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332nd Air Expeditionary Wing

United States Air Force Air Combat Command unit

332nd Air Expeditionary Wing

United States Air Force Air Combat Command unit

FieldValue
unit_name332nd Air Expeditionary Wing
image332nd Air Expeditionary Wing emblem.jpg
image_size250
caption332nd Air Expeditionary Wing emblem
dates1941–1946; 2002–2012; 2015–present
countryUnited States
branchUnited States Air Force
typeProvisional Expeditionary Wing
command_structureUnited States Air Forces Central
current_commanderBrig. Gen. Christopher S. Sage
commander2Col. Christopher M. Auger
commander2_labelVice commander
commander3CCM Sean M. Milligan
commander3_labelCommand Chief
garrisonSouthwest Asia
mottoTuskegee Airmen...The Legend Continues
colorsAir Force Blue and Yellow
battlesWorld War II
Operation Iraqi Freedom
Operation Enduring Freedom
Syrian Civil War
notable_commandersGen. Benjamin O. Davis, Jr.
Lt. Gen. Burton M. Field
Gen. Robin Rand
Gen. Frank Gorenc
Maj. Gen. David Iverson

Operation Iraqi Freedom Operation Enduring Freedom Syrian Civil War Lt. Gen. Burton M. Field Gen. Robin Rand Gen. Frank Gorenc Maj. Gen. David Iverson

Balad Airmen honor fallen on Memorial Day 2007

The 332nd Air Expeditionary Wing (332 AEW) is a Provisional Wing of Air Combat Command, currently active. It was last inactivated on 8 May 2012, and most recently reactivated on 19 May 2015.

The Wing's 332nd Expeditionary Operations Group (332 EOG), is the direct descendant organization of the World War II 332nd Fighter Group, the Tuskegee Airmen. The title Tuskegee Airmen refers to all who trained in the groundbreaking Army Air Forces African-American pilot training program at Moton Field and Tuskegee Army Airfield, Alabama between 1941 and 1945. It includes pilots, navigators, bombardiers, maintenance and support staff, instructors and all the personnel who kept the planes in the air.

Overview

The 332 AEW conducted a number of missions. The F-16 aircraft were responsible for maintaining air supremacy in the skies over Iraq. Additionally, the A-10 and F-16 aircraft performed close air support missions as required. The C-130 unit provided required airlift within Iraq and to other US Central Command bases as necessary. The HH-60 Pave Hawks performed combat search and rescue missions. Finally, the MQ-1 Predators and MC-12W Liberty aircraft provided tactical surveillance and reconnaissance within Iraq. Additionally, the unit operated the Air Force Theater Hospital and served as the Contingency Aeromedical Staging Facility.

The wing used the General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon, Fairchild Republic A-10 Thunderbolt II, and the MQ-1 Predator unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) for close air support and traditional and non-traditional intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions.

In a departure from traditional Air Force missions, the 732nd Air Expeditionary Group (732 AEG), provided command oversight and advocacy for up to 1,800 Air Force personnel who were tactically assigned to U.S. Army and Marine units throughout Iraq. Operating from Balad Air Base at its inception, six squadrons of the 732 AEG provided direct Joint and Coalition combat and combat support to and/or in lieu of US Army, Marine Corps and Iraqi Army and Police Forces at over 60 locations, including downtown Baghdad; Camp Speicher; Al Asad Air Base; Camp Anaconda (Balad Air Base); Camp Bucca; Camp Caldwell (Kirkush); Tallil Air Base; Mosul Air Base; Camp Rustamiyah; Baghdad International Airport; Green Zone; Kirkuk Air Base; Camp Hadithah; and Taji Air Base.

Units

Current units

Former units

At Joint Base Balad (JBB), the 332nd Air Expeditionary Wing consisted of the following major groups:

  • 332nd Expeditionary Maintenance Group : Provided combat-ready aircraft and munitions to the Air Component Commander in support of Coalition forces throughout Iraq. Was responsible for on- and off-aircraft maintenance and sortie generation in support of F-16 Fighting Falcons, C-130 Hercules, HH-60 Pave Hawks, MQ1 Predators, and the MC-12 Liberty, as well as launch, recovery and servicing support for military and commercial transient aircraft -

  • 332nd Expeditionary Medical Group : Consisted of approximately 357 professional and support staff from all four armed services working alongside civilians and contractors that provided state-of-the-art medical care. The medical group was the only air-evacuation hospital in Iraq and provided a full-spectrum of medical services for Coalition and U.S. forces throughout the Iraqi theater of operations.

  • 332nd Expeditionary Mission Support Group : Enabled sustained and protected combat capability for US Air Forces Central, 332nd Air Expeditionary Wing, Joint Base Balad, and detachments. The 332 EMSG provided expeditionary communications, services, civil engineering, force protection, personnel accountability, and logistics-readiness operations in support of DoD's busiest single-runway operation. In addition, the 332 EMSG provided base-life support to the approximately 26,000 servicemembers and civilians on JBB.

