Formally established in
1920 as the
Aviation Ministry, the
ROCAF was active during the tenure of the
ROC on
Mainland China. In this period, various airplanes were purchased and deployed by warlords in their struggle for power until nominal
Chinese reunification in 1928. In
February 1932, US
Reserve Lt.
Robert McCawley
Short, who was transporting armed
Chinese aircraft, shot down an
IJN aircraft on
February 19, 1932 and downed another on
February 22 before he was killed (he was posthumously raised to the rank of
Colonel in the
Chinese Air Service).
During the
Second Sino-Japanese War (
1937–
1945), the ROCAF participated in attacks on
Japanese warships on the eastern front and along the
Yangtze river including support for the
Battle of Shanghai in 1937.
The Chinese frontline fighter aircraft initially were mainly the
Curtiss Hawk II and
III and the Boeing P-26model 281, and engaged Japanese fighters in many major air battles beginning on August 14, 1937, when
Imperial Japanese Navy warplanes raided Chienchiao airbase; "814" has thus become known as "
Air Force Day". Chinese
Boeing P-26/281 fighters engaged Japanese
Mitsubishi A5M fighters in what is among the world's first aerial dogfighting between all-metal monoplane fighter aircraft. A unique mission in
April 1938 saw two Chinese
B-10 bombers fly a mission over
Japan, but dropping only propaganda leaflets over the
Japanese cities of
Nagasaki andSaga. It was a war of attrition for the Chinese pilots, as many of their most experienced ace fighter pilots, such as
Lieutenant Liu Tsui-Kang and Colonel
Kao Chih-Hang were lost early in the war
.
In the latter-half of the
Sino-Japanese War, part of
World War II, the ROCAF was augmented by a volunteer group of
American pilots (the
Flying Tigers) in
1941.[5]Throughout the war, the ROCAF was involved in attacks on Japanese air and ground forces in the
Chinese theatre.
ROCAF
General HQ was established in June 1946. From 1946 to 1948, during the
Chinese Civil War, the ROCAF participated in combat against the
People's
Liberation Armyengaging in air-to-air combat on at least eleven occasions in the areas surrounding theTaiwan Strait. The ROCAF reportedly enjoyed a 31:1 kill ratio against the
PLA.
GHQ was evacuated to
Taiwan along with the rest of the ROC
Government in
April 1949 following the Communist victory in the Chinese Civil War. The ROCAF assisted in halting the PLA advance at the
Battle of Kuningtou on Kinmenthe same year.
The ROCAF regularly patrolled the
Taiwan Straits and fought many engagements with its Communist counterpart (the
PLAAF). The ROCAF received second hand equipment from the US at that time, such as the
F-86 Sabrejets,
F-100 and
F-104.
During the
Cold War, the ROCAF was involved in combat air patrols over the
Taiwan Strait and engaged the PLAAF and PLAN-AF on several occasions. The ROCAF was also the testbed of American technology at this time. The first successful kill scored by an air-to-air missile was accomplished by an ROCAF
F-86 Sabrejet with then experimental
AIM-9 Sidewinder. ROCAF pilots also flew
U-2 recon overflights of the
PRC during this time with assistance from the
USAF. Known as theBlack Cat Squadron they flew a total of
220 missions, with 102 missions over mainland
China, losing 5 planes. All five were shot down by
SA-2 surface-to-air missiles, the same type of surface-to-air missile that shot down
Gary Powers over the
USSR in 1960. The 34th "
Black Bat Squadron" flew low level missions into China as part of its mapping PRC growing air defense networks, conducting
ESM and
ECM missions, inserting agents behind enemy lines, and air drop resupply missions.
Since
November 1967, the ROC secretly operated a cargo transport detachment to assist the US and the
ROV. It was based on existing formation of the 34th squadron of ROC Air force.
The unit's strength included two cargo aircraft, seven flight officers and two mechanics, even though a higher number of military personnel was involved through rotation. It was tasked with air transportation, airdrop and electronic reconnaissance. Some 25 members of the unit were killed, among them 17 pilots and co-pilots, and three aircraft were lost. Other ROC involvement in
Vietnam included a secret listening station, special reconnaissance and raiding squads, military advisers and civilian airline operations (which cost a further two aircraft due to
Vietnamese individually operated AA missiles).
- published: 16 Jun 2016
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