词条 | United States Air Forces Central Command |
释义 |
|unit_name=United States Air Forces Central Command |image=File:United States Air Forces Central Command - Emblem.png |caption=Shield of the United States Air Forces Central Command |dates= 5 August 2009 - present (as United States Air Forces Central Command) 1 March 2008 - 5 August 2009 (Ninth Air Force (Air Forces Central)) 26 June 1951 - 1 March 2008 (as Ninth Air Force) 1 August 1950 - 26 June 1951 (as Ninth Air Force (Tactical)) 28 March 1946 - 1 August 1950 18 September 1942 - 2 December 1945 as Ninth Air Force) 8 April 1942 - 18 September 1942 (as 9 Air Force) 21 August 1941 - 8 April 1942 (as 5 Air Support Command) ({{Age in years and months|1941|08|21}})[1] |country={{Flagicon image|Flag of the United States.svg|size=23px}} United States of America |allegiance= |branch={{air force|USA}} (26 September 1947 - present) United States Army ( Army Air Forces; 8 April 1942 - 26 September 1947)[1] |type= Named Air Force |role= Provides combat-ready air forces and serves as the air component to U.S. Central Command[2] |size= |command_structure= Air Combat Command United States Central Command |current_commander=Lt Gen Joseph T. Guastella Jr.[3] |garrison=Shaw Air Force Base, South Carolina, U.S. |garrison_label=Headquarters |ceremonial_chief= |nickname= |patron= |motto= |colors= |march= |mascot= |battles= {{collapsible list |titlestyle = background:transparent;text-align:left;font-weight:normal; |title = See list | World War II - American Theater World War II - European-African-Middle Eastern Theater
Southwest Asia
}} |notable_commanders=Lewis H. Brereton Hoyt Vandenberg Gary L. North |anniversaries= |decorations= Air Force Outstanding Unit Award Air Force Organizational Excellence Award |identification_symbol= |identification_symbol_label=Emblem of the Ninth Air Force (1941–2009) }}United States Air Forces Central Command (USAFCENT/AFCENT) is a Named Air Force of the United States Air Force headquartered at Shaw Air Force Base, South Carolina. It is the Air Force Service Component of United States Central Command (USCENTCOM), a joint Department of Defense combatant command responsible for U.S. security interests in 27 nations that stretch from the Horn of Africa through the Persian Gulf region, into Central Asia.[4] Activated as 9th Air Force on 8 April 1942, the command fought in World War II both in the Western Desert Campaign in Egypt and Libya and as the tactical fighter component of the United States Strategic Air Forces in Europe (USSTAF), engaging enemy forces in France, the Low Countries and in Nazi Germany. During the Cold War, it was one of two Numbered Air Forces of Tactical Air Command. Co-designated as United States Central Command Air Forces (CENTAF) on 1 January 1983, on 2009 as part of a complicated transfer of lineage, the lineage and history of the Ninth Air Force was bestowed on USAFCENT, and a new Ninth Air Force, which technically had no previous history, was activated. It has fought in the 1991 Gulf War, War in Afghanistan (OEF-A, 2001–present), the Iraq War (OIF, 2003–2010), as well as various engagements within USCENTCOM. {{Visible anchor|History}}United States Air Forces Central is the direct descendant organization of Ninth Air Force, established in 1941. AFCENT was formed as the United States Central Command Air Forces (CENTAF) under Tactical Air Command (TAC). CENTAF initially consisted of designated United States Air Force elements of the Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force (RDJTF) which was inactivated and reformed as USCENTCOM in 1983. On 1 March 2008 USCENTAF was redesignated USAFCENT.[5] It shared its commander with Ninth Air Force until August 2009.[6] Ninth Air Force was formally re-designated USAFCENT on 5 August 2009. A new Ninth Air Force was established that date for command and control of CONUS-based Air Combat Command units formerly assigned to the previous Ninth Air Force. World War IIIn June 1942, the German Afrika Korps advance in North Africa forced the British Eighth Army to retreat towards Egypt putting British Middle East Command at risk. The United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) had already planned for a buildup of American air power in the Middle East in January 1942 in response to a request from the British Chief of the Air Staff, but the first units arrived unexpectedly on 12 June 1942 as Col. Harry A. Halverson, commanding twenty-three B-24D Liberator heavy bombers and a hand-picked crews (a group called HALPRO – from "Halverson Project"), decided to move to Egypt. They had initially been assigned to the China Burma India Theater to attack Japan from airfields in China, but after the fall of Rangoon the Burma Road was cut, so the detachment could not be logistically supported in China. HALPRO was quickly diverted from its original mission to a new one—interdictory raids from airfields in Egypt against shipping and North African ports supporting Axis operations.