  • 332nd Expeditionary Operations Group : See 332nd Expeditionary Operations Group article.

The emblem of the 532 ESFS.
  • 332nd Expeditionary Security Forces Group :The Security Forces Group was activated on 24 July 2008, at JBB, Iraq. Its activation marked the first time the Air Force deployed more than 900 people within a single unit to defend an air base in combat since the Vietnam War. The members of the 332nd ESFG work side-by-side with soldiers of the U.S. and Iraqi armies to provide physical security in the area around JBB. The Group was made up of two squadrons; the 332nd Expeditionary Security Forces Squadron provided base law enforcement and flight line security and the 532nd Expeditionary Security Forces Squadron provided security at the three entry control points to the base as well as a quick reaction force for "outside-the-wire" missions. The group was initially led by Colonel Decknick who was the prior Group commander for the 820th Security Forces Group.

  • 732 Air Expeditionary Group :The 732 AEG, originally the 732 Expeditionary Mission Support Group, was re-designated an air expeditionary group in December 2006 to reflect its theater-wide responsibilities. Operating from Balad Air Base, the six squadrons of the 732 AEG provided direct Joint and Coalition combat and combat support to and/or in lieu of US Army, Marine Corps and Iraqi Army and Police Forces at over 44 locations, including downtown Baghdad; Camp Speicher; Al Asad Air Base; Camp Anaconda; Camp Bucca; Camp Habbaniyah; Camp Caldwell (Kirkush); Tallil Air Base; Mosul Air Base; Camp Rustamiyah; Baghdad International Airport; Green Zone; Kirkuk Air Base; Camp Hadithah; and Taji Air Base. 732 AEG had over 1800 Airmen assigned, including security forces, RED HORSE and civil engineers, lawyers, truck drivers, interrogators, military working dog teams, intelligence specialists, explosive ordnance disposal specialist, logisticians, and airfield managers.

History

The 332nd Fighter Group, part of the Tuskegee Airmen, was a hard-fighting Army Air Forces unit in Europe during the Second World War.

The 332nd Fighter Wing was established in July 1947 under the United States Air Force's Hobson Plan, the wing/base reorganization. The 332nd Fighter Group becoming the operational component of the wing, controlling its flying squadrons. the 332nd Fighter Wing replaced the 447th Composite Group and 580th Air Service Group. The new wing participated in firepower demonstrations, gunnery training, and operational missions to maintain combat proficiency. The African-American segregated unit was inactivated in July 1949 as a result of Executive Order 9981. EO 9981 abolished racial discrimination in the United States Armed Forces. The 332nd's personnel and equipment were reassigned to other units.

Air Expeditionary Wing

In front of F-16C block 25 #84-1253 from the 179th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron, Minnesota ANG, airmen pose for a 'family' photograph at Balad AB, on 20 March 2007.

In August 2002, the Air Combat Command (ACC) 332nd Air Expeditionary Group at Ahmad al-Jaber Air Base, Kuwait, was authorized to expand to a Wing. The 332nd Air Expeditionary Wing was activated as a provisional organization on 12 August 2002 by ACC, with the 332nd AEG becoming the Wing's flying organization. A support organization was also activated as part of the 332 AEW, consisting of the 332nd Expeditionary Maintenance Group; 332nd Expeditionary Mission Support Group; 332nd Expeditionary Medical Group, and the 332nd Expeditionary Security Forces Group.

At its peak strength, the 332nd AEW consisted of over 8,000 personnel, including 1,800 Airmen of the 732 AEG, provided operational oversight for Airmen tactically assigned to U.S. Army and Marine units at over 60 forward operating locations throughout Iraq.

Employing A-10 Thunderbolt IIs, F-16 Fighting Falcons, HH-60 Pave Hawk rescue helicopters and HC-130 Hercules aircraft the 332nd AEW initially participated in Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF), playing a critical role in the defeat of the Taliban regime and later providing key air support for Afghanistan's provisional government.

After the initiation of Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) the 332nd was moved to Tallil Air Base, Iraq. To better position airpower within the theater of operations, the 332nd AEW was moved to Balad AB, Iraq, in February 2004. In June 2008, the base was officially renamed Joint Base Balad. The new name was indicative of the joint nature of operations by all branches of service at the base.

During the height of operations, the 332nd AEW contained nine groups. Four were geographically separated—the 407th, 447th, 438th Air Expeditionary Group and 506th Air Expeditionary Groups located respectively at Ali AB, Sather Air Base, Al Asad AB, Kirkuk Air Base—as well as numerous detachments and operating locations scattered throughout Iraq. The wing had as many as two F-16 fighter squadrons, a Predator UAV squadron, a C-130 squadron, a combat search and rescue squadron (HH-60s), a MC-12 Liberty squadron, and a Control and Reporting Center.

