Polícia Aérea

Polícia Aérea
Air Police
Country Portugal
Allegiance Portuguese Air Force
Branch Military police
Type Air force police and special forces infantry
Role Defense of the assets, infrastructures, and the surrounding areas of the Air Force Bases
Part of Air Command (Portuguese Air Force)
Motto(s) Honoramus Principia
(Latin for We respect the principles)
Anniversaries 1955
Engagements Portuguese Overseas War (1961-1974)
War in Afghanistan (2001–present)

The Polícia Aérea (P.A., Portuguese for "Air Police") is the military police and ground combat special forces of the Portuguese Air Force. The Air Police has as its main symbol the Blue Beret with the Emblem of the Air Force.

Motto: Honuramus Principia

Missions

The Polícia Aérea has the following main missions, both in Portugal and abroad (namely in support to deployed air assets and units):

  1. Internal security and immediate defense of the Air Force facilities and sensitive areas;
  2. Ground based air defense;
  3. Internal policing of the units and other bodies of the Air Force;
  4. Order and security enforcement.

To fulfill these missions, the PA has to maintain combat capability, employing appropriate tactics, specific equipment and war dogs. It has to be able to act both in normal security conditions as in hostile environments created by acts of terrorism, sabotage or nuclear, biological and chemical threat.[1]

History

Polícia Aérea honor guard in the arriving of the U.S. Air Force Secretary at Lajes Air Base.

When created as an independent branch in 1952, the Portuguese Air Force had no military police or a permanent specialized security force to protect its bases. Initially and when need, the function of military police and security of the Air Force bases was entrusted to the National Republican Guard (gendarmerie). After 1957, the task was transferred to the Military Police of the Portuguese Army.

At the same time, some units of the Air Force created ad hoc police detachments, sometimes referred as Polícia da Aeronáutica (Aeronautics Police). One of the first of such detachments was the police corps created by the Lajes Air Base, on the May 31, 1955, made up of one officer, one sergeant and 32 airmen.

In the late 1950s, the Portuguese Air Force finally creates a permanent Polícia Aérea (PA, Air Police), establishing the police and close defense flights (EPDP, esquadrilhas de polícia e defesa próxima). Each air base should have one EPDP as part of its internal organization.

The PA force is greatly expanded after 1961, with the beginning of the Portuguese Colonial War and the need to defend the Air Force bases located in the theatres of operation of Angola, Portuguese Guinea and Mozambique. During this War, PA suffered more than 20 dead.

Initially, the EPDP flights were made up of Military Police personnel transferred from the Army to the Air Force. However, after 1963, the PA personnel started to be recruited directly by the Air Force, receiving a specific training in the Tancos Air Base.

In the late 1970s, following the reorganization of the Air Force bases, the former EPDP flights were replaced by the air police squadrons (EPA, esquadras de Polícia Aérea). Each EPA being made up of a headquarters, an operational flight and a support flight.

In 1981, the Corpo de Polícia Aérea (CPA, Air Police Corps) is created, headed by a Colonel or Lieutenant-Colonel, under the direct dependence of the General commanding officer of the Air Force Operational Command. This Corps groups all PA personnel and units under a single organization. The several PA units – although part of the CPA – continued to be integrated into the several Air Force bases organizations. The CPA would eventually be extinct in 1990.

During its history, the Air Police Corps were trained by Paratroopers, until it has is own personal. Air Police members, are often seen on civil and militar special police forces, and even the foreign legion.

Organization

The Polícia Aérea is an occupational speciality of the Portuguese Air Force, whose members are organized in mutually independent PA units, each one being subordinate to the command or base to which is assigned. At the present, no central PA organization exists.

PA field units

The standard PA field unit is the esquadra de polícia aérea (air police squadron), usually each Air Force base having one of such units assigned. Usually, the organization of an air police squadron is the following:

Special forces units

The Unidade de Protecção de Força (UPF, Force Protection Unit) is the special forces unit of the Portuguese Air Force, made up of Polícia Aérea members. UPF is charged with missions of force protection, VIP protection and combat search and rescue, as well as other possible classified missions.[2][3]

Disbanded in 2006 and also made up of PA elements, the Unidade de Resgate em Combate (RESCOM, Combat Rescue Unit) was the former special forces unit of the Portuguese Air Force.[3]

Recruitment and training

The candidates to the occupational specialty of Polícia Aérea receive a specific training at the Air Force Military and Technical Training Center located at Ota. Dependending on the prior qualifications of the candidate, this training lasts 30, 25 or 20 weeks. Officer candidates must hold a bachelor's degree as the minimum prior qualifications.

Uniform

The members of the Polícia Aérea wear the same uniforms of the rest of the members of the Portuguese Air Force, however with a blue beret instead of the standard side or peaked caps. In some occasions, a white brassard with the letters "PA" in blue is used. In the past, a blue helmet with a white stripe and white "PA" letters was used, but this uniform item has been discontinued.

Equipment

Condor and Hummer armoured vehicles used by the Polícia Aérea

Firearms

Vehicles

Anti-air artillery

References

  1. "PA - Polícia Aérea - 11º Ano" (in Portuguese). Centro de Recrutamento da Força Aérea. Retrieved 16 June 2014.
  2. "Núcleo da Proteção da Força" (in Portuguese). Portuguese Air Force. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
  3. 1 2 Miguel Machado (27 November 2009). "Afeganistão: Unidade de Protecção da Força em operações" (in Portuguese). Operacional. Retrieved 22 February 2013.

External links

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