6th Air Refueling Wing explained

Unit Name:6th Air Refueling Wing
Dates:1951–1992; 1994–present
Country: United States
Role:Air refueling
Command Structure:Air Mobility Command
Garrison:MacDill AFB, Florida
Equipment:KC-135R Stratotanker
Motto:Parati Defendere Latin Ready to Defend[1]
Decorations:Air Force Outstanding Unit Award[2]
Current Commander:Colonel Adam D. Bingham
Commander2:Colonel Edward V. Szczepanik
Commander2 Label:Vice Commander
Commander3:Chief Master Sergeant Shae D. Gee
Commander3 Label:Command Chief
Identification Symbol Label:6th Air Refueling Wing emblem (adopted 18 March 1955, reinstated 20 September 1988)[3]
Identification Symbol 2 Label:Patch with 6th Strategic Wing emblem (approved 21 October 1980)

The United States Air Force's 6th Air Refueling Wing is the host wing for MacDill Air Force Base, Florida. It is part of Air Mobility Command's (AMC) Eighteenth Air Force. The wing's 6th Operations Group is a successor organization of the 3d Observation Group, one of the seven original combat air groups formed by the United States Army Air Service shortly after the end of World War I.

The 6th Air Refueling Wing provides day-to-day mission support to more than 3,000 personnel along with more than 50 mission partners, including the United States Central Command and United States Special Operations Command. It is a force capable of rapidly projecting air refueling power anywhere in the world. The 6 ARW is organized into four unique groups and three operational flying squadrons to carry out its mission to be provide air refueling, airlift, and air base support.

Units

The 6th Air Refueling Wing consists of the following units:

50th Air Refueling Squadron KC-135R

91st Air Refueling Squadron KC-135R

99th Air Refueling Squadron KC-135R (Active Associate to ANGSumpter Smith Air National Guard Base, Alabama)

911th Air Refueling Squadron KC-46A (Active Associate to AFRCSeymour Johnson Air Force Base, North Carolina)

History

Strategic bomber operations

The 6th Bombardment Wing (Medium) was activated Walker Air Force Base, New Mexico on 2 January 1951, where it was assigned to Strategic Air Command (SAC)'s Eighth Air Force. The 24th, 39th and 40th Bombardment Squadrons were simultaneously activated. The squadrons were nominally assigned to the wing's 6th Bombardment Group, but the group was not operational and the squadrons were attached directly to the wing's headquarters until the group was inactivated in June 1952. The wing was equipped with Boeing B-29 Superfortress bombers. In August, the 307th Air Refueling Squadron, operating KB-29P Superfortress tankers to refuel the wing's bombers, moved to Walker from Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona, and was also attached to the Wing.[1] [4]

One month after the wing was activated, it was assigned to the 47th Air Division, which was activated at Walker to serve as the headquarters for the 6th and Walker's second wing, the 509th Bombardment Wing.[5] In 1952, the 6th converted from the B-29 to the Convair B-36 Peacemaker. The Peacemaker did not require air refueling, so the 307th Squadron's attachment to the wing ended. On 31 October 1955, the entire wing deployed to Anderson Air Force Base, Guam, remaining there until 26 January 1956, when it returned to Walker. The wing continued to fly the B-36 until 1957, when it began converting to the Boeing B-52 Stratofortress.[1]

Crew training

The air refuelable B-52 brought with it a return of the air refueling mission, this time with the Boeing KC-135 Stratotankers of the 6th Air Refueling Squadron. SAC was expanding the number of its B-52 wings, increasing the number of B-52 crews it had to train. On 1 August 1959, the 4129th Combat Crew Training Squadron was organized and assigned to the wing to conduct ground training of new crews, while the following month, the 24th and 39th Bombardment Squadrons[6] [1] began flying training.[1]

The 40th Bombardment Squadron continued to train for combat missions. On 10 June 1960, the entire wing became non-operational, a status that lasted until 1 December 1961, when the 40th returned to combat status.[1] One third of the squadron's aircraft were maintained on fifteen minute alert, fully fueled and ready for combat to reduce vulnerability to a Soviet missile strike. This was increased to half the squadron's aircraft in 1962.[7]

Missile operations

The 579th Strategic Missile Squadron was activated in September 1961 as an SM-65 Atlas-F squadron.[1] This addition of ICBMs resulted in the wing's redesignation as the 6th Strategic Aerospace Wing in May 1962. The squadron received its first ICBM on 24 January 1962. At the beginning of the Cuban Missile Crisis of October 1962 six of the squadron's missile sites had not yet been turned over to SAC by Air Force Systems Command (AFSC). On 24 October, AFSC began to bring these missiles up to alert status. Once the crisis had abated, these missiles were removed from alert until normal training and testing could be completed. On 1 June 1963, a crew of the 579th was conducting a propellant loading exercise when an explosion occurred, destroying the squadron's launch complex 1.[8] A nearly identical accident on 13 February 1964 destroyed launch complex 5, followed less than a month later, on 9 March 1964, by the destruction of launch complex 2 in another explosion.[9]

On 19 November 1964, Secretary of Defense Robert MacNamara announced Project Added Effort which would phase out that all Atlas-F missiles by the end of June 1965.[10] In implementing this project, the 579th Strategic Missile Squadron phased out its missile operations in February and inactivated on 25 March 1965.[1] [11]

