Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
history/military

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Royal Saudi Air Force

Air warfare branch of Saudi Arabia's military


Air warfare branch of Saudi Arabia's military

FieldValue
unit_nameRoyal Saudi Air Force
native_nameالقوات الجوية الملكية السعودية
image{{ubl
captionEmblem and logo of the Royal Saudi Air Force
start_date{{plainlist
* {{start date and age1916dfyes}} — *de facto*
* {{start date and age1921dfyes}} — official
* {{start date and age19521116dfyes}} — current form
country{{plainlist
typeAir force
roleAerial warfare
size30,000 personnel
1,088 total aircraft
command_structure[[File:Saudi Armed Forces Flag.svg23x17pxborderalt=link=]] Saudi Arabian Armed Forces
nicknameSaudi Falcons
mottoالله أكبر; *Allah Akbar* (God is the greatest)
battles* Arab Revolt
* Yemeni Civil War<ref>{{cite newsurlhttps://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091105/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_yemen_saudititle=Saudis launches offensive against Yemen rebelsagency=Associated Pressarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091106150040/http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091105/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_yemen_saudidate=5 November 2009archive-date=6 November 2009access-date=26 March 2017 }}
website
<!-- Commanders -->commander1Royal Standard of Saudi Arabia.svg King Salman
commander1_labelCommander-in-chief
commander2Chief of General Staff flag of the Saudi Armed Forces.svg Air Chief Marshal Fayyadh Al-Ruwaili
commander2_labelChairman of the General Staff
commander3Flag the Saudi Arabia Defense Minister.png Khalid bin Salman
commander3_labelMinister of Defense
commander4Flag of the Royal Saudi Air Force (Seal).svg Lieutenant General Turki bin Bandar
commander4_labelCommander of Royal Air Force
notable_commanders
identification_symbol[[File:Flag of the Royal Saudi Air Force (Seal).svg145px]]
identification_symbol_labelFlag
identification_symbol_2[[File:Roundel of Saudi Arabia.svg80px]]
identification_symbol_2_labelRoundel
identification_symbol_3[[File:Roundel of Saudi Arabia – Low Visibility.svg80px]]
identification_symbol_3_labelLow Visibility roundel
aircraft_electronicE-3 Sentry, Saab 2000 AEW&C
aircraft_fighterPanavia Tornado, Eurofighter Typhoon, F-15C/D, F-15S/SA
aircraft_helicopterBell 412, AS532, UH-60
aircraft_reconPanavia Tornado, King Air 350
aircraft_trainerPilatus PC-21A, PAC MFI-395, Cirrus SR22, BAE Hawk
aircraft_transportC-130H, C-130J, Airbus A330 MRTT

| [[File:Royal Saudi Air Force embelm.svg|frameless]] | [[File:Royal Saudi Air Force Emblem.png|frameless]]

  • de facto
  • — official
  • — current form
  • [[File:Flag of Hejaz (1917).svg|20px]] Kingdom of Hejaz (1916–1925)
  • [[File:Flag of the Kingdom of Hejaz and Nejd.svg|20px]] Kingdom of Hejaz and Nejd (1926–1932)
  • [[File:Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg|20px]] Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (1932–present) }} 1,088 total aircraft
  • Hejaz–Nejd War
  • Al-Wadiah War
  • Action of 5 June 1984
  • Gulf War
  • Syrian Civil War
  • Houthi–Saudi Arabian conflict
  • War against ISIS
  • Yemeni Civil War
  • 2025–2026 Southern Yemen campaign

The Royal Saudi Air Force (RSAF; ) is the air warfare branch of the Saudi Arabian Armed Forces, formed in 1916 during World War I.

The Royal Saudi Air Force currently has wings, squadrons, and a special forces unit dedicated to combat search and rescue. It has developed from a largely defensive military force into one with an advanced offensive capability, beginning in the 1990s with the acquisition of laser-guided bombs and unguided bombs.