[7] On 28 June 1942, Major General Lewis H. Brereton arrived at Cairo to command the U.S. Army Middle East Air Force (USAMEAF), which was activated immediately. USAMEAF comprised the Halverson Project, Brereton's detachment (9th Bombardment Squadron (Heavy) and other personnel which Brereton brought from India), and the Air Section of the U.S. Military North African Mission. Several USAAF units were sent to join USAMEAF during next weeks in the destruction of Rommel's Afrika Korps by support to ground troops and secure sea and air communications in the Mediterranean. In September 1942, RAF Middle East Command's Senior Air Staff Officer, Air Commodore[8] H. E. P. Wigglesworth was authorized by Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder to select targets for all U.S. heavy bombers. {{Quote |"A development of some importance in the career of USAMEAF manifested itself administratively on 12 October (1942) when orders were cut assigning nine officers to the IX Bomber Command, which organization was then and for a month afterwards unofficial. This command had its roots in a discussion on 5 September between Tedder's senior air staff officer, Air Vice Marshal H. E. P. Wigglesworth, and G-3 officers of USAMEAF, during which Wigglesworth asserted that he had control, delegated by Tedder, over the target selection for the U.S. heavy bombers. Col. Patrick W. Timberlake, G-3 of Brereton's staff, took a serious view of this assertion in that it violated the Arnold-Portal-Towers agreement that American combat units assigned to theaters of British strategic responsibility were to be organized in "homogeneous American formations" under the "strategic control" of the appropriate British commander in chief. In a memo of 7 September, Timberlake granted that this canon might be justifiably violated in the case of the 12th Bombardment (M) and 57th Fighter Groups, but he could see no reason why operational control of the 1st Provisional and 98th Groups, comprising four-fifths of the heavy bomber force in the Middle East, should not be vested in American hands. Subsequent negotiations carried the point with the British, who even turned over their 160 Squadron (Liberators) to the operational control of IX Bomber Command. On 12 October a small staff moved into Grey Pillars [RAF headquarters in Garden City, Cairo[9]], and thenceforth USAMEAF's bombers operated only under the "strategic" direction of the British. Timberlake headed the organization, with Kalberer as his A-3 and Lt. Col. Donald M. Keiser as his chief of staff."—The Army Air Forces in World War II[10]}}On 1 November 1942, General Bernard Montgomery launched an attack on the Afrika Korps at Kidney Ridge. After initially resisting the attack, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel decided he no longer had the resources to hold his line and on 3 November he ordered his troops to withdraw. Allied victory in the Second Battle of Alamein was accomplished.{{citation needed|date=December 2012}} Ninth Air Force had been first constituted as V Air Support Command, part of Air Force Combat Command, at Bowman Field, Kentucky on 11 September 1941. Its responsibility was to direct and coordinate the training activities of National Guard observation squadrons inducted into federal service with those of light bomber units training with the Army Ground Forces. However a lack of unity of command in the organizational set-up led to an early discontinuation of the "air support commands" and V Air Support Command was redesignated as Ninth Air Force in April 1942. It was reassigned to Bolling Field, Washington, D.C. on 22 July and transferred without personnel or equipment to Cairo, Egypt on 12 November 1942. The Ninth Air Force mission comprised: (1) Gain air superiority; (2) Deny the enemy the ability to replenish or replace losses, and (3) Offer ground forces close support in North-East Africa. On 12 November 1942, the US Army Middle East Air Force was dissolved and replaced by HQ Ninth Air Force, commanded by Lieutenant General Lewis H. Brereton. At that time, the Ninth Air Force consisted of:[11]
Operations in Western Desert Campaign, 1942–1943By the end of 1942 a total of 370 aircraft had been ferried to the Ninth Air Force. While the great majority were P-40s, Consolidated B-24 Liberators (The original Halverson Detachment (HALPRO), 98th Bombardment Group, 376th Bombardment Group, and RAF units), and B-25 Mitchells (12th and 340th Bombardment Groups), there were also more than 50 twin-engine transports (316th Troop Carrier Group), which made it possible to build an effective local air transport service. Ninth Air Force P-40F fighters (57th, 79th, and 324th Fighter Groups) supported the British Eighth Army's drive across Egypt and Libya, escorting bombers and flying strafing and dive-bombing missions against airfields, communications, and troop concentrations. Other targets attacked were shipping and harbor installations in Libya, Tunisia, Sicily, Italy, Crete, and Greece to cut enemy supply lines to Africa. The Palm Sunday Massacre was one noteworthy mission by the P-40 and Spitfire groups.