During the drawdown of forces from Iraq, the 332nd AEW provided surveillance, reconnaissance, combat search and rescue, armed overwatch and close air support to one of the largest logistics movements since World War II.

The wing continued to operate from Balad until moving in November-December 2011 to another nearby, undisclosed, country. Joint Base Balad could be returned to the government of Iraq. In support of the U.S. withdrawal, the wing continued to support U.S. Forces-Iraq. And as the last U.S. convoy left Iraq on 18 December 2011 with the 332nd AEW's F-16s and MQ-1B Predators in the skies providing overhead watch.

As of 2020, the wing was located at Muwaffaq Salti Air Base, Jordan.

Lineage

  • Established as 332nd Fighter Wing on 28 July 1947 : Organized on 15 August 1947 : Discontinued on 28 August 1948
  • Activated on 28 August 1948 : Inactivated on 1 July 1949
  • Redesignated as 332nd Air Expeditionary Wing, 1 August 2002 : Converted to provisional status and allocated to Air Combat Command to activate or inactivate any time after 1 August 2002 : Activated on 12 August 2002 : Inactivated on 8 May 2012 : Activated on 19 May 2015

Assignments

  • Ninth Air Force, 15 August 1947 – 28 August 1948; 26 August 1948 – 1 July 1949 : Attached to: First Air Force, 15 Jan-l Feb 1949
  • Air Combat Command : Attached to: United States Central Command Air Forces, 12 August 2002 – 5 August 2009 : Attached to: United States Air Forces Central, 5 August 2009 – 8 May 2012; 19 May 2015–present.

Components

Stations

  • Lockbourne AAB (later, AFB), Ohio, 15 August 1947 – 1 July 1949
  • Ahmad al-Jaber Air Base, Kuwait, 12 August 2002
  • Tallil Air Base, Iraq, March 2003
  • Balad Air Base (later Joint Base Balad), Iraq, 2004
  • Undisclosed Location, 18 December 2011 – 8 May 2012
  • Undisclosed Location, 19 May 2015 – Present

Aircraft

  • F-47N Thunderbolt, 1947–1949
  • O/A-10 Thunderbolt II, 1995, 1999, 2001–2003
  • F/A-18C/D Hornet, 2002
  • MQ-1A Predator, 2003–2011
  • HH-60 Pave Hawk, 2003–2011
  • F-16C/D Fighting Falcon, 2003–2011
  • F-15C/D Eagle, 2003–2011
  • F-15E Strike Eagle, 2003–2011
  • C-130 Hercules, 2003–2011
  • A-10 Thunderbolt II, 2007–2011
  • MC-12W Liberty, 2009–2011
  • P-51C/D Mustang, 1944-1945

Decorations

  • [[File:AFOUA with Valor.jpg|250px]] Air Force Outstanding Unit Award with Valor Iraq, 16 September 2002 – 15 September 2003
  • [[File:AF MUA Streamer.JPG|250px]] Air Force Meritorious Unit Award Iraq, 1 May 2005 – 31 January 2007
  • [[File:AF MUA Streamer.JPG|250px]] Air Force Meritorious Unit Award Iraq, 1 February 2007 – 31 January 2008
  • [[File:AF MUA Streamer.JPG|250px]] Air Force Meritorious Unit Award Iraq, 1 February 2008 – 31 January 2009
  • [[File:AF MUA Streamer.JPG|250px]] Air Force Meritorious Unit Award Iraq, 1 June 2009 – 31 May 2010
  • [[File:AF MUA Streamer.JPG|250px]] Air Force Meritorious Unit Award Iraq, 1 June 2010 – 31 May 2011

References

  • Ravenstein, Charles A. Air Force Combat Wings: Lineage and Honors Histories, 1947–1977 (Washington: USGPO, 1984)

References

  1. "Brigadier General Christopher S. Sage".
  2. "Colonel Christopher M. Auger".
  3. "Chief Master Sergeant Sean M. Milligan".
  4. (October 4, 2020). "332nd Air Expeditionary Wing Fact Sheet". U.S. Air Force.
  5. (4 December 2016). "Initial Personnel Recovery Forces Arrive in Diyarbakir". DVIDS.
  6. Staff Sgt. Don Branum. (28 July 2008). "Many Airmen, one mission: 'Defend the Base'". 332nd Air Expeditionary Wing Public Affairs.
  7. (2003). "Tallil Times newspapers". 332 AEW/PA.
  8. https://www.acc.af.mil/News/Photos/igphoto/2002496755/
  9. "Answering nation's call: 332nd Air Expeditionary Wing reactivation".
  10. "332 AEW awarded Meritorious Unit Award".
  11. Source document for missing MUA = USAFCENT SPECIAL ORDER G-02991 dated 15 November 2010
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