The backbone of the RSAF is the F-15 family, including the advanced F-15SA variant; it maintains the second largest fleet of F-15 Eagles after the U.S. Air Force. The RSAF also operates the Eurofighter Typhoon, acquired under the Al-Salam agreement with BAE Systems. Many earlier aircraft were delivered under the Al-Yamamah contracts with British Aerospace (now BAE Systems).

History

Following a contract with the British government, which was concluded in 1937, a military airstrip at Jeddah was established in 1939. The military airstrip was where the Air Force was stationed. In 1949, a group of aviation students were sent to study in England, after completing training at Al-Houba. By 1950, a second group of students were sent. The Air Force was re-organized in 1950 and began to receive American assistance from 1952 including the use of King Abdulaziz Air Base by the United States Air Force. In 1951, the group of aviation students returned to form the Royal Saudi Air Force. On November 5, 1952, the Air Force’s flag was raised at a military hangar in Jeddah Airport, which was attended by Prince Mishaal bin Abdulaziz, Minister of Defense and Aviation at the time. Shortly afterwards, Air Force schools begun opening around the kingdom. Early aircraft used by the RSAF included the Caproni Ca.100, Albatros D.III, Armstrong Whitworth F.K.8, Farman MF.11 Airco DH.9, dH 82 Tiger Moth, Westland Wapiti, Avro Anson, Douglas C-47, and the Douglas A-26 Invader. In 1957, the Royal Saudi Air Force begun major developments, including the establishments of 5 Squadrons, all based at Jeddah Airport. The transportation squadron was equipped with Douglas C-54 Skymasters and Fokker S-13s. The No.2 Squadron was equipped with Douglas B-26 Invaders and the No.5 Squadron was equipped with 20 De Havilland Vampires.

As part of the Magic Carpet arms deal between the United Kingdom and Saudi Arabia, four single-seat Hawker Hunter F.6s and two Hunter T.7s were ordered from Hawker in 1966. The aircraft were delivered to No. 6 Squadron at Khamis Mushayt Airbase in May 1966. Although the Hunters were operational, following attacks on Saudi Arabia by the Egyptian Air Force they were not a success as interceptors as they lacked any ground control but were used for ground attack. One single-seat aircraft was lost in 1967 and the remaining aircraft were presented to Jordan in 1968.

The Saudi forces are equipped with mainly western equipment. Main suppliers to the RSAF are companies based in the United Kingdom and the United States. Both the UK and the US are involved in training programs conducted in Saudi Arabia.

During the 1980s and 1990s, the armed forces of Saudi Arabia were relatively small by Middle Eastern standards. Its strength however was derived from advanced technology. The backbone of the strike / ground attack force is formed by ca 70 Tornados (a second batch of 48 Tornado IDS were ordered in 1993 under the Al-Yamamah II program), and 72 F-15S aircraft delivered from the mid-1990s that operate beside the remnants of more than 120 F-15C/D aircraft delivered starting in 1981. Pilot training is executed on the Pilatus PC-21 and BAE Systems Hawk. The C-130 Hercules is the mainstay of the transport fleet and is assisted by CN-235s and Beechcraft Super King Air light transports. Reconnaissance is performed by Tornadoes and F-15s equipped with the DJRP electro-optical reconnaissance pod. The Boeing E-3A is the Airborne Early Warning platform operated by No. 18 Squadron RSAF.

The VIP support fleet consists of a wide variety of civil registered aircraft such as the Airbus A330, Airbus A320 family, 737 and 747, Lockheed Tri-Stars, MD11s and G1159A as well as Lockheed L-100-30. The HZ- prefix used in the civilian registrations of these aircraft derived from the former name of the territory (Hejaz).

From 1989 to 1991 three Lockheed C-130 Hercules of the RSAF were destroyed in accidents.

The September 1991 issue of Air Forces Monthly lists Nos 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 (Tornado IDS), 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 21, 22, 29 Squadron (Dhahran with Tornado ADVs); 34, 37, 42, and 66 Squadrons.

