3 Sqn RAF Regiment

3 Squadron Royal Air Force Regiment

3 Squadron Royal Air Force Regiment

The history of No 3 (Field) Squadron Royal Air Force Regiment dates back to the inter-war years, before the formation of the Royal Air Force Regiment itself. It was Lord Trenchard's philosophy in the 1920s that, to support light bombers in their policing of large areas in the Middle East, Armoured Car Companies should be formed, manned by Royal Air Force officers and airmen and under Royal Air Force control. No 3 Armoured Car Company was formed on 3 November 1922 at Basra and served in eastern Iraq. The Company conducted operations both on its own and in co-operation with aircraft against disaffected Kurdish tribes over a wide area of southern and eastern Iraq. On 1 April 1925 the Company was disbanded and its personnel and vehicles were distributed among the remaining Armoured Car Companies.

World War II was the first war in which air power was to play a decisive role. The rear, which historically had always been protected by the front, would be wide open to the enemy's air and deep penetration forces on the ground unless these could be counted on equal terms. This threat to Royal Air Force stations was initially countered by the formation of Defence Squadrons. No 757 Defence Squadron was formed at Royal Air Force Nutts Corner in Northern Ireland in late 1940 and on 19 December 1941 was re-numbered to No 2757 Squadron. However, the scale of the German assault in Crete and the speed at which the airfield had fallen acted as a catalyst on British Defence planning and highlighted the need for the coordinated defence of airfields.

The Chiefs of Staff accepted the recommendations of the resultant report that the Royal Air Force should form its own Aerodrome Defence Corps. Thus on 2 February 1942 the Royal Air Force Regiment, a Corps formed as an integral part of the Royal Air Force, came into being. No 2757 Squadron was absorbed into the new Corps and acquired a mobile defence role and by the time it reached Europe on 20 August 1944, it was organised as an Armoured Car Squadron.

During the Campaign in North Western Europe the Squadron was continually on the move seeing active service in France, Belgium, Holland and Germany. During these final stages of the war the Squadron was mainly tasked with escort duties, protecting Air Technical Intelligence staff on reconnaissance missions to a wide variety of targets which included airfields, radar sites and their installations, V1 Flying Bomb sites and storage depots.

At the end of the war the Squadron was in Germany as part of the 2nd Tactical Air Force and remained stationed in Germany in the post war period. In August 1947, the Squadron was re-numbered as No 3 (Armoured Car) Squadron and continued to serve in Germany at Fassberg and Gutersloh until its disbandment on 1 November 1955. The Squadron was briefly resurrected on 1 January 1956 as No 3 (Light Anti Aircraft) Squadron Royal Air Force Regiment before being disbanded again on 30 September 1957.

The present Squadron was re-formed on 27 July 1987 at Royal Air Force Hullavington as No 3 (Field) Squadron Royal Air Force Regiment. On 1 February 1988 the Squadron deployed to Northern Ireland as the resident Royal Air Force Regiment Squadron engaged on Internal Security duties. The Squadron is tasked primarily with the protection of the military airhead at Royal Air Force Aldergrove, the home of the Joint Helicopter Force (Northern Ireland). Additionally, the Squadron regularly provides support to the Police Service of Northern Ireland and routinely deploys personnel to other parts of the Province.

3 Squadron Royal Air Force Regiment are presently based at Royal Air Force Wittering arriving here in 2006.

3 Squadron Royal Air Force Regiment Badge

3 Sqn Scorpion 3 Squadron Royal Air Force Regiment has chosen for its Badge a scorpion with tail erect set in front of an infantry bayonet and has adopted the motto 'IN ARDUIS AUDAX'. The scorpion, as well as representing an aggressive force able to defend itself and its territory provides, as a creature of the desert, a link with No 3 Armoured Car Company, Royal Air Force, which was formed and operated in the deserts of Iraq and was the original incarnation of 3 Squadron. The bayonet alludes to the Squadron's role as an infantry (field) squadron employed on operations and the chosen motto, which may be freely translated as 'Bold in Adversity' stresses the quality required in the execution of that role.

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