From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
24th Special Tactics Squadron
U.S. Air Force's tier one special operations force
U.S. Air Force's tier one special operations force
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| unit_name | 24th Special Tactics Squadron | |
| image | 140414-F-RP072-629 (18194271289).jpg | |
| image_size | 300 | |
| caption | 24th STS members complete fast rope and hoisting training during exercise Advanced Guard at Holloman Air Force Base, New Mexico, 2014 | |
| dates | 1941–1944; 1987–present | |
| country | ||
| branch | ||
| type | Special Mission Unit | |
| command_structure | [[File:United States Special Operations Command Insignia.svg | 24px]] United States Special Operations Command |
| [[File:Seal of the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC).svg | 24px]] Joint Special Operations Command | |
| [[File:Shield of the United States Air Force Special Operations Command.svg | 25px]] Air Force Special Operations Command | |
| [[File:24th Special Operations Wing insignia.jpg | 25px]] [24th Special Operations Wing](24th-special-operations-wing) | |
| [[File:724th Special Tactics Group insignia.jpg | 25px]] [724th Special Tactics Group](724th-special-tactics-group) | |
| garrison | Pope Field, North Carolina | |
| battles | Operation Just Cause | |
| Somali Civil War | ||
| decorations | Air Force Outstanding Unit Award with Combat "V" Device | |
| Gallant Unit Citation | ||
| Air Force Outstanding Unit Award | ||
| identification_symbol | [[File:230202-F-AFHRA-196 24th Special Tactics Squadron.png | 165px]] |
| identification_symbol_label | 24th Special Tactics Squadron emblem (Approved 22 June 1990) |
Somali Civil War
- Operation Restore Hope
- Battle of Mogadishu Global war on terrorism
- War in Afghanistan
- Iraq War Gallant Unit Citation Air Force Outstanding Unit Award
The 24th Special Tactics Squadron is a special tactics unit of the United States Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC). Garrisoned at Pope Field, North Carolina, it is the U.S. Air Force component of Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC). The unit's webpage describes it as "the Air Force's special operations ground force".
The 24th Special Tactics Squadron are one of the U.S. military's tier one special mission units that are tasked with performing the most complex, covert, and dangerous missions directed by the president of the United States and the secretary of defense.
Mission
As the Air Force's tier 1 unit, the 24th STS provides special operations airmen to the Joint Special Operations Command, including Pararescuemen, Combat Controllers, Special Reconnaissance, and Tactical Air Control Party personnel. 24th STS members are also trained to conduct classified and clandestine operations such as direct action, counter-terrorism, counter-insurgency, hostage rescue, and special reconnaissance.
24th STS members conduct some missions on their own, but are mostly known as enablers to the Army's 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta (a.k.a. Delta Force) and the Navy's Special Warfare Development Group, or DEVGRU (a.k.a. SEAL Team 6).
The Special Tactics Squadron is the oldest of the U.S. military's special forces groups, dating to World War II, before the U.S. military adopted a widespread special operations doctrine.
History
World War II
The squadron traces its lineage to the 24th Air Corps Interceptor Control Squadron, formed in October 1941 at Hamilton Field, California. It was the director unit for the 24th Pursuit Group, which was formed simultaneously at Clark Field, Philippines, as the headquarters for pursuit squadrons of the Philippine Department Air Force.
After completing training, the squadron sailed for the Philippines on the USAT President Garfield on 6 December 1941. After the following day's Japanese attacks on Pearl Harbor and Clark Field, the President Garfield returned to port on 10 December and the squadron returned to Hamilton Field.
Although nominally assigned to the 24th Group from January to October 1942, the squadron served with air defense forces on the Pacific coast until it was disbanded on 31 March 1944, when the Army Air Forces converted its units in the United States from rigid table-of-organization units to more flexible base units. Its personnel and equipment were transferred to the 411th AAF Base Unit (Fighter Wing) at Berkeley, California.
Special operations
From 1977 to 1981, the 24th Special Tactics Squadron was called Brand X. Then it was called Det 1 MACOS (Detachment One, Military Airlift Command Operations Staff). In 1983, it was renamed Det 4 NAFCOS (Detachment Four, Numbered Air Force Combat Operations Staff). In 1987, it became 1724th Combat Control Squadron, and later in 1987, the 1724th Special Tactics Squadron. In 1992, it was renamed the 24th Special Tactics Squadron.
In 1989, the 1724th Special Tactics Squadron participated in the United States invasion of Panama. Combat Controller (CCT) SSgt. Jeffrey W. Bray received the Silver Star for coordinating helicopter attack runs throughout the night around their positions.
In September 2000, the 24th STS and the 23rd Special Tactics Squadron took part in the annual Canadian military exercise, Search and Rescue Exercise (SAREX). This was the first time Special Tactics units took part in SAREX.
