Paraguayan_Navy

Paraguayan Navy

Paraguayan Navy

National military force


The Paraguayan Navy (Spanish: Armada Paraguaya) is the maritime force of the Armed Forces of Paraguay, in charge of the defense of Paraguay's waters despite not having direct access to the sea.

Quick Facts Founded, Country ...

It has gone to war on two occasions: the War of the Triple Alliance (1864–1870) against Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay, and the Chaco War (1932–1935) against Bolivia.

Although Paraguay is a landlocked country, it has a strong naval tradition by virtue of the fact that it has access to the Atlantic Ocean through the ParaguayParaná rivers. The Paraguayan Navy has twelve bases. The main base is the Puerto Sajonia in Asuncion, followed by Bahia Negra, Ciudad del Este, Encarnacion, Salto del Guaira. It also has aviation facilities in Puerto Sajonia.[2]

In terms of vessels, the Navy has 34 surface ships, some of which have reached centenarian age, due in part to limited use and the vessels floating in fresh water. The main vessels and the flagship of the Paraguay Navy is still the Humaita, which was commissioned prior to Paraguay's involvement in the Chaco War. It has a further four patrol vessels, of which the oldest was commissioned in 1908 and the newest in 1985. The Navy has 17 patrol boats of various drafts, four of which were donated by Taiwan and the United States, while the other 13 were built locally. The rest of the fleet is composed of tugboats, barges, landing craft, transports, and a presidential yacht. The new additions are four Croc-class riverine vessels from Australia, plus 43 locally built riverline patrol vessels constructed from 2006–2009. For air support, one Helibras HB350 helicopter is used to provide SAR, MEDEVAC and utility work[3]

Role

Its main mission is to contribute to the defense of Paraguay, in order to protect and guarantee sovereignty over its water resources.

These priorities include:

  • The custody and defense of the coasts, ports and areas of fluvial interest in its area of influence.
  • Logistics support base for future operations of the forces.
  • Exercise prefectural functions in its area of influence.
  • Cooperate with the tasks of civil defense in cases of natural disasters, environmental protection and the restoration of internal order.

Fleet

Flagship, River gunboat ARP C-1 Paraguay
CROQ15 alongside Itaipú (P05)
Pirá 170 SVX patrol class

Gunboats

  • Paraguay (C-1) [es] (built 1930)
  • Humaitá (C-2) (still commissioned, but now designated as a museum ship; also built 1930)[4]

River patrol ships

  • Capitán Cabral (P-01)
  • Itaipú (P-05)

Patrol vessels

  • Capitán Ortiz (P-06)
  • Teniente Robles (P-07)
  • Yhaguy (P-08)
  • Tebicuary (P-09)
  • 5 x patrol boats LP7-LP11
  • 2 x Class 701 patrol boats Class LP101 108
  • 2 x Croq-15 class patrol boats P201-202
  • 43 x Light patrol boats, all constructed in Paraguay between 2006 and 2009
  • Pirá 500 SL 5 × 1.60 m. Yamaha 25 hp.
  • Pirá 170 SVX 5.20 × 1.60 m. Yamaha 40 hp.
  • Pirá 240 SVX 6.50 × 2,40 m. Yamaha 90 hp.
  • Pirá 4.80 × 1.80 m. Yamaha 50 hp.

Tugboats:

  • Triunfo R4 (1960), constructed in USA
  • Angostura R5 (1960) constructed in USA
  • Stella Maris R6 (1970)
  • Esperanza R7 (1970)

Other

  • Amphibious assault craft LCVP 3 (1980), constructed in Brazil
  • 1 x Floating dock: DF-1 (1944), constructed in USA
  • 1 x Training ship: Guaraní (1968), constructed in Spain
  • 1 x Presidential yacht: 3 de Febrero (1972)
  • 1 x Casualty ship - T1 (1964)
More information Aircraft, Origin ...

Ranks

Commissioned officer ranks

The rank insignia of commissioned officers.

More information Rank group, General / flag officers ...

Other ranks

The rank insignia of non-commissioned officers and enlisted personnel.

More information Rank group, Senior NCOs ...

See also


References

  1. "Armada Paraguaya :: COMANDANTE".
  2. "Armada Paraguaya :: Misión y Visión". www.armadaparaguaya.mil.py. Retrieved 2021-12-29.
  3. "World Air Forces 2020". Flightglobal Insight. 2020. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  4. "La Armada Paraguaya en el 2005". histarmar.com.ar (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-12-30.
  5. Cooke, Melinda W. (1990). "Chapter 5: National Security". In Hanratty, Dennis M.; Meditz, Sandra W. (eds.). Paraguay: A Country Study. Area Handbook Series (2nd ed.). Library of Congress. pp. 216–217. LCCN 89600299. Retrieved 5 October 2021.

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