Purchases during the 2000s

SAF Roundel on the side of a Lightning Aircraft

The Al-Yamamah contract was controversial because of the alleged bribes associated with its award. Nonetheless, the RSAF announced its intention to purchase the Typhoon from BAE Systems in December 2005. On 18 August 2006, a memorandum of understanding was signed for 72 aircraft in a GB£6–10 billion deal. The Ef2000 was part of a reveloutinary cross program including France, Spain, and Germany. In the end France left the building of the Ef2000 and later built the Rafel. Following this order, the investigation of the Al-Yamamah contract was suppressed by the British prime minister Tony Blair in December 2006, citing "strategic interests" of the UK. On 17 September 2007 Saudi Arabia announced it had signed a £4.4bn deal with BAE Systems for 72 Typhoons.

On 29 December 2011, the United States signed a $29.4 billion deal to sell 84 F-15s in the SA (Saudi Advanced) configuration. The sale includes upgrades for the older F-15s up to the SA standard and related equipment and services.

On 23 May 2012, the British defence firm BAE Systems agreed to sell 22 BAE Systems Hawk advanced jet trainer aircraft to the Royal Saudi Air Force for a total of £1.9 billion ($3 billion). The deal also included simulators, ground and training equipment and spares. In April 2013, BAE Systems delivered the first two new Typhoons of 24 to Saudi Arabia.

In 2013, the USAF tendered an offer for security services to protect the Saudi air force from cyberwarfare attacks.

In March 2021, RSAF started a joint military exercise, that will last until April 10, with the US and Pakistani Air Forces that will help in exchanging experiences and expertise.

Structure

Wings

As of 2025, the RSAF is divided into multiple wings that are dispersed across nine air bases:

EmblemWingLocationSquadronsNotesActive
RSAF Wing 1King Faisal Air AcademyNo. 8 Squadron RSAF
No. 9 Squadron RSAF
No. 22 Squadron RSAF
No. 77 Squadron RSAFtitle=Royal Saudi Air Forceurl=https://www.scramble.nl/planning/orbats/saudi-arabia/royal-saudi-air-force#OERY368website=Scrambleaccess-date=20 December 2025}}
RSAF Wing 2King Fahd Air Base, Taif, Mecca ProvinceNo. 3 Squadron RSAF
No. 10 Squadron RSAF
No. 80 Squadron RSAF
RSAF Wing 3King Abdulaziz Air Base, Dhahran, Eastern ProvinceNo. 13 Squadron RSAF
RSAF Wing 4Prince Sultan Air Base, Al-Kharj, Riyadh ProvinceNo. 23 Squadron RSAF
No. 24 Squadron RSAF
No. 32 Squadron RSAF
RSAF Wing 5King Khalid Air Base, Khamis Mushait, Asir ProvinceNo. 6 Squadron RSAF
No. 55 Squadron RSAF
No. 66 Squadron RSAF
No. 99 Squadron RSAF
RSAF Wing 6Prince Sultan Air Base, Al-Kharj, Riyadh ProvinceNo. 18 Squadron RSAF
No. 19 Squadron RSAF
No. 71 Squadron RSAF
RSAF Wing 7King Faisal Air Base, Tabuk, Tabuk ProvinceNo. 2 Squadron RSAF
No. 25 Squadron RSAF
No. 29 Squadron RSAF
No. 88 Squadron RSAF
RSAF Wing 8King Abdullah Air Base, Jeddah, Mecca ProvinceNo. 4 Squadron RSAF
No. 16 Squadron RSAF
No. 20 Squadron RSAF
RSAF Wing 9King Fahd Air Base, Taif, Mecca ProvinceNo. 14 Squadron RSAF
No. 33 Squadron RSAF
No. 44 Squadron RSAF
RSAF Wing 10King Fahd Air Base, Taif, Mecca ProvinceNo. 5 Squadron RSAF
No. 34 Squadron RSAF
No. 94 Squadron RSAF
RSAF Wing 11King Abdulaziz Air Base, Dhahran, Eastern ProvinceNo. 7 Squadron RSAF
No. 35 Squadron RSAF
No. 75 Squadron RSAF
No. 83 Squadron RSAF
Fighter Weapons School
RSAF Wing 12King Khalid Air Base, Khamis Mushait, Asir ProvinceNo. 100 Squadron RSAF
No. 201 Squadron RSAF
No. 202 Squadron RSAF
No. 203 Squadron RSAF
No. 204 Squadron RSAF
RSAF Wing 13
RSAF Wing 14
RSAF Wing 15King Saud Air Base, Hafar al-Batin, Eastern ProvinceNo. 12 Squadron RSAF
No. 17 Squadron RSAF
No. 92 Squadron RSAF
RSAF Wing 16Al-Jouf Air Base, Sakaka, Al-Jouf ProvinceNo. 15 Squadron RSAF

