PGRS/Paraku insurgency. The Air Force launched Operation Lightning Strike (
Indonesian: Operasi Samber Kilat) to support ground troops eradicate Sarawak communists that were present in
West Kalimantan and along Indonesia-Malaysia border by dropping troops to the target area, dropping logistical assistance, VIP transportation, medical evacuation and recon flights. The Air Force deployed Air Squadron 6 and 7 which were equipped with Mi-4,
Bell 204B and
UH-34D helicopters to the operation.[25][26]
Rebirth (1970–1980)
The Air Force began to be re-equipped by receiving former
Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF)
CAC Sabres – an Australian re-design of the
F-86 Sabre – to replace the MiG-21s. The Sabre was used by the TNI-AU until 1982. In 1973, the United States supplied military assistance including
T33s trainers and UH-34D helicopters in exchange for four old MiG-21F-13s.
Pakistan Air Force took over the responsibility to train Indonesian pilots in the Sabre and in logistical aspects of the Air Force. Over the next three years, the US supplied 16
North American Rockwell OV-10 Broncos counter-insurgency aircraft and
F-5E/F Tiger II fighters, in exchange for which the Indonesian Air Force handed over the majority of its remaining MiG-21F-13s, which were used to form a
US Air ForceAggressor squadron.[27] Indonesia also purchased
BAE Hawk Mk 53s from the United Kingdom in the 1970s.
The Indonesian Air Force took part in the 1975 Indonesian
invasion of
East Timor.
Influence of American and allied products (1980–1998)
In the early 1980s, the Air Force, needing modern strike aircraft, organised Operation Alpha to clandestinely acquire ex-
Israeli Air ForceA-4 Skyhawks. Air Force personnel were sent in secret by different routes and eventually Indonesia received 32 aircraft.[28]
In 1982, Indonesia purchased 16 Northrop F-5E/F Tiger II from the United States to replace their Sabres under the Peace Komodo I and II.[29][30] These were upgraded in
Belgium from 1995.
During 1986–88, there was a competition for the contract to provide a new fighter bomber, between the General Dynamics
F-16 and
Dassault Mirage 2000. Indonesia eventually ordered 12
F-16A/B Fighting Falcon Block 15 OCU as a new fighter in 1989. The Indonesian Air Force had originally planned to acquire 60
F-16s to cover and defend its 12 million square kilometres of territory.[31] A total of 10 F-16A and F-16B are still in service with Indonesian Air Force: 2 planes crashed in two different accidents. A follow-up order for 9 more F-16A Block-15 OCU was cancelled in favour of 24 Su-30KI,[32] but this order was also cancelled due to the
1997 Asian Financial Crisis.
The Indonesian Air Force ordered eight BAE Hawk Mk 109s and 32 Mk 209s in 1993. The last of these was delivered by January 1997.
1998–2006 embargoes
In 1999, the Indonesian military staged a
military intervention in
East Timor following an
independence referendum. The result was that more than 1,500 civilians were killed and 70 percent of Dili's infrastructure razed. In response, the United States and the European Union both imposed arms embargoes. Although the European Union chose not to renew its ban in 2000, the United States did not lift its embargo until November 2005. During this embargo, the Indonesian government turned to
Russia to supply them with arms including fighters, helicopters, missiles, radars and other equipment.
In 2002, the Indonesian Air Force conducted operations against separatists, such as the
Free Aceh Movement (Gerakan Aceh Merdeka (GAM)) and
Free Papua Movement (Organisasi Papua Merdeka (OPM)). In the conflict with GAM in Aceh, the Indonesian Air Force utilised OV-10Fs for counter-insurgency actions along with BAe Hawk 53 and 209. Indonesian F-16s underwent
Falcon UP program in the Netherlands with Koolhaas Alphen bv, and Daedalus.[33][34]
In that same year, the Air Force received two
Sukhoi Su-27s and two
Sukhoi Su-30s from Russia. The fighters were partly paid for in Indonesian
palm oil. The purchase, however, did not include any weaponry. Seven
KT-1B Korean basic trainers were also purchased.