[12] After an Allied air forces command reorganisation effective 18 February 1943, the Ninth Air Force began to report to RAF Middle East Command (RAFME) under Air Chief Marshal Sir Sholto Douglas. Additionally, the Ninth's 57th, 79th, and 324th Fighter Groups and its 12th and 340th Bombardment Groups were transferred to the operational control of the Northwest African Tactical Air Force (NATAF) under the command of Air Vice-Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham. The Ninth's 316th Troop Carrier Group flew its missions with the Northwest African Troop Carrier Command (NATCC). In February 1943, after the Afrika Korps had been driven into Tunisia, the Germans took the offensive and pushed through the Kasserine Pass before being stopped with the help of both Ninth and Twelfth Air Force units in the battle. The Allies drove the enemy back into a pocket around Bizerte and Tunis, where Axis forces surrendered in May. Thus, Tunisia became available for launching attacks on Pantelleria (Operation Corkscrew), Sicily (Operation Husky), and mainland Italy. At the time of Operation Husky, the invasion of Sicily on 10 July 1943, Ninth Air Force Headquarters was still based at Cairo in Egypt while the Headquarters of Ninth Fighter Command and IX Bomber Command were stationed at Tripoli and Benghazi, Libya, respectively. During this critical period of World War II when the Allied forces finally left North Africa for Europe, the groups of the Ninth Air Force consisted of:[13]
During most of 1943, the Ninth Air Force was officially assigned to RAF Middle East Command of the Mediterranean Air Command. However, the Ninth's 12th and 340th Bombardment Groups were assigned to the Tactical Bomber Force, the 57th and 79th Fighter Groups were assigned to the Desert Air Force, and the 324th Fighter Group was surprisingly{{citation needed|date=January 2013}} assigned to XII Air Support Command. The Tactical Bomber Force under Air Commodore Laurence Sinclair, the Desert Air Force under Air Vice Marshal Harry Broadhurst, and XII Air Support Command under Major General Edwin House were sub-commands of the Northwest African Tactical Air Force (NATAF) under Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham. NATAF was one of the three major sub-commands of the Northwest African Air Forces (NAAF) under Lieutenant General Carl Spaatz. NATAF, Northwest African Strategic Air Force (NASAF) and Northwest African Coastal Air Force (NACAF), formed the classic tri-force, the basis for the creation of NAAF in February 1943. Ninth Air Force groups attacked airfields and rail facilities in Sicily and took part in Operation Husky, carried paratroopers, and flew reinforcements to ground units on the island. The heavy bombardment groups (B-24s) of the Ninth also participated in the low-level assault of the oil refineries at Ploesti, Romania on 1 August 1943. On 22 August 1943 the following groups were transferred from the Ninth Air Force to the Twelfth Air Force:
The 316th Troop Carrier Group was operating under Northwest African Troop Carrier Command with C-47 Dakotas and CG4A Waco Gliders. Ninth Air Force 1943 to June 1944Concurrently with the amalgamation of Ninth Air Force formations in the Mediterranean with Twelfth Air Force, plans were afoot in Britain to devolve Eighth Air Force's medium bomber force to a separate command. This command was offered to Brereton, who accepted "with utmost eagerness",{{citation needed|date=January 2013}} and the force was constituted, also as Ninth Air Force, on 16 October 1943. During the winter of 1943–1944 Ninth Air Force expanded at an extraordinary rate, so that by the end of May, its complement ran to 45 flying groups operating some 5,000 aircraft. With the necessary ground support units, the total number of personnel assigned to Ninth Air Force would be more than 200,000, a total greater than that of Eighth Air Force. HQ Ninth Air Force extended IX Bomber Command's choice of targets considerably, although first priority for Operation Pointblank [the Combined Bomber Offensive (CBO) of US and RAF air forces against the Luftwaffe and German aircraft industry] and next priority for Operation Crossbow (codename for operations against German V-weapon sites) targets was maintained.[14] U.S. and British Air Forces aimed to defeat the German Luftwaffe in the air and on the ground, to bring about complete air supremacy prior to the invasion of Normandy. Operational missions involved attacks on rail marshaling yards, railroads, airfields, industrial plants, military installations, and other enemy targets in France, Belgium, and the Netherlands. Other targets were German Atlantic Wall defenses along the English Channel coast of France. On 4 January 1944 XIX Air Support Command was activated at RAF Middle Wallop to support Patton's Third Army in Europe.