29th Fighter Division
The 29th Fighter Division (29th FD, Chinese: 第29歼击机师; pinyin: Dì 29 Jiānjíjī Shī), also called the 29th Air Division was a fighter division of the Chinese People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) based in Quzhou, Zhejiang province. Headquartered at Quzhou Air Base, the unit was under the control of the Eastern Theater Command Air Force. The 29th operated Sukhoi Su-30MKK, Chengdu J-7H, and Shenyang J-8B aircraft in support of air operations in the East China Sea and Taiwan Strait. As of 2019, the division commander was Xu Xueqiang.[1] Since the near complete abolition of divisions from the PLA command structure around 2017, the previously subordinate 85th and 87th Fighter Regiments of the 29th FD survived as the 85th and 78th Fighter Brigades, respectively.[2] HistoryIn accordance with a telegram issued by the Central Military Commission on 15 December 1953, and 17 December, the 29th Fighter Division was formally established in Jiaxing, Zhejiang Province on the basis of the 71st Division of the PLA Ground Force and a regiment drawn from the Air Force of the East China Military Region.[1][3][4] The division subsequently assumed control over the 85th Fighter Regiment, formerly the 4th regiment of the 2nd Air Division, and the 87th Air Regiment, equipped with 25 Lavochkin La-11 fighter aircraft between them.[1][4] On 22 July 1954, 11 pilots of the 85th Regiment of the 29th Fighter Division, led by deputy commander Wang Tianbao, arrived at Haikou Airport, Hainan Island to escort Soviet oil tankers Leningrad and Batumi Mi from Hainan to Guangzhou's Huangpu Port. This was the first time that PLAAF forces were stationed on Hainan.[5][1] On 26 July, two La 11's of the PLAAF escorted the Soviet Polish oil tanker "Peace" and other merchant ships. Five groups of 24 U.S. Navy fighter aircraft invaded the sky over Dazhou Island in the southeast of Hainan Island. At 10:05, 12 fighter jets launched an attack on the La-11s over the sea area east of Bei'ao Port. Lead pilot Zhou Zhendong and his wingman were both killed in the counterattack. The U.S. plane then reportedly fired on the escort ship. After the escort ship fired back, the American aircraft left the area.[1] In August 1954, the unit was responsible for air support to the Chinese invasion of the Yijiangshan Islands. On 10 March 1955, the unit was ordered to be transferred to the North China Military Region Air Force. The unit officially moved 1 April 1955, stationed at Liuting Airport in Shandong Province. On 4 August 1959, the unit moved to Xuzhou Airport, in Jiangsu province. The division officially became part of the People's Liberation Army Air Force on 1 July 1956. On 17 November 1968, the 12th Air Division and the 29th Air Division were transferred to the People's Liberation Army. The 12th Air Division, based at Quzhou and Jianqiao Airports moved to Xuzhou and Baitabu Airports, while the 29th Air Division was transferred to Quzhou and Jianqiao in Guangdong. On 29 September 1977, the 86th Regiment of the 29th Air Division was transferred from Jiaxing to Liancheng.[1] By around 2010, the 29th Fighter Division's three aviation regiments were each equipped with between 19 and 28 Sukhoi Su-30MKK,[6][7] as well as Chengdu J-7H, and Shenyang J-8B aircraft, providing the unit a combat radius of 1,500 km.[8][1] While based at Quzhou, the 29th was 500 km from Taipei, and reportedly tasked primarily with achieving air superiority over the city when the Chinese attack on Taiwan began.[1][9] Fighters of the 29th Fighter Division were identifiable by their tail numbers, all having number '2' as the initial digit, and '0' as the penultimate digit.
Reorganization and brigadizationIn November 2011, the 29th Fighter Division began the PLA-wide program eliminating divisions in favor of brigades.[4] The resulting brigades now report directly to the Eastern Theater Command Air Force under Eastern Theater Command (Nanjing Military Region prior to the 2015 military reforms). These units operate as follows:
In 2004, the original 86th Regiment of the 29th FD was transferred to the 41st Fighter Regiment of the 14th Fighter Division, equipped with Shenyang J-11 and Sukhoi Su-27UBK fighter aircraft.[10] The regiment recovered its previous number during the switch from regiments to brigades in 2012, becoming the 86th Fighter Brigade.[10] Shootdown of commercial airlinerAt 23:40 GMT 23 July 1954, a Douglas C-54 Skymaster of Cathay Pacific Airways en route to Hong Kong Kai Tak Airport was flying at 9,000 ft (2,700 m) roughly 10 miles (16 km) off Hainan Island when two La-11 fighters of the 85th Fighter Regiment, 29th Fighter Division, appeared behind the aircraft on either side. At approximately 23:44 GMT, the fighters opened fire, hitting the two outboard engines (numbers 1 and 4), forcing the crew to ditch the aircraft into 15 foot (3 m) waves. Between the impact of the ditching, drownings, and gunfire from the La-11s, 10 of the 19 passengers and crew on board were killed.[5] Lead La-11 pilot Zhao Xu was eventually sentenced to one year in prison, while wingman Han Guangrong served one month confinement.[4][5][1] Accidents
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