By 2005 the Air Force was experiencing a logistical crisis. The A-4s were phased out of service in 2004, and to respond to the decreasing quantity of aircraft in service, in 2006, the Indonesian Air Force ordered three Sukhoi Su-27SKM and three
Su-30MK2 to complete a full squadron. It was also made public that the four aircraft procured in 2003 were inactive and awaiting an upgrade of their communication systems, as they were incompatible with the Indonesian systems in use. The additional aircraft were ordered with systems complying with the Indonesian and international standards and would also include new weaponry for all variants.[32] A further 12 KT-1b trainers were also ordered in 2006.
Until 2008, the Indonesian Air Force had only purchased four types of missiles:
KS-1 Komet,
Vympel K-13,
AIM-9 Sidewinder and
AGM-65 Maverick. Starting from 2008, it started receiving more advanced Russian made
Vympel R-73 and
R-77 air-to-air missiles for its new Su-27 and Su-30 fighters. Also, a limited number of
Kh-29,
Kh-31 and
Kh-59 air-to-ground missiles were delivered for the Su-30s.[35]
Local weapons are being developed such as P-100 air-to-ground bomb manufactured by PT Dahana and PT Sari Bahari Malang, East Java.[36] P-100 has been successfully tested in Su-27 and Su-30 for ground attack missions. Large-scale production has received certification from Ministry of Defence.[37]
Minimum Essential Force (MEF) 2010–present
During the visit of US President
Barack Obama on 9–10 November 2010, the TNI-AU was offered 24 ex-USAF F-16 Block 25 aircraft as part of the Peace Bima-Sena II agreement.[38][39] In October 2011, the House of Representatives approved the grant. The jets would be upgraded similar to the then latest Block 50/52 variant.[40] The TNI-AU is also progressing with the reactivation of all 10 units of F-16 Block 15 OCU, which resulted in the reactivation of TS-1606, TS-1609 and TS-1612 recently.[41] To replace the
Fokker F-27s, the TNI-AU ordered nine Spanish
CASA C-295 in joint production with PT. Dirgantara Indonesia. New
unmanned aerial vehicles were also purchased to strengthen TNI-AU aerial observation and were based at Supadio Air Force Base,
Pontianak,
Kalimantan Barat.
Starting in 2010,[42] Minister of Defence Purnomo Yusgiantoro stated that TNI-AU will gradually purchase a total of 180 Su-27s and Su-30s to complete the needs of 10 squadrons.[43] India also offered TNI-AU Indian-Russian made
BrahMos missiles to equip its Su-27s and Su-30s.[44]
Indonesia signed a memorandum of understanding to participate in the South Korean
KF-X programme in July 2010 and the terms of agreement was signed in 2011. Indonesia agreed to finance 20 percent of the project and would receive 50 jets in return, while South Korea would get 200 jets. A Defence ministry spokesman claimed that the jet would be more capable than the F-16 but less capable that the
F-35. The project was started in 2009 and the first prototype is expected to roll out in the second half of 2020.[45] But payment problems and technical difficulties had caused several delays and postponement of the KAI KF-X project.[45] Indonesia has also signed an MOU with China to produce C-705 missiles which will arm the Sukhoi jets.[46]
In April 2011, Indonesia confirmed that it will buy 16 supersonic
KAI T-50 Golden Eagle trainer jets from South Korea for up to US$400 million after an evaluation of the
Yakovlev Yak-130,
Guizhou JL-9/FTC-2000 Mountain Eagle and
Aero L-159 Alca.[47] The T-50 would replace the BAE Hawk MK-53 trainer jets. Deliveries were completed by January 2014 and were commissioned on 13 February 2014.[48]
In June 2011, Indonesia signed the final contract for 8
Super Tucano as the replacement for the OV-10 Bronco in the counter-insurgency role[49] with a second contract for a further 8 aircraft in July 2012.[50] The first four units arrived in March 2012 with deliveries complete by 2014.[51]
On 29 December 2011 Indonesia committed to purchase 6 Su-30MK2 jet fighters in a US$470 million procurement contract signed by the Defence Ministry and Russia's JSC Rosoboronexport.[53] Deliveries were set to reportedly start after 2013.[citation needed]
