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Last modified: 2021-08-26 by klaus-michael schneider
Keywords: colombia | air force | roundel | fin flash |
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image by Jaume Ollé, 5 November 2001
See also:
The Colombian Air Force's full organizational chart (from the Air Force's
official website) is located
here.
The Colombian Air Force's operational units (Air Commands, Air Groups and
Schools) are seen here:
Wikipedia and
www.fac.mil.co)
On the operational level, the Air Force is divided into Comandos Aéreos (Air
Commands), which in turn have several Grupos Aéreos (Air Groups) and these are
divided into Escuadrones (Squadrons). There are also several independent Air
Groups as well, which will most certainly turn into Air Commands when they reach
the proper capacity and infrastructure needed both in manpower and airpower.
These Air Commands and Air Groups are as follows:
- Comando Aéreo de Combate No. 1 (CACOM 1) "CT. Germán Olano Moreno": official
website,
flag,
CoA;
- Comando Aéreo de Combate No. 2 (CACOM 2) "CT. Luis Fernando Gómez Niño":
official website, no flag reported on
official website,
CoA;
- Comando Aéreo de Combate No. 3 (CACOM 3) "MG. Alberto Pauwels Rodríguez":
official website, no flag reported on
official website,
CoA;
- Comando Aéreo de Combate No. 4 (CACOM 4) "TC. Luis Francisco Pinto Parra":
official website:, no flag reported on
official website,
CoA;
- Comando Aéreo de Combate No. 5 (CACOM 5) "GR. Arturo Lema Posada": official
website, no flag reported on official
website, CoA;
- Comando Aéreo de Combate No. 6 (CACOM 6) "CT. Ernesto Esguerra Cubides":
official website, no flag reported
on official website,
CoA;
- Comando Aéreo de Transporte Militar (CATAM) "BG. Camilo Daza Álvarez":
official website,
flag (source:
http://www.catam.mil.co/index.php?idcategoria=11898 ),
CoA;
- Comando Aéreo de Mantenimiento (CAMAN) "MY. Justino Mariño Cuesto": official
website;
- Grupo Aéreo del Amazonas (GAAMA): no official website yet;
- Grupo Aéreo del Casanare (GACAS): official
website, no flag
reported on official website, no CoA reported on official website;
- Grupo Aéreo del Caribe (GACAR) "TC. Benjamín Méndez Rey": official
website,
flag (source:
http://www.gacar.mil.co/index.php?idcategoria=1555 ),
CoA;
- Grupo Aéreo del Oriente (GAORI) "CR. Luis Arturo Rodríguez Meneses" (will soon
become CACOM 7): official website, no
flag reported on official website,
CoA.
It is important to notice that these Air Commands were first called Comando
Aéreo de Apoyo Táctico (CAATA), (Air Tactical Support Command)
Regarding the schools, these are:
- Escuela Militar de Aviación (EMAVI) "Marco Fidel Suárez": official
website, no flag
reported on official website,
CoA;
- Escuela de Suboficiales FAC (ESUFA) "CT. Andrés Maria Díaz Díaz": official
website,
flag,
CoA;
- Instituto Militar Aeronáutico (IMA) "CT. José Edmundo Sandoval": official
website,
flag,
CoA.
Esteban Rivera, 26 September 2010
Last February 8, 2013, a new
Combat Air Command was set up with its respective
flag. A picture gallery of this activation ceremony can be seen
here.
Esteban Rivera, 11 February 2013
The pattern followed by these Units' Standards (flags) is the plain Air Force flag with the respective unit's CoA, as seen here:
located by Esteban Rivera, 26 September 2010
GACAR Standard, taken from:
http://www.gacar.mil.co/recursos_user/imagenes//unidades/gacar/2010/DSC_7705.JPG
Also, each unit has its own War Flag, which is the Colombian tricolor, plus the
name of the unit on the lower red fringe surrounding the CoA , as seen here:
located by Esteban Rivera, 26 September 2010
CACOM War Flag, taken from:
http://i.esmas.com/image/0/000/006/083/ALVAROURIBE-P.jpg
As mentioned before, an Air Command has several Air Groups. These Air Groups
have in turn their own flags, as seen in this example:
located by Esteban Rivera, 26 September 2010
Standard of GRUCO-41, taken from
http://www.cacom4.mil.co/index.php?idcategoria=3015.