Squadrons

Saudi F-15 flying over the training lanes
  • 1 Squadron (Royal Flight)
  • 2 Squadron (F-15C/D)
  • 3 Squadron (Eurofighter Typhoon F.2/T.3)
  • 4 Squadron (C-130H)
  • 5 Squadron (F-15C/D)
  • 6 Squadron (F-15S/SA)
  • 7 Squadron (Tornado IDS)
  • 8 Squadron (Cirrus SR22T)
  • 9 Squadron (PC-21)
  • 10 Squadron (Eurofighter Typhoon F.2/T.3)
  • 12 Squadron (Bell 212)
  • 13 Squadron (F-15C/D)
  • 14 Squadron (Bell 212/412EP)
  • 15 Squadron (F-15SA)
  • 16 Squadron (C-130H/C-130H-30)
  • 17 Squadron (Operational Conversion Unit)
  • 18 Squadron (E-3A)
  • 19 Squadron (Beech 350ER-ISR & RE-3A/B)
  • 20 Squadron (C-130H)
  • 21 Squadron (BAE Hawk 165)
  • 22 Squadron (PC-21)
  • 23 Squadron (KE-3A)
  • 24 Squadron (A330-203/243 MRTT)
  • 25 Squadron (Bell 412)
  • 29 Squadron (F-15SA)
  • 32 Squadron (KC-130H/J)
  • 33 Squadron (Royal Medical Flight)
  • 34 Squadron (F-15C/D)
  • 35 Squadron (Jetstream)
  • 37 Squadron (BAE Hawk 65)
  • 44 Squadron (Bell 412)
  • 50 Squadron (Beech 350i)
  • 55 Squadron (F-15SA)
  • 60 Squadron (Saab 2000AEW&C)
  • 75 Squadron (Tornado IDS)
  • 77 Squadron (PC-21)
  • 79 Squadron (BAE Hawk 165)
  • 80 Squadron (Eurofighter Typhoon F.2)
  • 83 Squadron (Tornado IDS)
  • 88 Squadron (BAE Hawk 65/A)
  • 92 Squadron (F-15S/SA)
  • 99 Squadron (AS532M Cougar)
  • 202 Squadron (CH-4B UAV)
  • 203 Squadron (CH-4B UAV) Other Squadrons:
  • 11 Squadron (OUT OF SERVICE)
  • 30 Squadron (OUT OF SERVICE) (Helicopters)
  • 41 Squadron (OUT OF SERVICE) (King Air 350 Aerial Reconnaissance)
  • 42 Squadron (OUT OF SERVICE) (F-15C and F-15D)
  • 66 Squadron (OUT OF SERVICE) (Tornado IDS)