In January 2012, the Australian and Indonesian governments agreed to the transfer of four used C-130H Hercules aircraft from the Royal Australian Air Force to the Indonesian Air Force in 2012, which was approved by the US as the Hercules' producer.[54]
In January 2014, Defence Minister
Purnomo Yusgiantoro said that he hoped to start the replacement of the F-5 fighters under the upcoming 2015 to 2020 strategic plan. The Indonesian Air Force shortlisted five candidates for the replacement, comprising the
Sukhoi Su-35S,
Saab JAS 39 Gripen,
Dassault Rafale,
Eurofighter Typhoon, and F-16C/D Block 60.[55]
In September 2014, Head of Indonesian National Armed Forces Public Relations and Media Office (Kapuspen TNI), Major General (TNI) Mochamad Fuad Basya explained the Minimum Essential Forces (MEF) Plan of TNI-AU consist of: 11 Fighter Squadrons, 6 Transport Squadrons, 2 VIP/VVIP Squadrons, 2 Patrol Squadrons, 4 Helicopter Squadrons, 2 Training Squadrons and 2 UAV Squadrons.[56]
In September 2015, Defence Minister
Ryamizard Ryacudu said that Indonesia had chosen the Su-35 Flanker-E to replace the F-5 Tiger II. Although in recent times, the deal to purchase Su-35 is in limbo due to Russia's refusal to give transfer of technology to Indonesia owing its small number of orders in addition to Indonesian concerns over price.[57]
In January 2017, Indonesia approved for the acquisition of 5 Airbus A400M Atlas multi-role aircraft worth US$2 billion, as part of the plans to boost the country's military capabilities. They are to be acquired in both transport and utility configurations and will be operated by the Indonesian Air Force (TNI-AU) Aviation Squadrons 31 and 32.[58] In November 2021, Indonesian ministry of defence officially orders two
Airbus A400M in multirole tanker and transport configuration.[59]
On 12 May 2017, Defence Minister Ryamizard Ryacudu confirmed that the Indonesian Air Force (TNI-AU) will sign contract to buy 10 Su-35s. Russia will open the factory for Sukhoi Spare Parts in Indonesia as part of the contract.[60] On 28 November 2017, the Defence Minister confirmed that the Air Force (TNI-AU) had completed the procurement process of the aircraft.[61]
In October 2019 the Chief of Staff of the Indonesian Air Force
Yuyu Sutisna said the Indonesian Air Force will purchase at least 2 Squadrons (32 aircraft) of F-16V Block 70/72 for the last phase of the 'Minimum Essential Force' program (MEF Fase 3 2020–2024) to replace the older
BAE Systems Hawk.[62][63] Since 2017 the Indonesian Air Force with
Lockheed Martin and
Indonesian Aerospace is also upgrading their existing F-16A/B with the Falcon STAR eMLU upgrade program that include new avionics, new armament capability that could carry
AMRAAM, and
JDAM, new aircraft airframe that will last longer,
Sniper ATP,
LITENING, and Bird Slicer
IFF. The upgrade is being carried out by Indonesian companies supervised by Lockheed Martin in Skadron Teknik 042.[64][65][66][67]
On 12 March 2020,
Bloomberg reported that Indonesia had cancelled the
Su-35 deal due to diplomatic pressure from the United States. Indonesia instead opted to negotiate the purchase of
F-35 aircraft.[69] This was later denied and Russia ensured that the cooperation would continue, although there were still a number of things to discuss.[70] On 8 July 2020 however, the Russian Ambassador to Indonesia, Lyudmila Vorobieva stated that Indonesia's plan to buy 11 Sukhoi Su-35 fighter jets from Russia is still continuing.[71]
On 20 July 2020, a letter written by defence minister, Prabowo Subianto to his Austrian counterpart
Klaudia Tanner, was published by Indonesian news outlets expressing interest in acquiring
Austria's Luftstreitkräfte entire fleet of Eurofighter Typhoon jets.[72][73][74]
On 18 February 2021, the Chief of Staff of the Air Force Air Chief Marshal
Fadjar Prasetyo announces in annual Air Force Leadership Meeting that Indonesian Air Force plans to buy 36 Dassault Rafales and 8
F-15EX Strike Eagle, of which 6 F-15EX are expected to arrive in 2022, along with
C-130J Super Hercules and
Medium-altitude long-endurance unmanned aerial vehicle.[8] The Air Chief Marshal also stated that the Air Force will modernize its various fleet of combat aircraft, whose implementation will begin in 2021.[75]
In November 2021, Airbus confirmed that the Indonesian Ministry of Defence had signed a deal with Airbus for 2