The CACOM-4 has an Air
Group, called Grupo de Combate (Combat Group) 41 (GRUCO-41), and this is its
Standard). The GRUCO-41 has an eagle as its insignia, seen
here.
Esteban Rivera, 26 September 2010
I located the Air Force flag
at <elpibe.urc.net.co>.
Esteban Rivera , 19 May 2000
The flag with the crest and white background seems to be the
official one. They probably changed it since I remember
seeing the same coat of arms but on a different background (more
like a light blue one). In every TV appearance of the Air Force
flag, I have always seen that flag.
Esteban Rivera, 30 May 2000
Photo of the flag at <www.fac.mil.co/simbolos>,
arms at <www.fac.mil.co>.
Jaume Ollé, 24 November 2001
A government decree no. 126 of 31 December 1919 to form
aviation element of Army was the first step for the
establishement of Fuerza Aérea Colombiana. On 4 April 1922
Aviacion Militar was formed and it was renamed in 1943 Fuerza
Aérea Nacional and renamrd again in 1947 to its current name.
Homepage at <www.fac.mil.co>
.
Dov Gutterman, 14 June 2004
The FAC flag was established by Resolution on May 24, 1971.
Source: <www.fac.mil.co>.
E. R., 7 July 2008
image
located by Esteban Rivera, 08 March 2016
Since all official flags have the
tricolor plus coat of arms as their template,
here's an actual picture of the Colombian Air Force War Flag
showing the same design pattern and below the initials FAC.
Image taken at an Air Force Base on March 5, 2016.
Esteban Rivera, 08 March 2016
image by Jaume Ollé, 5 November 2001
Light blue, the national flag in the canton, the air force
roundel (8 points star) in the fly.
Source: Christian Fogd Pedersen: Moussault's lexicon
van vlaggen en wapens (Alverdens flag i farver), 1980 [ped80].
Mark Sensen, 22 June 1997
Air Force ensign: Light blue field with national flag in
canton and roundel (5 points star) at lower fly
Source: Album des Pavillons (1995) [pay].
Ivan Sache, 12 August 1999
I have two books on roundels, both of which say that the star
has had five points since the nineteen-fifties. One says that
before that time the star had ten points
John Ayer, 14 September 1999
From <www.geocities.com/Pentagon/7978/facres/simbolos.htm>:
ENSIGN (Roundel): This is the ensign that the Colombian Air Force
uses since 1950 in all and each one of its aircraft which goes by
the following pattern: On top of the left side (wing), below the
right side (wing) and on the tail, one on each side. In the
middles it has a five-pointed white star and on its borders is
the national tricolor inverted.
Esteban Rivera, 30 May 2000
In Znamierowski's book [zna99]
at p. 85: the text states: "...and Colombia have the air
force emblem in the centre", but the picture shows the air
force flag with the roundel, not an air force emblem
Marcus Schmoger, 16 July 2000
The image is probably of the old flag at top and the text is
about the Air Force New Flag
Dov Gutterman, 17 July 2000
The Album 1995 issue [pay] show
another flag wich is omitted from Album 2000 [pay00], but I think only due to the
editorial policy and not because the flag is obsolete. That is
the Air Force Ensign, of the clasical pattern - light blue with
the national flag in canton and the roundel in fly. I think that
this flag is not obsolete indicated, and that the Air Force flag
of different design does not replace it - this other flag serve
entirely different function - it is the flag of the Air Force as
a branch of the defence forces, in the same way as there are
similar flags for other branches.
eljko Heimer, 23 May 2001
image by Jaume Ollé, 5 November 2001
Air Force (FAC)
image by Carlos Thompson, 2 June 2003
In the front dor of the Military Hospital, in Bogota,
Colombia, there are three flags in plain color: dark blue, light
blue and red. I supose that the flags are just versions without
the coat of arms, of the flags of the Army (EJC), Navy (ARC) and
Air Force (FAC).
Carlos Thompson, 2 June 2003
António Martins wrote: "These seem to follow the
british pattern...". Given that Colombia military airfield
flag follows a British pattern: sky blue flag with national flag
in the canton and roundel in the fly; and that Britain had a lot
of influence in Latin America post independence, that would be a
fair guess.