[15] In February 1944 the Ninth Air Force underwent a reorganization and several troop carrier groups relocated headquarters. Major General Otto P. Weyland became commanding general of XIX Air Support Command, replacing Major General Elwood R Quesada. The latter assumed dual command of both IX Fighter Command and the IX Air Support Command, which took control of all its fighter and reconnaissance units. HQ IX Air Support Command changed from Aldermaston Court to Middle Wallop. Major General Paul L. Williams, who had commanded the troop carrier operations in Sicily and Italy, replaced Giles in command of IX Troop Carrier Command.[16] The IX TCC command and staff officers were an excellent mix of combat veterans from those earlier assaults, and a few key officers were held over for continuity. The groups assigned were a mixture of experience, but training would be needed to confront the expected massive movements of troops of the 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions. On 18 April 1944, the IX and XIX Air Support Commands were redesignated, respectively, as IX Tactical Air Command and XIX Tactical Air Command.[17] Between 1 May and the invasion on 6 June, the Ninth flew approximately 35,000 sorties, attacking targets such as airfields, railroad yards, and coastal gun positions.[18] By the end of May 1944, the IX TCC had available 1,207 C-47 Skytrain troop carrier airplanes and was one-third overstrength, creating a strong reserve. Three quarters of the aircraft were less than one year old on D-Day, and all were in excellent condition. Gliders were incorporated, Over 2,100 CG-4 Waco gliders had been sent to the UK, and after attrition during training operations, 1,118 were available for operations, along with 301 larger Airspeed Horsa gliders received from the British. Order of battle, June 6, 1944{{Col-begin}}{{Col-break|width=50%}}
Operations in Europe 1944–1945On D-Day, IX Troop Carrier Command units flew over 2000 sorties conducting combat parachute jumps and glider landings as part of American airborne landings in Normandy of Operation Neptune. Other Ninth Air Force units carried out massive air attacks with P-51 Mustang, P-47 Thunderbolt fighter-bombers, North American B-25 Mitchell and Martin B-26 Marauder medium bombers. Air cover during the morning amphibious assault by Allied forces on the beaches of France was flown by P-38 Lightnings. With the beaches secure, its tactical air units then provided the air power for the Allied break-out from the Normandy beachhead in the summer of 1944 during the Battle of Cherbourg, Battle for Caen, and the ultimate breakout from the beachhead, Operation Cobra. Unlike Eighth Air Force, whose units stayed in the United Kingdom, Ninth Air Force units were very mobile, first deploying to France on 16 June 1944, ten days after the Normandy invasion by moving P-47 Thunderbolts to a beach-head landing strip. Because of their short range, operational combat units would have to move to quickly prepared bases close to the front as soon as the Allied ground forces advanced. The bases were called "Advanced Landing Grounds" or "ALGs". On the continent, many ALGs were built either from scratch or from captured enemy airfields throughout France, the Low Countries and Germany. Ninth Air Force units moved frequently from one ALG to another. By early August most Ninth Air Force operational fighter and bomber groups were transferred to bases in France and assigned to the U. S. Twelfth Army Group. These groups were then assigned to Tactical Air Command (TAC) organizations which supported Army ground units. XXIX Tactical Air Command (XXIX TAC) was activated in France on 15 September 1944, commanded by Brig. Gen. Richard E. Nugent, to support operations of the U.S. Ninth Army. XXIX TAC supported the Ninth Army in the north; IX TAC supported the First Army in the center; and XIX TAC supported the Third Army in the south. Air cover over Allied-controlled areas on the continent was performed by the IX Air Defense Command. Ninth Air Force groups made numerous moves within France, the Low Countries and western Germany to keep within range of the advancing battle front before the end of hostilities in May 1945. During Operation Dragoon, the invasion of Southern France in August 1944, two Ninth fighter groups were transferred to the provisional United States/Free French 1st Tactical Air Force supporting the invasion force's drive north. As part of Operation Market-Garden, the Ninth Air Force transferred its entire IX Troop Carrier Command with its fourteen C-47 groups to the 1st Allied Airborne Army in September 1944. Those troop carrier groups flew many of the C-47s and towed CG-4 Waco gliders for the Allied airborne unit drops—Operation Market Garden—to take the bridges northwest of