A400Ms configured for MRTT role, with an option, in the form of a letter of intent, for four additional aircraft.[59]
On 22 December 2021 during a Press Tour and Media Gathering, the Air Chief Marshall Fadjar Prasetyo confirmed that the Su-35 purchase will not go ahead. Regarding the planned purchase of the Sukhoi Su-35, Fadjar said it would be abandoned.[76]
Indonesia has ambitious plans for a homemade future 4.5 generation jet fighter with
South Korea's
KAI and Indonesia's IAe, the KF-X/IF-X. On November 11, 2021, it was reported that South Korea and Indonesia had reached an agreement on the payment which Indonesia would have to make for their joint fighter jet project after concerns that Jakarta would default on the deal.[77] Under the renegotiated agreement, Indonesia will have to pay 1.6 trillion won ($1.35 billion) of the 8.1 trillion-won project.[78]
On 10 February 2022, Dassault Aviation stated that Indonesia has officially signed an order for 42 Dassault Rafale F4s, concluding two years of negotiations with 6 aircraft for Batch I.[79][80] Hours later the
State Department of the United States approved Indonesia to purchase up to 36 F-15ID aircraft, the would-be Indonesian variant of the F-15EX.[81][82]
On 20 April 2022, PT Len Industri and
Thales Group signed a strategic partnership agreement for further collaboration on a wide array of defence-related topics including
radars,
military satellites,
electronic warfare, UAVs and combat management systems.[83]
On 17 May 2022, PT Len Industri signed an agreement with Thales Group to jointly produce 13
GCI radars.[84] Thales will be partnering with
state-owned defence electronics firm PT Len Industri to supply
Ground Master 403 (GM403) air surveillance radars and SkyView command-and-control (C2) system to Indonesia.[85] On 18 June 2023 in a joint statement by Thales and PT Len it is revealed that Indonesia is ordering the Ground Master 400 Alpha (GM400α) variant.[86]
Indonesia has considered acquiring 12 used
Mirage 2000-5s from Qatar.[87] In November 2022, the Ministry of Finance of Indonesia has approved foreign loans to fund several Indonesian Air Force procurement programs, including the ex-Qatari Mirage 2000-5 proposal.[88] In January 2024, the spokesperson for the Minister of Defence disclosed the planned procurement of Mirage 2000s has been postponed, citing fiscal limitations.[89] On 9 February 2024, spokesperson for the Minister of Defence confirmed the plan to acquire Mirages have been cancelled.[90]
Organization
The Indonesian Air Force is structured into the following in accordance with Presidential decree No. 66/ 2019:[91]
Air Force Command and Staff College (Sekolah Staf dan Komando TNI Angkatan Udara).
Service Branches
Combat Branches
Pilot Corps (Korps Penerbang) (PNB), such as Fighter Pilot, Transport Pilot, and Helicopter Pilot, all officers only.
Quick Reaction Force Command Corps (Korps Komando Pasukan Gerak Cepat) (PAS), air force infantry and special forces corps, wears orange beret.
Support Branches
Navigator Corps (Korps Navigator) (NAV), all officers only.
Aviation Engineering Corps (Korps Teknik) (TEK). NCOs and enlists are further subdivided into following specialties:
Aviation Engineering (Teknik Pesawat Terbang);
Aviation Weaponry Engineering (Teknik Senjata); and
Support Engineering (Teknik Sarana Bantuan).
Electronics Corps (Korps Elektronika) (LEK). NCOs and enlists are further subdivided into following specialties:
Avionics (Avionik);
Radar System (Radar);
Simulator System (Simulasi);
Communication System (Komunikasi); and
Air Traffic Control (Pengatur Lalu Lintas Udara).
Administration Corps (Korps Administrasi) (ADM). NCOs and enlists are further subdivided into following specialties:
Personnel Administration (Administrasi Personel);
Secretariat Administration (Administrasi Sekretariat); and
Finance Administration (Administrasi Keuangan).
Supply Corps (Korps Perbekalan) (KAL).
Military Police Corps (Korps Polisi Militer) (POM), all personnel wear light blue berets or MP helmets.
Medical Corps (Korps Kesehatan) (KES). NCOs and enlists are further subdivided into following specialties:
Medicine (Kedokteran);
Psychology (Psikologi); and
Physical Fitness (Jasmani).