Carlos Thompson, 3 June 2003
image by Jaume Ollé and Eugene Ipavec, 19
August 2008
Flag spotted on 6 June 2008 at Eldorado Airport, Bogota. It
was hanged on an hangar and I believe that it belongs to one of
two Air Force units: CAMAN or CATAM that are located in this
airport.
E.R., 19 August 2008
image by Jaume Ollé, 5 November 2001
This is the Colombian Air Force's Crest. It reads "Sic
Itur Ad Astra", which means "Like this you go to the
stars".
Esteban Rivera , 19 May 2000
From <www.geocities.com/Pentagon/7978/facres/simbolos.htm>:
THE EAGLE OF GULES: She was made the symbol of aviation
itself. As the queen of all birds she is the symbol of the
empire that the AIR ARM exerts over Colombian skies, winds and
storms; she is a living image of the power and freedom of our
fatherland. Her color is gules or blood and/or fire red, that war
or martyr heroes have; it speaks clearly about the transparence
and energy of love. It also shows the strength of the
spirit and and the ability to dread, primary virtues of those who
are part of the Colombian Air Force and incarnates in its blason
, manhood, victory, valor, ellegance and courage. The center of
the crest is in Azure (Turqueoise Blue) with an horizontal chief
that holds two sabre blades, meaning guard, truth, loyalty
and beautifulness. Its title, also in gold, says "SIC ITUR
AD ASTRA" which translates "Like this you reach the
heigths". The golden color symbolizes the "light
and commitment, the greatness and wisdom". This is, at a
glance, the formidable heraldry of the crest that was made into
the symbol of our institution. Its motto was taken from
Eneida de Virgilio in his book IX, Chapter V. The crest's origin
was from a contest promoted by the Colonel Arturo Lema Posada,
then commander of the military aviation and formalized by the
Decree No. 2963 of the 26th of December of 1944, being President
of the Republic Alfonso López Pumarejo and Minister of War
(Today Minister of Defense), General Domingo Espinel.
E. R., 30 May 2000
image by eljko Heimer, 23 May 2001
Alternate depiction:
image by
Eugene Ipavec, 14 June 2011
Low-visibility version
image by Eugene Ipavec, 13 December 2005
According to [pay00] -
Aircraft Marking - A note to the figure explains that the
national flag is painted on the fin as Fin Flash.
The marking is a roundel divided horizontally and lower part
again vertically in yellow, blue and red and in the center
covered with a disk divided horizontally in red, blue and yellow
(yellow covering the whole lower half), and over it in the middle
a white star. The star is a five-pointed star in Album 2000. In
Album 1995 the star is of eight points, and as far as I have
observed - ight-pointed star is preffered star shape throughout
the Colombian history - so I am inclined to believe that the
five-pointed star in Album 2000 might be an error. Other source
by hand is [zna99] with
eight-pointed star also.
eljko Heimer, 23 May 2001
According to Cochrane - military aircraft insignia [cos98], the star was changed to 5
points in 1953. Wheeler Aircraft Markings [whe86] also gives 5 points in 1986.
Armand du Payrat, 25 May 2001
A government decree no. 126 of 31 December 1919 to form
aviation element of Army was the first step for the
establishement of Fuerza Aérea Colombiana. On 4 April 1922
Aviacion Militar was formed and it was renamed in 1943 Fuerza
Aérea Nacional and renamrd again in 1947 to its current name.
Homepage at <www.fac.mil.co>
.
According to [cos98], since 1925
the FAC use its complicated roundel, and the only change was in
1953 when the star was changed to 5 points star and instead of a
roundel as fin flash, came rudder stripes. See: <www.skytamer.com>
(1925-1953) and <www.skytamer.com>
(post 1953). Jane's 1945 report 8 points star and national colors
as rudder stripes. [whe86] report
a 5 points star an a sqare fin flash. <www.aeroflight.co.uk>
also report 5 points. Photo at <www.airliners.net/240294>
show clearly a 5 points star as well <www.airliners.net/240293>
. Unfortunally, old photos are so unclesr and the star so small,
so I can't have a good one. We shall have to trust the books on
this. The rudder stripes are used on uncamoflagued planes. Combat
planes carry a small flag as fin flash (see <www.scramble.nl>).