The squadron was heavily involved in combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, where the unit was part of the JSOC groupings Task Force 121, Task Force 6-26 and Task Force 145. During Operation Rhino, two 24th STS operators were among the members of Task Force Sword that established a forward arming and refueling point (FARP) at Dalbandin, on the border with Pakistan. On November 13, an eight-man 24th STS element, supporting thirty-two Rangers from B Co., 3rd Ranger Battalion, executed a combat jump to seize a desert landing strip (LZ Bastogne). It was 24th STS's second combat jump of the war.
At LZ Bastogne, 24th STS was responsible for preparing the airstrip to receive two MC-130 Combat Talons, each ferrying two of Delta Force's AH-6 Little Bird gunships, which once unloaded, used LZ Bastogne as a FARP for their operations.
In 2003, members of the unit made two combat jumps in the initial phases of the Iraq War alongside the 3rd Ranger Battalion. The first was on 24 March 2003 near the Syrian border in the Iraqi town of Al Qaim, where they secured a small desert landing strip to allow follow-on coalition forces into the area. The second combat jump was two days later near Haditha, Iraq, where they secured the Haditha Dam.
On 8 April 2003, Combat Controller Scott Sather, a member of the 24th STS, became the first airman killed in combat in Operation Iraqi Freedom, near Tikrit, Iraq. He was attached to a small team from the Regimental Reconnaissance Company. The RRD team and Sather were operating alongside Delta Force, under Lieutenant Colonel Pete Blaber, west of Baghdad. They were tasked with deceiving the Iraqi army into believing the main U.S. invasion was coming from the west in order to prevent Saddam Hussein from escaping into Syria. Sather Air Base was named after him.
The 24th STS was a part of JSOC's Task Force 145 which was a provisional grouping charged with hunting down high-value al-Qaeda and Iraqi leaders, including Al-Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who was killed in June 2006.
In 2011, the squadron lost three members – PJs John Brown and Daniel Zerbe and CCT Andrew Harvell – when the Chinook in which they were flying was shot down in Afghanistan. To honor them, 18 members of AFSOC marched 800 miles from Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas to Hurlburt Field, Florida.
Notable members
-
PJ Tim Wilkinson received the Air Force Cross for his actions during the 1993 Battle of Mogadishu. Wilkinson was portrayed by Ty Burrell in the 2001 film Black Hawk Down, which chronicled the events of the Battle of Mogadishu.
-
CCT John Chapman was posthumously awarded the Air Force Cross, later upgraded to the Medal of Honor. He is the first US Air Force member to receive the Medal of Honor since the Vietnam Era, for his actions in the Battle of Takur Ghar during the War in Afghanistan. In 2005 a U.S. Navy Buffalo Soldier-class container ship was renamed the TSgt John A. Chapman in Chapman's honor. It took 16 years for him to be awarded one, due in large part to the Navy SEALs' attempts to block his Medal of Honor.
-
PJ Ramón Colón-López, a former Senior Enlisted Advisor to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was a member of the 24th STS twice. From February 1999 to January 2005, Colón-López was a Special Tactics Element Leader and from April 2009 to April 2011 he was the Squadron's Senior Enlisted Advisor. In 2007, Colón-López was one of the first six recipients of the newly created Air Force Combat Action Medal. He was awarded the AFCAM for a 2004 operation in Afghanistan during which he led an Advance Force Operations Team.
Lineage
; 24th Fighter Control Squadron
- Constituted as the 24th Air Corps Interceptor Control Squadron on 14 October 1941 : Activated on 21 October 1941
- Redesignated 24th Fighter Control Squadron on 15 May 1942
- Disbanded on 31 March 1944
; 24th Special Tactics Squadron
- Designated as the 1724th Combat Control Squadron on 1 May 1987
- Redesignated 1724th Special Tactics Squadron on 1 October 1987
- Reconstituted and consolidated with the 1724th Special Tactics Squadron on 1 March 1992
- Consolidated with the 24th Fighter Control Squadron on 1 March 1992
- Redesignated 24th Special Tactics Squadron on 31 March 1992
Assignments
- Fourth Air Force, 21 October 1941
- 24th Pursuit Group, 15 January 1942 (apparently attached to Fourth Air Force until 7 July 1942, then to IV Fighter Command)
- San Francisco Air Defense Wing (later San Francisco Fighter Wing), 15 October 1942 – 31 March 1944
- Twenty-Third Air Force, 1 May 1987
- 1720th Special Tactics Group (later 720th Special Tactics Group), 1 October 1987
- 724th Special Tactics Group, 29 April 2011 – present
Stations
- Hamilton Field, California, 21 October 1941 (aboard the USAT President Garfield, 6–10 December 1941
- Berkeley, California, 7 October 1943 – 31 March 1944
- Pope Air Force Base (later Pope Field), North Carolina, 1 May 1987 – present
Unit Awards
;Other
- Air Commando Association 2012 AFSOC Squadron of the Year
Commanders
- July 2003 – July 2005, Lt. Col. Mark F. Stratton
- June 2005 – June 2007, Lt. Col. Robert G. Armfield – Previous 24th STS assignments: Director of Operations (January 1998 – July 2002)
- June 2009 – April 2011, Lt. Col. Matthew Wolfe Davidson – Previous 24th STS assignments: Flight Commander (August 1998 – January 2002), Deputy Commander (June 2008 – June 2009)
References
Citations
General and cited references
; Attribution
References
- (9 June 2010). "Factsheet 24 Special Tactics Squadron (AFSOC)". Air Force Historical Research Agency.