Inventory

Malta International
A Saudi Air Force C-130H departing [[East Midlands
A Boeing KE-3A of the Royal Saudi Air Force
AircraftOriginTypeVariantIn serviceNotesCombat aircraftAWACSAerial refuelingTransportHelicoptersTrainer aircraft
Eurofighter TyphoonItaly / UK / Germany / Spainmultirolelast =first =url= https://www.flightglobal.com/download?ac=90688title = World Air Forces 2023newspaper = Flight Globalpublisher= Flightglobal Insightyear= 2022doi =access-date= 23 November 2022archive-date= 7 December 2022archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20221207224755/https://www.flightglobal.com/download?ac=90688url-status= live}}
Panavia TornadoItaly / UK / GermanymultiroleIDS81
F-15 EagleUnited Statesair superiority / conversion trainerF-15C/D211
F-15E Strike EagleUnited Statesstrike fighterF-15SR
F-15EX Eagle IIUnited Statesstrike fighterF-15SA
Boeing E-3United StatesAEWE/RE-3A6one used for SIGINT / ELINT missions
Saab 2000SwedenAEW&C2000 AEW&C2
Boeing KC-707United Statesaerial refuelingKE-3A7
KC-130 HerculesUnited Statestanker / transportKC-130H7
Airbus A330 MRTTSpaintanker / transportKC-30A6
KC-130 Super HerculesUnited Statesaerial refuelingKC-130J2
Gulfstream IVUnited StatesVIP transport2
BAE JetstreamUnited KingdomVIP transport311
Cessna Citation IIUnited StatesVIP transportBravo4
Super King AirUnited Statestransport350155 used for reconnaissance – 4 on order
C-130 HerculesUnited Statestactical airlifterC-130H33
Bell 212United Statesutilityyear=2017title=World Air forces 2004 pg. 83url=https://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/2004/2004-09%20-%202376.htmlurl-status=livearchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190403023214/https://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/2004/2004-09archive-date=3 April 2019accessdate=20 June 2017publisher=Flightglobal Insightdoi=}}
Bell 412United Statesutility16
Sikorsky UH-60United StatesutilityUH-60L2
Eurocopter AS332Franceutility / SAR133 on order
BAE HawkUnited Kingdomadvanced trainer65A/1658110 on order
Pilatus PC-21Switzerlandadvanced trainer55
Cirrus SR22United Stateslight trainer25
PAC MFI-17 MushshakPakistanprimary trainer20

Retired

Previous aircraft operated included the F-86F Sabre, dH 100 Vampire FB.52, BAC Strikemaster Mk 80, DHC-1 Chipmunk Mk 10, C-54A Skymaster, C-123B Provider, T-6A Texan, T-33A Shooting Star, Cessna 310, O-1 Bird Dog, T-35A Buckaroo, T-34A Mentor, OH-58A Kiowa, T-28A Trojan, F-5 Tiger II, Lockheed JetStar, dH Comet 4C (VIP transport), BAe 146, Alouette III, BAC Lightning

Drones

Saudi Arabia is one of the largest countries that owns unmanned aerial vehicles, including attack, surveillance, and reconnaissance. In 2012, Saudi Arabia purchased 50 Italian Selex Galileo Falco drones. In 2014, Saudi Arabia signed a contract with China to purchase Wing Loong drones, and Saudi Arabia has more to receive so far.

In April 2013, Saudi Arabia announced its desire to buy 6 Turkish TAI Anka drones, however these efforts fell through.

Saudi Arabia has pursued projects to manufacture national drones, the first of which was in 2012, when Saudi Arabia announced a program to manufacture drones in the King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology. The project was called Saqr, and 3 new models of the drone have been introduced. Saudi Arabia also announced a new drone called Samoom, the Saudi crown prince showcased the new drone to the Egyptian President Abdul-Fattah As-Sisi during which he showed significant interest in it.

Saudi Arabia also announced in 2021 that it will start producing a high capability drone called SkyGuard. It also established a laboratory for robotic vehicle research at the Prince Sultan Advanced Technology Research Institute at King Saud University. The laboratory aims to build and transfer technology in the field of smart vehicles of all kinds, such as unmanned aircraft, autonomous land vehicles, and others. The laboratory has manufactured many unmanned aircraft, and the aircraft are still undergoing research and development.

Saudi Arabia has started technology transfer projects and joint ventures with countries to manufacture drones. The General organization for Military Industries obtained a license to manufacture the German drone project Luna, manufacturing hundreds of them for the Saudi armed forces. Saudi Arabia also entered a joint venture with South Africa to manufacture the Seeker 400 UCAV.

In 2023, Saudi Arabia and Baykar has signed a contract for AKINCI UCAV export. The amount was not declared but hinted that it is the biggest export at once. SSB President Görgün, who made a statement about the contract in question, said, “The largest Turkish defence industry export, made at once, is over three billion dollars.”