Special Service Corps (Korps Dinas Khusus) (SUS). All personnels are further subdivided into following specialties:
Intelligence (Intelijen);
Military Justice (Hukum);
Public Relations (Penerangan);
Facilities and Instruments (Fasilitas dan Instrumen);
Electronic Data Processing (Pengolahan Data Elektronik);
Chaplaincy (Pembinaan Mental);
Foreign Languages (Bahasa Asing); and
Meteorology (Meteorology).
Air Force Women's Service (Korps Wanita Angkatan Udara) (WARA) - all personnel wear crusher caps save Kopasgat who wear orange berets and military policewomen who wear as specified above.
Indonesian Air Force tail numbering systems uses one or two letters based on the aircraft's roles, followed by two numbers of the aircraft model, and two numbers of the serial number of the aircraft. For aircraft that uses no numbers such as the Dassault Rafale, the first letter of the aircraft will be transformed into a number for example, TS–18xx for the Rafale, the 18th alphabet is the letter 'R' for 'Rafale'.[92]
An example of a Second lieutenant rank (left) with red band indicating a command rank. While (right) without red band indicating a staff rank.
In the Air Force, as well as in other armed forces branches in Indonesia, the rank consists of
officer known as in
Indonesian: "Perwira",
NCO "Bintara" and
enlisted "Tamtama".
The proper title to address of rank on official document are as follows, all high-ranking officers (Marshal) use their rank followed by "(TNI)", while other officers use their rank followed by respective branch/corps abbreviation. For example, an Air Force colonel from Flying Corps use the title "Kolonel (PNB)", while an Air Force Marshal from Flying Corps use the title "Marsekal (TNI)". Enlisted airmen are not required to put their respective branch/corps specialty.[99]
Note: Indonesia is not a member of
NATO, so there is not an official equivalence between the Indonesian military ranks and those defined by NATO. The displayed parallel is approximate and for illustration purposes only.
Note: The red banding on the rank insignia denotes the personnel holding a command position which is agnostic of rank.
A
MiG-17F-1112 strafed several strategic locations in
Jakarta and
Bogor on 9 March 1960. The fighter aircraft then crash landed in a paddy field in
Garut. The aircraft was piloted by Lt. Daniel Maukar
(id), an Air Force pilot affiliated with
Permesta. He was tasked to strafe
BPM fuel tanks at
Tanjung Priok harbor, before attempting to assassinate
President Sukarno by strafing
Merdeka Palace and
Bogor Palace.[101][102]
A
Lockheed L-100-30 HerculesA-1322 crashed on 20 November 1985, killing all 10 crew on board. The aircraft crashed into
Mount Sibayak. The aircraft was conducting routine air patrol over Sumatra.[103]
A
Lockheed C-130 HerculesA-1324 crashed in Jakarta on 5 October 1991, killing 132 people comprising 119 passengers, 11 crew, and 2 people on ground. Only 1 survivor.[104]
An
F-16TS-1604, crashed in Tulungagung on 15 June 1992, but the pilot ejected safely[105][106]
An
F-16TS-1607, crashed at Halim Perdana Kusuma AB, on 10 March 1997, killing the pilot Cpt. Dwi Sasongko, who was with the "Elang Biru"[107] acrobatic team, due to ejection seat failure.[105][108]
A
Hawk Mk 53T-5311 piloted by Maj. Syahbudin Nur Hutasuhut and Cpt. Masrial and another Hawk T-5310 piloted by Cpt. Andis Solichin and Cpt. Weko Nartomo from the 15 Air Squadron crashed in a mid-air collision during an acrobatic exercise at the Iswahjudi Air Force Base on March 28, 2002. All four pilots were killed.[109]
A
Fokker 27A-2708 crashed on 21 June 2012, 10 people were killed, including all 7 crew on board the aircraft and 3 people on the ground. The aircraft crashed into a complex of military housing near
Halim Perdanakusuma International Airport, and eight buildings were damaged or destroyed. The aircraft was conducting a routine training exercise.[115]
An
F-16TS-1643, was destroyed on 16 April 2015 when hydraulic brake failure caused the plane to catch fire and burnt the jet completely at Halim Perdana Kusuma AB. The pilot Lt. Col. Firman Dwi Cahyono escaped with burns.[105][106]
An
F-16TS-1609 crashed on 24 June 2015 when its nose landing gear collapsed upon landing at Iswahyudi AB, Madiun, East Java.[105]
On 30 June 2015, a
Lockheed C-130B Hercules A-1310 crashed near a residential neighbourhood with 12 crew and 109 passengers on board shortly after taking off from
Medan, killing all aboard, along with 22 people on the ground.