- Haulman, Daniel L.. (12 November 2015). "The United States Air Force in Somalia, 1992–1995".
- Priest, Dana. (2 September 2011). "'Top Secret America': A Look at the Military's Joint Special Operations Command". [[The Washington Post]].
- (23 November 2009). "The Secret US War in Pakistan". [[The Nation]].
- "In high demand, Air Force commandos must find new ways to cope with stress of duty". [[The Gaffney Ledger]].
- Ambinder, Marc. (2013-03-22). "The most secret of secret units". The Week.
- Sof, Eric. (4 October 2019). "24th Special Tactics Squadron: USAF Tier 1 component to JSOC".
- (9 May 2005). "In high demand, Air Force commandos must find new ways to cope with stress of duty". The Gaffney Ledger.
- Longstreth, Samuel. (27 May 2023). "24th Special Tactics Squadron: Spear of the Sky".
- (2002). "No Room for Error: The Covert Operations of America's Special Tactics Units from Iran to Afghanistan". Ballantine Books.
- (2002). "No Room for Error: The Covert Operations of America's Special Tactics Units from Iran to Afghanistan". Ballantine Books.
- Naylor, Sean. (2015). "Relentless Strike: The Secret History of Joint Special Operations Command". St. Martin's Press.
- Oliveri. (June 1992). "Heroes at Mogadishu".
- "Awards of the Silver Star for Conspicuous Gallantry in Action During Operation Restore Hope in Somalia(1993)".
- Gertz, Bill. (3 October 1993). "The Fast Pace of Special Ops". Airforcemag.com.
- Groen, Ken. (2001). "413 Squadron wins Diamond Trophy at SAREX".
- John Pike. ["23rd Special Tactics Squadron 23rd STS]". Globalsecurity.org.
- Naylor, Sean. (2006). "Not a Good Day to Die: The Untold Story of Operation Anaconda". Berkley Books.
- Naylor, Sean. (2015). "Relentless Strike: The Secret History of Joint Special Operations Command". St. Martin's Press.
- Naylor, Sean. (2015). "Relentless Strike: The Secret History of Joint Special Operations Command". St. Martin's Press.
- Naylor, Sean. (2015). "Relentless Strike: The Secret History of Joint Special Operations Command". St. Martin's Press.
- John Pike. "United States Combat Jumps". Globalsecurity.org.
- (8 April 2003). "Air Force Staff Sgt. Scott D. Sather". Projects.militarytimes.com.
- (3 April 2013). "Our Fallen Heroes: Scott Sather". SOFREP.
- "DVIDS – News – Sather Air Base welcomes new commander". Dvidshub.net.
- (11 September 2001). "OTS Foundation Portal – The hunt ends". Air Force OTS.
- (11 August 2011). "Pentagon releases names of 30 Americans killed in Afghanistan helicopter crash". New York Post.
- (15 October 2011). "Airmen to walk 800 miles in memorial march for fallen from Bragg". Fayobserver.com.
- "The Air Force Cross For Actions in Somalia in 1993".
- "Ty Burrell, left,... – Ty Burrell and Jeremy Piven in 'Black Hawk Down'". Courant.com.
- "The Air Force Cross in the Global War on Terrorism".
- LaRaia. (8 April 2005). "Ship takes heroic legacy to the fight". 43rd Airlift Wing Public Affairs.
- Longstreth, Samuel. (3 December 2023). "24th Special Tactics Squadron: Spear of the Sky".
- (January 2013). "USAF Biography: Chief Master Sergeant Ramon Colon-Lopez".
- Burgess, Lisa. (13 June 2007). "Officials honor first recipients of Air Force Combat Action Medal". Stars and Stripes.
- Randolph, Monique. (12 June 2007). "Air Force Awards First Combat Action Medals". American Forces Press Services.
- Martin. (16 October 2012). "AFSOC Airmen past, present recognized at 2012 Air Commando Association banquet". Air Force Special Operations Command Public Affairs.
- (July 2011). "Colonel Marc F. Stratton". United States Air Force.
- (May 2013). "Colonel Robert G. Armfield".
- (September 2014). "Colonel Matthew Wolfe Davidson".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about 24th Special Tactics Squadron — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report