Eindhoven at Son (mun. Son en Breugel), Veghel, Grave, Nijmegen and Arnhem in the Netherlands. In December 1944 through January 1945, Ninth Air Force fighters and bombers were critical in defeating the Wehrmacht during the Battle of the Bulge. Initially American, British, and Canadian air power was grounded by very bad winter weather, but then the bad weather broke, freeing the tactical air forces to help break the back of the Wehrmacht attack. The long smash across France, Belgium, and Luxembourg was the highlight{{citation needed|date=January 2013}} of the existence of the 9th Air Force. In the spring of 1945, Ninth Air Force troop carrier units flew airborne parachute and glider units again during Operation Varsity, the Allied assault over the Rhine River on 24 March 1945. Operation Varsity was the single largest airborne drop in history. The operation saw the first use of the Curtiss-Wright C-46 Commando transport in Europe, operating with the reliable C-47 Skytrain of previous airborne operations, an experiment which ended with the catastrophic loss of 28% of the C-46s participating. Postwar demobilizationNinth Air Force tactical air support operations were flown over western Germany until the end of hostilities on 7 May. However, once the victory had been gained, the United States plunged into demobilization, just as it had done at the end of the First World War. Most officers and men were sent back to the United States and their units inactivated. Others were assigned to the new United States Air Forces in Europe and were moved to captured Luftwaffe airfields to perform occupation duties. Some transport units relocated to France. Finally, with the mission completed, on 2 December 1945 the Ninth Air Force was inactivated at USAFE Headquarters at Wiesbaden Germany. Cold Warsee also: Nineteenth Air Force Following World War II, Ninth Air Force was reactivated on 28 March 1946 at Biggs AAF, Texas. After several relocations, on 20 August 1954, Ninth Air Force Headquarters was assigned to Shaw Air Force Base, South Carolina, where it remains today. The postwar Numbered Air Forces were components of the new major command structure of the United States Air Force, and Ninth Air Force became one of the tactical air forces of the new Tactical Air Command. Ninth Air Force commanded TAC Wings east of the Mississippi River. Initially being equipped with propeller-driven F-51, F-47 and F-82 aircraft during the postwar years, in the 1950s, Ninth Air Force units received the jet-powered F/RF-80 Shooting Star, F-84G/F Thunderjet, F-86D/H Sabre, and F-100 Super Sabre aircraft. Ninth Air Force squadrons and wings were frequently deployed to NATO during the 1950s and 1960s as "Dual-Based" USAFE units, and reinforcing NATO forces in West Germany and France during the Lebanon crisis of 1958 and the 1961 Berlin Wall Crisis. During the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, Ninth Air Force units went on war alert, deploying to bases in Florida, being able to respond to the crisis on a moment's notice. During the Vietnam War, detached Ninth Air Force units engaged in combat operations over Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. The practice of stripping away squadrons and aircraft from their home Tactical Air Command Wings and attaching them indefinitely to a new wing under Pacific Air Forces was the method used for long-term deployments to the South Vietnam and Thailand air bases engaged in combat operations. In addition to these operational deployments, Ninth Air Force units performed a "backfilling" role in Japan and South Korea for PACAF as well as in Italy and Spain for USAFE to replace units whose aircraft and personnel were deployed to Southeast Asia. With the end of American involvement during the early 1970s, these units were returned in large part to their home Ninth Air Force units in the United States. During the remainder of the 1970s, NATO deployments resumed supporting the COMET, CORONET and CRESTED CAP exercises. These deployments were designed to exercise CONUS based Air Force squadrons long range deployment capabilities and to familiarize the personnel with the European theatre of operations. During these NATO deployments, exercises with Army infantry and armored units were conducted to enhance the Close Air Support role in Europe. Ninth Air Force Wings in 1979 were:
