Definition
Air traffic control units operated by the U.S. military (Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard) that provide separation, sequencing, and control services for aircraft operating on, around, or transiting military airfields and associated airspace. They include military control towers, radar approach control facilities (such as RAPCON, RATCF, and GCA units), and base operations elements that interact with the civil ATC system to handle both military and civil traffic.
Plain English
These are the military's own air traffic control units. They run the towers and radar rooms at military airfields, and they talk to civilian controllers when traffic crosses between military and civil airspace.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument procedure and air traffic control discussions, especially where FAA control sectors connect with military-controlled airspace or military flight operations.
Why Pilots Care
Civil pilots flying IFR into joint-use bases or near military airspace will be handed off to military controllers. Procedures, phraseology, and clearance limits work the same way, but knowing the facility is military helps you anticipate the handoff and the kind of airfield environment you're entering.
Intuition Check
Do not read “facilities” as only physical buildings. Here it means the military air traffic control organization, including its people, radios, radar displays, and assigned control responsibility.
Example Sentence 1
On the arrival into the joint-use field, Center handed the flight off to a military aviation control facility for radar vectors to the ILS.
Example Sentence 2
Civilian sector controllers coordinate handoffs with military aviation control facilities when routing IFR traffic near active military ranges.