20 December 2015: An Indonesian Airforce
T-50i Golden Eagle fighter plane registered as TT-5007 had crashed in a flight demonstration during airshow in
Adisutjipto Air Force Base in
Yogyakarta, killing its two pilots, Lt. Col. Marda Sarjono and Cpt. Dwi Cahyadi.[116]
An
F-16TS-1603 skidded off the runway in during landing at the Roesmin Nurjadin Airbase, Pekanbaru, Sumatra on 14 March 2017 and slammed into the tarmac. The pilots, Maj. Andri Setiawan and 1st Lt. Marko Henderson, escaped injury.[105][117]
A
Hawk 200 registered as TT-0209, crashed on 15 June 2020 around 5 kilometres from Roesmin Nurjadin Airbase, Pekanbaru. No casualties reported on this incident yet.[118]
A
KAI T-50iTT-5006 skidded off the runway during takeoff at Iswahyudi Airbase, Magetan, East Java on 10 August 2020. The aircraft were piloted by Maj. Luluk Teguh Prabowo as instructor and 2nd Lt. Muhammad Zacky as flight cadet, both of them were injured. The aircraft were heavily damaged as the result.[119][120] The instructor pilot later died on 2 September 2020.[121]
A
KAI T-50iTT-5009 lost contact around Blora, Central Java on 18 July 2022.[122] The aircraft was piloted by 1st Lt. Allan Safitra Indra Wahyudi,[123] the flight was routine night exercise. Around 19:25 (+7 GMT) Local Time the aircraft lost contact around Blora, Madiun area and it was soon confirmed that the aircraft had crashed and the pilot had died in the accident.[124]
Two
Super TucanoTT-3103 and TT-3111 crashed on 16 November 2023 in
Pasuruan,
East Java, near
Abdul Rachman Saleh AFB of which serves as homebase for the Super Tucanos. All four crews died in the crash, including Commander of the 2nd Air Wing, and Commander of the 21st Air Squadron.[125]
^COMMANDER IN CHIEF PACIFIC COMMAND HISTORY. Camp H.M. Smith Hawaii 96861: Command History Division Office of the Joint Secretary Headquarters CINCPAC. 1981.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (
link)
^Keris, Lembaga (6 May 2022).
"pengadaan F-5". Facebook (in Indonesian). Retrieved 6 May 2022.
^"Peraturan Presiden Republik Indonesia Nomor 66 Tahun 2019 Tentang Susunan Organisasi Tentara Nasional Indonesia" [Presidential Decree Number 66 Year 2019 Regarding Organization of Indonesian National Armed Forces].
Presidential decree No. 66 of 2019(PDF) (in Indonesian).
President of Indonesia.
Archived 19 June 2020 at the
Wayback Machine
^"Peraturan Pemerintah Republik Indonesia Nomor 39 Tahun 2010 Tentang Administrasi Prajurit Tentara Nasional Indonesia" [Government Regulation No 39 Year 2010 Regarding Administration of Armed Forces Personnel].
Act No. 39 of 2010(PDF) (in Indonesian). Government of Indonesia.
^
ab"Pangkat Harian". tni.mil.id (in Indonesian). Indonesian National Armed Forces. Archived from
the original on 24 November 2020. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
Green, William & Swanborough, Gordon (n.d.). "Pentagon Over the Islands: The Thirty-Year History of Indonesian Military Aviation". Air Enthusiast Quarterly (2): 154–162.
ISSN0143-5450.
Grodin, Yefim & Rigmat, Vladimir (2004) Tupelov Tu-16 Badger, Aerofax, London
ISBN1-85780-177-6
Poerwoko, F. Djoko (2001) My Home My Base: Perjalanan Sejarah Pangkalan Udara Iswahjudi 1939–2000, Publisher – Iswahjudi Air Force Base, No ISBN