During the 1980s, Ninth Air Force wings upgraded from the Vietnam-Era F-4s and A-7s to newer F-15s, F-16 and A-10 aircraft. First-generation F-15A/B models were later sent to Air National Guard fighter units while Regular Air Force units upgraded to the higher-capability F-15C/Ds and the new F-15E replaced the F-4E in the 4th TFW. With the end of the Cold War in the early 1990s, the 1991 Base Realignment and Closure Commission (BRAC) reductions meant the closing of Myrtle Beach AFB and England AFB. MacDill AFB was realigned under Air Combat Command as the headquarters of United States Central Command and United States Special Operations Command, but minus tactical aircraft operations with the reassignment of the 56th Fighter Wing to Air Education and Training Command and relocation to Luke AFB, Arizona. The restructuring of USAF CONUS forces by the inactivation of Tactical Air Command and subsequent creation of Air Combat Command realigned Ninth Air Force with new units and new missions. In addition, the effects of Hurricane Andrew at Homestead AFB on 24 August 1992 essentially destroyed the facility. Although both George H. W. Bush and President Clinton promised to rebuild Homestead, the BRAC designated the installation for realignment to the Air Force Reserve, and on 1 April 1994, Headquarters, ACC inactivated its base support units and transferred base support responsibility to the Air Force Reserve Command and AFRC's 482d Fighter Wing, effectively ending ACC ownership of the base. Concurrently, ACC also transferred responsibility for MacDill AFB to Air Mobility Command following the arrival of an air refueling unit and redesignation of the host air base wing as an air refueling wing (later redesignated as an air mobility wing). CENTAF and the 1991 Gulf War{{see also|Organization of United States Air Force Units in the Gulf War}}In 1980, Ninth Air Force units were allocated to the new Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force (RDJTF). In 1983, the RDJTF became a separate unified command known as the United States Central Command (USCENTCOM), focusing on the Middle East. Ninth Air Force provided the aircraft, personnel and materiel to form United States Central Command Air Forces (USCENTAF), the USAF air power of CENTCOM, which was also headquartered at Shaw AFB. Starting in 1981, Ninth Air Force aircraft and personnel were deployed to Egypt for Exercise Bright Star. During Operation Desert Shield and Operation Desert Storm, Ninth Air Force units deployed to the Middle East, and flew combat missions over Kuwait and Iraq. After the end of hostilities, units from the Ninth flew air missions over Iraq as part of Operation Deny Flight, Operation Northern Watch and Operation Southern Watch. From 1991, the 4404th Composite Wing (Provisional) served as a forward force, for most of that period flying from King Abdul Aziz AB, Saudi Arabia. Despite the boring nature of the quasi-peacetime patrols over both the northern and southern "no-fly zones," the years after 1991 were not entirely without hostile action. Time and time again Iraqi air defense radars came on line and "illuminated" American aircraft. There were also numerous cases where Iraqi anti-aircraft guns and missiles engaged American aircraft. In each case, the U.S. military aircraft would retaliate and in most cases, eliminate the offending air defense site(s). Among the deployed units were the 4th Air Expeditionary Wing, Camp Doha, Qatar (June 1996 and February 1997 in Air Expeditionary Force (AEF) Rotations III and IV respectively),[20] the 347th Air Expeditionary Wing, Shaikh Isa AB, Bahrain, and the 363d Air Expeditionary Wing at Prince Sultan AB, Saudi Arabia. During this "phony war," American pilots gained invaluable experience in air-to-ground tactics that could not be duplicated in practice missions back at home. Combat missions briefly resumed in 1998 during Operation Desert Fox. Iraq and AfghanistanNinth Air Force units, flying as USCENTAF, flew operational missions during the 2002 Operation Enduring Freedom—Afghanistan (OEF-A) and the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF). Air Expeditionary Force units are engaged in combat operations on an ongoing basis. U.S. Airmen are increasingly on the ground in Iraq:[21] "They drive in convoys and even work with detainees. The main aerial hub in Iraq has 1,500 airmen doing convoy operations in and 1,000 working with detainees. The USAF is also involved in training Iraqis and performing other activities not usually associated with the Air Force. The dangers of the Air Force's new role were highlighted when the expeditionary wing lost its first female member in the line of duty in Iraq. A1C Elizabeth Jacobson, 21, was killed in a roadside bombing while performing convoy security near the U.S. detention center at Camp Bucca in southern Iraq." "More and more Air Force are doing Army jobs," said Senior Master Sgt. Matt Rossoni, 46, of San Francisco. "It's nothing bad about the Army. They're just tapped out." "Air Force Security Forces are traditionally associated with base defense, however, now they provide security for patrols and to deliver supplies." The Air Force also is keeping up with its traditional duties. In November, the 386th Air Expeditionary Wing delivered its one millionth passenger to Iraq since October 2003. USAF missions included transporting troops, casualties and cargo flights. The Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps flew thousands of missions in support of U.S. ground troops in Iraq this fall, including attacks by unmanned Predator aircraft armed with Hellfire missiles, military records show. American and allied refueling, transport and surveillance planes also are in the air. Airstrikes have been largely in areas where the insurgency is strongest, like Balad, Ramadi and in the vicinity of Baghdad, according to the U.S. Central Command. Units
