) The Air Service began in 1893 as a
balloon corps () and would later be re-organized in 1912 under the command of Major
Emil Uzelac, an army engineering officer. The Air Service would remain under his command until the end of World War I in 1918. The first officers of the air force were private pilots with no military aviation training. At the outbreak of war, the Air Service was composed of 10 observation balloons, 85 pilots and 39 operational aircraft. On 25 August 1914 (by the Old Style calendar still used in Russia)[8 September 1914 New Style], after trying various methods on previous occasions unsuccessfully, Pyotr Nesterov used his Morane-Saulnier Type G (s/n 281) to ram the Austrian Albatros B.II reconnaissance aircraft of observer Baron Friedrich von Rosenthal and pilot Franz Malina from FLIK 11. Both planes crashed and all three airmen died. By the end of 1914, there were 147 operational aircraft deployed in 14 units. Just as
Austria-Hungary fielded a joint army and navy, they also had army and naval aviation arms. The latter operated
seaplanes;
Gottfried Freiherr von Banfield became an ace in one. The
Adriatic Coast seaplane stations also hosted bombers.
Lohners were the most common variant; the K Series heavy bombers mounted an offensive against the Italians that suffered few casualties. Austro-Hungarian pilots and aircrew originally faced the air forces of
Romania and
Russia, while also fielding air units in
Serbia,
Albania, and
Montenegro. Only the
Imperial Russian Air Service (IRAS) posed a credible threat, although its wartime production of 4,700 air frames gave it no numerical advantage over the before the IRAS ceased operations in mid-1917. The Austro-Hungarians requested, and received, aerial reinforcements from their German allies, especially in
Galicia. On 30 September 1915, troops of the
Serbian Army observed three Austro-Hungarian aircraft approaching
Kragujevac. Soldiers shot at them with shotguns and machine-guns but failed to prevent them from dropping 45 bombs over the city, hitting military installations, the railway station and many other, mostly civilian, targets in the city. During the bombing raid,
private Radoje Ljutovac fired at the enemy aircraft and shot one down. It crashed in the city and both pilots [Captain Kurt von Schäfer and his assistant, trainee officer Otto Kirsch] died from their injuries. The gun Ljutovac used was not an anti-aircraft gun but a slightly modified Turkish gun captured during the
First Balkan War in 1912. This was the first occasion that a military aircraft was shot down with artillery
ground-to-air fire. In late November 1915, Austrian aeroplanes bombarded columns of soldiers and refugees from
Serbia, as they trekked across the snowy plain of Kosovo, in the first aerial bombardment of civilians. Italy's entry into the war on 15 May 1915 opened another front and brought the Empire's greatest opponent into the air war. The new front was in the southern Alps, making for hazardous flying and near-certain death to any aviators crash-landing in the mountains. To remedy Italy's initial shortage of fighter planes, France posted a squadron to defend
Venice from the Austro-Hungarians. The 1916 Austro-Hungarian aviation program called for expansion to 48 squadrons by year's end but only 37 were established. Two-seater reconnaissance and bomber squadrons often had a number of single-seat fighters as escorts on missions. This reflected the army high command's emphasis on tying fighters to defensive duty. During 1917, Austria-Hungary pushed its number of flying training schools to 14, with 1,134 trainees. The expansion program was stretched to 68 squadrons, and the Air Service managed to set up the 31 units needed. The began to lose its Italian campaign as Italian superior numbers began to tell. By 19 June 1917, the situation had deteriorated to the point where an Italian attack force of 61 bombers and 84 escorting planes was opposed by an Austro-Hungarian defense of only 3 fighters and 23 two-seaters. Within two months, the found itself facing over 200 enemy aircraft a day. Some of the disparity can be explained by the importation of four squadrons of the
Royal Flying Corps to augment the Italian fighter force in the wake of the
Battle of Caporetto. Then, when winter came on, shortages of coal and other crucial supplies further hampered production for the Empire's Air Service. Austro-Hungarian plans for 1918 called for increasing its aerial force to 100 squadrons containing 1,000 pilots. Production climbed to 2,378 aircraft for the year. Withdrawal of German air units to fight in France worsened the Austro-Hungarians' shortage of aircraft. By June 1918, the 's strength peaked at 77
Fliks but only 16 were fighter squadrons. By 26 October, a fighter mass of some 400 Italian, British, and French airplanes attacked in the air as the Italian army conducted an offensive. The depleted Austro-Hungarians could send only 29 airplanes in opposition. The local armistice on 3 November 1918 was the effective end of the , as its parent nation passed into history. strength had peaked at only 550 aircraft during the war, despite having four fronts to cover. Its wartime losses amounted to 20 percent of its naval fliers killed in action or accident, and 38 percent of its army aviators. == Aircraft ==