Air Force unit uses only domestic warplanes
The Air Force’s 8th Fighter Wing is emerging as a symbol of South Korea’s growing
independent military capabilities, with its combat fleet consisting only of domestically
developed warplanes, officials said Sunday.
The unit in Wonju, Gangwon, has two operators of the FA-50 fighter - the 103rd
Fighter Squadron and the 203rd Fighter Squadron - and the 237th Tactical Control
Squadron running the KA-1 airfield control aircraft.
The FA-50 is a light-attack fighter based on the design of the T-50 trainer jet manufactured
by the Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI), the country’s sole aircraft maker.
Armed with AIM-9, AGM-65G and other missiles, the plane can conduct air-to-air and
air-to-ground operations.
Also built by KAI, the KA-1 is based on the KT-1 trainer plane. It carries a 12.7 millimeter
cannon and other weapons, and mainly conducts close air support missions designed to
provide firepower for troops on the ground.
“I take great pride in the fact that we train and defend our territorial air with indigenously
built aircraft,” an Air Force operator of the FA-50 was quoted as saying in a press release.
The 8th Fighter Wing was first launched as the 8th Tactical Air Control Wing in 1979. It got its
current name in 1988.
In 2013, the 103rd Fighter Squadron started to run a fleet of the FA-50s. The 203rd Fighter Squadron,
which used to run the aging fleet of F-5s, began operating the FA-50s in 2015.
The 237th Tactical Control Squadron used to belong to the 15th Fighter Wing, but the Air
Force put it under the 8th Fighter Wing in 2012. In December, the squadron achieved
160,000 hours of accident-free flight.