B-1B Lancer, C-130 Hercules, Globemaster III, E-6B Mercury, E-8C Joint STARS, KC-135 Stratotanker, P-3 Orion, RC-135 Rivet Joint Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar
E-3 Sentry, KC-10 Extender, RQ-4 Global Hawk, U-2 Dragon Lady Al Dhafra Air Base, United Arab Emirates
C-130 Hercules Ali Al Salem Air Base, Kuwait
Det 1. 438th Air Expeditionary Advisory Group (Mazar-e-Shariff Airfield) 438th Air Expeditionary Advisory Group (Kabul Airport) Det 1. 438th Air Expeditionary Advisory Group (Jalalabad Airfield) 738th Air Expeditionary Advisory Group (Kandahar Airfield) NATO Air Training Command-Afghanistan (Kabul Airport) Kabul International Airport, Afghanistan
A-10 Thunderbolt II, F-16 Fighting Falcon, C-130 Hercules, HH-60 Pave Hawk, MC-12 Liberty, EC-130 Compass Call Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan 451st Air Expeditionary Group, Kandahar Tenant Units assigned to the command are:
Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar
Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar Note: The 432d Air Expeditionary Wing is an Air Combat Command unit headquartered at Creech AFB, Nevada. It operates RQ-1 Predator and MQ-9 Reaper UAV aircraft in the AFCENT AOR. Lineage and assignments
Activated on 1 September 1941 Redesignated 9th Air Force on 8 April 1942 Redesignated as Ninth Air Force on 18 September 1942 Inactivated on 2 December 1945
Redesignated: Ninth Air Force (Tactical) on 1 August 1950 Redesignated: Ninth Air Force on 26 June 1951 Co-designation United States Central Command Air Forces (CENTAF) established, 1 January 1983 CENTAF designation used for Ninth Air Force assets assigned to United States Central Command Redesignated: Ninth Air Force (Air Forces Central), on 1 March 2008. Redesignated: United States Air Forces Central, on 5 August 2009. Assignments
(later, United States Air Forces in Europe), 22 February 1944 – 2 December 1945
Stations{{Col-begin}}{{Col-break|width=50%}}
Major componentsWorld War II Units{{Col-begin}}{{Col-break|width=50%}}
USAF Air Divisions{{Col-begin}}{{Col-break|width=50%}}
(formerly, 19 Bombardment Wing; IX Bomber Command; 9 Bombardment Division; 9 Air Division; 19 Bombardment Wing) 24 July 1942 – 20 November 1945; 22 December 1948 – 1 February 1949. 21 Air: 22 December 1948 – 1 February 1949.
Known Inactive Air Expeditionary unitsSee Organization of United States Air Force Units in the Gulf War for units and deployment of CENTAF forces during Operation Desert Shield and Operation Desert Storm{{Col-begin}}{{Col-break|width=50%}}
Flights at several bases in AFCENT AOR
Camp Victory, Baghdad, Iraq
Sather AB, Iraq
Transit Center at Manas, Kyrgyzstan
Flights at several bases in AFCENT AOR
Shaikh Isa Air Base, Bahrain
RAFO Thumrait, Oman{{Col-break|width=50%}}
H-5 Air Base, Jordan Shaheed Mwaffaq AB, Jordan
Karshi-Khanabad AB, Uzbekistan
Sather AB, Iraq
Camp Lemonier, Djibouti
Kirkuk AB, Iraq
Balad AB, Iraq
Shaheed Mwaffaq AB, Jordan{{col-end}} Service and campaign streamers
Awards{{unit awards table|award_image1=AF OUA |award_name1=Air Force Outstanding Unit Award |award_date1=1 June 1986 – 31 May 1988 |award_notes1= |award_image2=AF OEA |award_name2=Air Force Organizational Excellence Award |award_date2=4 August 1990 – 11 April 1991 |award_notes2= |award_image3=AF OUA |award_name3=Air Force Outstanding Unit Award |award_date3=1 July 1996 – 31 March 1998 |award_notes3= |award_image4=AF OUA |award_name4=Air Force Outstanding Unit Award |award_date4=1 June 1998 – 31 May 2000 |award_notes4= |award_image5=AF OEA |award_name5=Air Force Organizational Excellence Award |award_date5=1 June 2011 – 31 May 2013 |award_notes5= }} References{{Portal|United States Air Force|Military of the United States|World War II}}{{Air Force Historical Research Agency}}1. ^1 2 {{cite web |url=http://www.afhra.af.mil/About-Us/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/431962/united-states-air-forces-central-command-acc/ |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2018-01-04 |deadurl=no |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20180105011653/http://www.afhra.af.mil/About-Us/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/431962/united-states-air-forces-central-command-acc/ |archivedate=5 January 2018 |df=dmy-all }} 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.afcent.af.mil/About/Mission/|title=Mission|author=|date=|website=www.afcent.af.mil|accessdate=29 April 2018|deadurl=no|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20171019014446/http://www.afcent.af.mil/About/Mission/|archivedate=19 October 2017|df=dmy-all}} 3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.afcent.af.mil/About/Biographies/|title=U.S. Air Forces Central Command Leadership|author=|date=|website=www.afcent.af.mil|accessdate=30 August 2018}} 4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.afhra.