Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)
0 sources
Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)
Summary
Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force) is a wing[1]. Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force) draws 74 Wikipedia views per month (wing category, ranking #10 of 86).[2]
Key Facts
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force) is in the country of Germany[3].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s instance of is recorded as wing[4].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s anthem is recorded as Yorckscher Marsch[5].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s coat of arms image is recorded as FlBschBMVg Wappen1.png[6].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s GND ID is recorded as 7674928-9[7].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s military branch is recorded as German Air Force[8].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s location is recorded as Berlin-Tegel Airport[9].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s location is recorded as Cologne Bonn Airport[10].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s location is recorded as Q1875934[11].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s part of is recorded as German Air Force[12].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s Commons category is recorded as Flugbereitschaft Bundesministerium der Verteidigung[13].
- +1957-04-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)[14].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 50.8639, 'lon': 7.12083}[15].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s location of formation is recorded as Nörvenich Air Base[16].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s parent organization or unit is recorded as Air Force Forces Command[17].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s parent organization or unit is recorded as European Air Transport Command[18].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s official website is recorded as http://www.luftwaffe.de/portal/a/luftwaffe/start/org/trans/flgbe/[19].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s official website is recorded as https://www.bundeswehr.de/de/organisation/luftwaffe/organisation-/luftwaffentruppenkommando/flugbereitschaft-des-bundesministeriums-der-verteidigung[20].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s employees is recorded as {'amount': '+1100'}[21].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s short name is recorded as {'lang': 'de', 'text': 'FlBschftBMVg'}[22].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s intended public is recorded as president of Germany[23].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s intended public is recorded as President of the Bundestag[24].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s intended public is recorded as President of the Bundesrat of Germany[25].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s intended public is recorded as Federal Chancellor of Germany[26].
- Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s intended public is recorded as president[27].
Body
Founding
+1957-04-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)[14]. Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s location of formation is recorded as Nörvenich Air Base[16].
Identity
Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force)'s part of is recorded as German Air Force[12]. Its short name is recorded as {'lang': 'de', 'text': 'FlBschftBMVg'}[22].
Operations
Parent organizations include Air Force Forces Command[17], a command of the Bundeswehr[28], in Germany[29], founded in 2015[30] and European Air Transport Command[18], an international organization[31], in Netherlands[32], founded in 2010[33], headquartered in Eindhoven[34].
Why It Matters
Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force) draws 74 Wikipedia views per month (wing category, ranking #10 of 86).[2] Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force) has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[35] Executive Transport Wing (German Air Force) is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[36]