Commanders

Main article: Commander of Royal Air Force (Saudi Arabia)

Early Commanders

No.RankNameTermRef.
1CaptainAbdullah al-Mandili
2MajorRashid al-Saleh
3Major generalIbrahim al-Tassan1950–1963

Commanders of the Air Force (1963–1972)

No.RankNameTermRef.
1Lieutenant generalAsaad Abdulaziz Al-Zuhair1963–1966
2Major generalHashim bin Said Hashim1966–1972

Commanders of the Royal Saudi Air Force (1972–present)

No.RankNameTermRef.
1Lieutenant generalAsaad Abdulaziz Al-Zuhair1972–1979
2Lieutenant generalMohammed Sabri Suleiman1980–1984
3Lieutenant generalAbdullah bin Abdulaziz al-Hamdan1984–1987
4Lieutenant generalAhmed Ibrahim Behery1987–March 1996
5Lieutenant generalAbdulaziz bin Mohammad Al-HenadiMarch 1996 – 4 April 2004
6Lieutenant generalAbdulrahman Al-Faisal4 April 2004 – 16 June 2010
7Lieutenant generalMohammed Al-Ayesh16 June 2010 – 10 May 2013
8Lieutenant generalFayyadh Al-Ruwaili10 May 2013 – 14 May 2014
9Lieutenant generalMuhammad Al-Shaalan14 May 2014 – 10 June 2015
10Major generalMohammed Al-Otaibi10 June 2015 – 26 February 2018
11Lieutenant generalTurki bin Bandar26 February 2018 – present

References

References

  1. David Fromkin. (2010). "A Peace to End All Peace: The Fall of the Ottoman Empire and the Creation of the Modern Middle East". Macmillan.
  2. (February 13, 2024). "The Military Balance 2024". Routledge.
  3. (5 November 2009). "Saudis launches offensive against Yemen rebels".
  4. (1993). "Two Kings in Arabia: Letters from Jeddah, 1923-5 and 1936-9". Ithaca Press.
  5. al-Mutawiya, Khaled. (2015). "مقاتلة سعودية من نوع ترنادو".
  6. "Year 1372 AH".
  7. "Defenders of the Faithful: Royal Saudi Air Force," Air Forces Monthly, September 1991, 23.
  8. (22 December 2005). "Saudi Arabia orders Eurofighter Typhoons in up to 10 bln stg package - report - Forbes.com".
  9. (17 September 2007). "Business | Saudis buy Eurofighters from UK". BBC News.
  10. Wolf, Jim. (29 December 2011). "U.S. Saudi fighter jet sale to help offset Iran". Reuters.
  11. (23 May 2012). "BAE Systems and Saudi Arabia sign £1.9bn Hawk jet deal – BBC News". BBC News.
  12. Reed, John. (18 March 2013). "The Saudi air force wants to protect its newest planes from cyber attack".
  13. (2021-03-31). "Saudi Air Force begins joint exercise with US and Pakistani forces".
  14. "Royal Saudi Air Force".
  15. (February 2016). "[[AirForces Monthly]]". [[Key Publishing.
  16. (April 2016). "[[AirForces Monthly]]". [[Key Publishing.
  17. (August 2015). "[[AirForces Monthly]]". [[Key Publishing.
  18. (2022). "World Air Forces 2023". Flightglobal Insight.
  19. "First Saudi F-15SR conversion flies {{!}} Times Aerospace".
  20. (2017). "World Air forces 2004 pg. 83". Flightglobal Insight.
  21. (1994). "World Air forces 1995 pg. 57". Flightglobal Insight.
  22. "WAF 1987 pg. 91". flightglobal.com.
  23. (2023-07-25). "Saudi Arabia Will Pay More than 3 Billion Dollars for AKINCI {{!}} TURDEF".
  24. (5 April 2004). "King Fahd appoints Commander of Air Force – SAMIRAD". Saudinf.com.
  25. Arabian Aerospace, 25 June 2015.
  26. "Saudi Lt-General Mohammad Al-Shaalan, new RSAF Commander".
  27. O'Connor, Tom (26 February 2018). ''Newsweek''.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Royal Saudi Air Force — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report