Dov Gutterman, 14 June 2004
The low-visibility version differs somewhat in layout from the
regular roundel, too - the inner ring is a bit larger, and the
cental star noticeably smaller.
Source: photo at <www.fac.mil.co>,
reported by E.R.
Eugene Ipavec, 13 December 2005
There are several roundels used throughout the years, as seen on the FAC official website (All of the roundels that featured on this website and the explanation of them are extracted from the book: "75 Años en los Cielos Patrios", published by Editorial Margabby Ltd., First edition in 1994, by FAC Lt. Col. (r) Oscar Forero Racines):
First roundel (1920-1924)
image by Eugene Ipavec, 22 December 2009
Source:
http://www.fac.mil.co/?idcategoria=7990&facmil_2007=e11b77c1a71e91e26db6ca3aec4ce739
Second roundel (1924-1927)
image by Eugene Ipavec, 22 December 2009
Source:
http://www.fac.mil.co/?idcategoria=7992&facmil_2007=e11b77c1a71e91e26db6ca3aec4c
e739
Third roundel (1927-1953)
image by eljko Heimer, 23 May 2001
Third roundel (1927-1953) Alternate depiction:
image by
Eugene Ipavec, 14 June 2011
Third roundel. Established by Decree No. 289 of February 21,
1927 (1927-1953).
Source:
http://www.fac.mil.co/?idcategoria=7994&facmil_2007=e11b77c1a71e91e26db6ca3aec4ce739
Fourth roundel- 1953-present (above).
Source:
http://www.fac.mil.co/?idcategoria=7996&facmil_2007=e11b77c1a71e91e26db6ca3aec4ce739
Roundels are seen also on the FAC
official website
All of the previously mentioned roundels, its images featured on the website and
the text explanation of them is extracted from the folloiwng book:>
"75 Años en los Cielos Patrios", published by Editorial Margabby Ltd., First
edition in 1994, by FAC Lt. Col. (r) Oscar Forero Racines.
E.R., 7 July 2008 and 22 December 2009
Different versions of two roundels appear in this source. They differ from
Željko's existing gifs at
in that the star in the 1927-53
one has 9 rays, not 8, and both have a different division of red/blue in the
inner ring. They should not replace Željko's but supplement them, and should be
labeled "alternate depictions."
Eugene Ipavec, 14 June 2011
image by Jaume Ollé, 5 November 2001
Fuerza Aerea Colombiana uses a thiner vertion of the
national flag as its fin flash.
Source: B. C Wheeler, An Illustrated Guide to Aircraft
Marking (1986) [whe86].
Dov Gutterman , 8 October 1999
Flag
image by Eugene Ipavec, 10 August 2009
Coat of Arms
image by Eugene Ipavec, 10 August 2009
ASURFAC (Asociación de Suboficiales en Retiro de la Fuerza
Aérea Colombiana, Retired NCO's of the Colombian Air Force) is
an organization that has its own symbols. It consists of the
plain Air Force flag pattern with the Coat of Arms of the ASURFAC
on the middle.
E.R., 10 August 2009
The Acción Social FAC Nuestra Señora de Loreto (FAC Social
Action Our Lady of Loreto) is a non profit organization made up
of wives of Air Force Active and Retired Officers that work
voluntarily to support the families of the homes of the most in
need of the Air Force. It was established in 1972
The Lady of Loreto was chosen because it represents protection
for the houses and the families that live there
Sources: <www.fac.mil.co>,
<www.corazones.org>
and wikipedia
The Logo can be seen on the header of the website they have. The
flag is on a horizontal plain yellow background with the logo on
the middle, as seen in the pictures:
E.R., 10 December 2009
The Air Force Social Action "Our Lady of Loreto" was established in 1972.
Source:
https://www.fac.mil.co/?idcategoria=237
It has a new flag, the colors being the same, but with a new logo.
This picture taken on July 11, 2013
during the F-Air air show.
For additional information go to: Acción Social "Nuestra Señora de Loreto" (official
website)
Esteban Rivera, 21 December 2013
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