195th Wing explained

Unit Name:195th Wing
Dates:1962–1970; 1970–1974; 2015–present
Allegiance:California Air National Guard
Branch:  Air National Guard
Role:Composite unit
Command Structure:California Air National Guard
Garrison:Beale Air Force Base
Website:195wg.ang.af.mil
Identification Symbol Label:195th Wing emblem (approved 1 October 1973)[1]

The 195th Wing is a unit of the California Air National Guard, stationed at Beale Air Force Base, California. If mobilized, the wing would be assigned to Air Force Space Command. It comprises seven subordinate units at five locations throughout the state. The 195th controls all non-flying, non-kinetic operations for the California Air National Guard.[2] The wing was activated as the headquarters for California Air National Guard space, cyber, and intelligence, surveillance & reconnaissance units.

From 1970 through 1974, the wing flew Lockheed C-130 Hercules aircraft from Van Nuys Air National Guard Base as the 195th Tactical Airlift Group.

Today the wing's mission is to train, deploy and employ its airmen and assets to deliver integrated space, cyber, and intelligence, surveillance & reconnaissance capabilities to the Combatant Commands and the Governor of California.[2]

Organization

149th Intelligence Squadron (Mather Field, California)[2] [3]

222d Intelligence Support Squadron[2]

234th Intelligence Squadron[2]

147th Combat Communications Squadron[2]

148th Space Operations Squadron (Vandenberg Air Force Base, California)[2]

216th Space Control Squadron (Vandenberg Air Force Base, California) - the federal mission of the 216th is to provide combat space superiority effects to the Commander, Combined Force Space Component Command and Space Operations Command under U.S. Space Force, and theater combatant commanders.[4] The unit’s space operators deploy globally to conduct mobile and transportable space superiority and evaluate and operate new counter-space technologies.

261st Cyber Operations Squadron (Van Nuys, California)[2]

History

Airlift group

The 195th Tactical Airlift Group was formed as the headquarters for the 195th Tactical Airlift Squadron in 1971 Van Nuys Air National Guard Base and was initially equipped with the Lockheed C-130A Hercules. In 1973, the group upgraded to the C-130B model of the Hercules. As the Vietnam War wound down, the demand for airlift decreased and the 146th Tactical Airlift Wing was reduced in size by inactivating the 195th Group and its components on 30 September 1974. The group's personnel, equipment and aircraft were reassigned to other units of the 146th Wing.[2]

Composite wing

In August 2015, the California Air National Guard announced that it was forming a new wing to manage its military intelligence, space, cyber and combat communications missions. The core of the new wing would be the 162d Combat Communications Group, which would be inactivated when the wing stood up.[2] [5] Preparations for establishing the wing went back as far as 2001, when the 162d Group added units whose mission complemented its core combat communications mission.[2]

Lineage

Activated on 15 May 1971

Federally recognized on 7 October 1971

Inactivated on 30 September 1974

Assignments

Components

Groups
Squadrons
Flights
Medical

Stations

Aircraft

See also

References

Notes
Citations

Bibliography and further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lineage & Honors History of the 195th Wing California Air National Guard. Anderson. David P.. 5 October 2015. California Military History Museum. 1 August 2016.
  2. Web site: 195th Wing - California Air National Guard. 19 May 2016. 9th Wing Public Affairs. 1 August 2016.
  3. If no location is given, the unit is located with wing headquarters at Beale Air Force Base.
  4. Web site: Cal Guard Space Operators support COVID-19 food bank mission.
  5. Web site: California Guard Forms 195th Wing To Take On Space, Cyber, Intelligence, Communications Missions. . 17 August 2015. Homeland Security Today. 1 August 2016.