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=16122|title=USAFHRA Fact Sheet United States Air Forces Central Command|author=|date=|website=af.mil|accessdate=29 April 2018|deadurl=no|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304042346/http://www.afhra.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=16122|archivedate=4 March 2016|df=dmy-all}} 5. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123088409|archiveurl=https://archive.today/20120717150700/http://www.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123088409|deadurl=yes|title=USCENTAF to become USAFCENT with redesignation|author=|date=17 July 2012|archivedate=17 July 2012|website=af.mil|accessdate=29 April 2018}} 6. ^[https://archive.is/20120718145813/http://www.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123162152 New leaders take command of redesignated AFCENT, 9th Air Force], 8/6/2009, Air Force News Service 7. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.376hbgva.com/history/index.html#brief|title=376hbgva.com|author=|date=|website=376hbgva.com|accessdate=29 April 2018|deadurl=no|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160202004738/http://376hbgva.com/history/index.html#brief|archivedate=2 February 2016|df=dmy-all}} 8. ^Temporary Air Vice Marshal from December 1942 9. ^http://www.meobserver.org/?p=16217 10. ^The Army Air Forces in World War II, Vol. 2, Torch to Point Blank, Chapter 1, "Crisis in the Middle East," page 33. Chicago, IL, Chicago University Press, 1949 11. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.usaaf.net/chron/42/nov42.htm|title=USAAF.net|author=|date=|website=usaaf.net|accessdate=29 April 2018|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090211102714/http://usaaf.net/chron/42/nov42.htm|archivedate=11 February 2009|df=dmy-all}} 12. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.warwingsart.com/12thAirForce/blakeley.html|title=Warwingsart.com|author=|date=|website=warwingsart.com|accessdate=29 April 2018|deadurl=no|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20170630233751/http://www.warwingsart.com/12thAirForce/blakeley.html|archivedate=30 June 2017|df=dmy-all}} 13. ^Secret Document 151, Location of Units in the Royal Air Force, 34th Issue, July 1943, The Royal Air Force Museum, Accession Number PR02859 14. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.usaaf.net/chron/44/feb44.htm |title=Army Air Forces in World War II |publisher=Usaaf.net |date= |accessdate=2014-02-22 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141227223115/http://www.usaaf.net/chron/44/feb44.htm |archivedate=27 December 2014 |df=dmy-all }} 15. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.airwarweb.net/usaaf/9af_1944-01.php|title=Airwarweb.net|author=|date=|website=airwarweb.net|accessdate=29 April 2018}} 16. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.usaaf.net/chron/44/feb44.htm|title=USAAF.net|author=|date=|website=usaaf.net|accessdate=29 April 2018|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141227223115/http://www.usaaf.net/chron/44/feb44.htm|archivedate=27 December 2014|df=dmy-all}} 17. ^Publicenquiry.co.uk {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110726013034/http://www.publicenquiry.co.uk/history.html |date=26 July 2011 }} This table shows the 1 June 1944 Order of Battle for the Ninth Air Force in the United Kingdom, prior to the deployment of units to the Continent. 18. ^Tourtellot, Arthur B. et al. Life's Picture History of World War II, p. 234. Time, Inc., New York, 1950. 19. ^{{cite web |url=http://shopwornangel.imaginarynumber.net/1st-pathfinder-squadron-provisional/ |website=344th Bomb Group |accessdate=2 January 2019}} 20. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.seymourjohnson.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-081030-011.pdf|title=4th Fighter Wing History|author=|date=|website=af.mil|accessdate=29 April 2018|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304054545/http://www.seymourjohnson.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-081030-011.pdf|archivedate=4 March 2016|df=dmy-all}} 21. ^Associated Press, Air Force's Role Changing in Iraq, 3 January 2006 Bibliography{{Refbegin}}
External links
|list ={{Tactical Air Command}}{{USAAF 9th Air Force UK}} }}{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2012}} 5 : Air Forces of the United States Army Air Forces|Cold War military history of the United States|Military units and formations established in 1942|Military units and formations in South Carolina|European theatre of World War II |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。