Return to bomber operations

The Cuban Missile Crisis impacted the wing's flying force as well. On 20 October each of the wing's B-52 squadrons was directed to put two additional planes on alert. Additional KC-135s were also placed on alert to replace KC-135s devoted to maintaining 1/8 of SAC's B-52 bomber force on airborne alert. On 24 October SAC went to DEFCON 2, placing all aircraft on alert. On 21 November SAC returned to its normal alert posture. However, the wing's return to the training mission was short-lived, for on 5 September 1963, the 24th and 39th Squadrons returned to combat status, and three weeks later, on 25 September, the 39th Bombardment Squadron and 4129th Combat Crew Training Squadron were discontinued.[1]

In June 1965, the 310th Air Refueling Squadron moved to Walker from Schilling Air Force Base. The 310th had supported the Boeing B-47 Stratojets of the 310th Bombardment Wing at Schilling with Boeing KC-97s, but in preparation for its move to Walker, had re-equipped with KC-135s during 1964.[12] This made the 6th a double-sized wing and one of the largest in SAC with its 60 heavy jet aircraft. Soon after, on 8 December 1965, the Department of Defense announced that Walker would close in connection with the drawdown of older model B-52s.

All operational elements of the wing had ceased operations by 25 January 1957. The 310th Air Refueling Squadron moved to Plattsburgh Air Force Base, New York while the remaining operational squadrons were discontinued. On 25 March, wing headquarters moved on paper to Eielson Air Force Base.[1] [12]

Strategic reconnaissance

Background

SAC had long deployed bombardment and reconnaissance aircraft to the Arctic. In 1955, the tactical and maintenance elements of the 90th Bombardment Wing deployed to Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska, and SAC formed the provisional Eielson Task Force to control its forces temporarily stationed there. In August of the following year, the 14th Aviation Depot Squadron (later the 14th Munitions Maintenance Squadron) of Fifteenth Air Force moved to Eielson to oversee special weapons there.

On 1 July 1960, SAC formed the 4157th Combat Support Group to provide support for forward deployed SAC bombardment and reconnaissance elements at Eielson. The group was a tenant of the 5010th Air Base Wing (later 5010th Combat Support Group) of Alaskan Air Command. Its original component squadron was the 14th Aviation Depot Squadron. When the focus of the 4157th shifted to reconnaissance with the discontinuance of Reflex operations in August 1962, the 14th was inactivated. In 1962, the group expanded to become the 4157th Strategic Wing, and its commander assumed duties as the commander of the Eielson Task Force.[13] The wing mission had expanded to include air refueling support for B-52s involved with Operation Chrome Dome operations[14] In 1966 it added a permanently based maintenance squadron was added to the wing to provide maintenance support for deployed aircraft.[15]

In July 1965 the wing was reassigned to the 18th Strategic Aerospace Division,[16] However, SAC Major Command Controlled (MAJCON) Strategic Wings could not carry a permanent history or lineage[17] and SAC took the opportunity presented by the drawdown at Walker to replace the 4157th with the 6th Strategic Wing.[18]

Move to Eielson

The wing moved on paper to Eielson, where it became the 6th Strategic Wing and assumed the personnel, equipment and mission of the 4157th Strategic Wing. In addition to a maintenance squadron, the wing was assigned the new 24th Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron.[1] [19]

In Alaska, the wing's 24th Squadron flew RC–135 strategic reconnaissance missions and conducted Alaska Tanker Task Force[20] missions with deployed KC–135s from SAC, the Air Force Reserve and the Air National Guard. Task force aircraft flew missions to support reconnaissance and numerous exercises for the Air Force and United States Navy. From April 1968 to July 1972 the wing periodically served as the airborne monitor of the Alaskan Ballistic Missile Early Warning System station at Clear, Alaska. The wing maintained a detachment at Shemya Air Force Station, in the Aleutian Islands On two occasions, from February through May 1975 and June through September 1976, the wing moved all operations to Shemya when Eielson closed for repair of earthquake damage.[1]

The wing won the P.T. Cullen Award for greatest contributions to SAC's photographic and signal intelligence effortsthree times, in 1973, 1978 and 1983.[1] On 4 October 1968, exactly 11 years to the day after the launch of Sputnik-1, a wing Rivet Ball aircraft captured the first photographic evidence of a Soviet ICBM test with three multiple reentry vehicles.

The wing suffered several losses while at Eielson. On 13 January 1969, RC-135S, serial 59-1491 hydroplaned off the end of Runway 28 at Shemya while attempting to land after an operational mission. The aircraft was totally destroyed. No one was seriously injured. On 5 June 1969 an RC-135E crashed in the Bering Sea minutes after leaving Shemya. Nineteen crewmembers died. On 15 March 1981, an RC-135 Cobra Ball aircraft, serial 61-2664 departed Eielson for Shemya with 24 people on board. While attempting to land on Shemya they encountered a rapid decline in weather that resulted in a crash landing. Six men died and several medals were awarded for bravery. On 25 February 1985, an RC-135T, serial 55-3121 Rivet Dandy aircraft crashed into a mountainous area near Valdez, Alaska while on a training mission. All three crewmembers perished. The wreckage was not located until 2 August 1985.

On 1 April 1988, SAC renamed the wing the 6th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing. In December 1991, it was decided to transfer the wing's reconnaissance mission to the 55th Wing at Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska, and terminate the Alaska Tanker Task. The 24th Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron moved to Offutt on 7 July 1992, terminating the wing's operational mission and it was inactivated on 1 September 1992.[1]

Air mobility operations

Base support mission

Following the 1991 Base Realignment and Closure Commission decision to terminate the 56th Fighter Wing's mission at MacDill Air Force Base, Florida by the end of 1993 and relocate it and its General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon aircraft to Luke Air Force Base, Arizona, Air Mobility Command assumed responsibility for operating MacDill and providing support for United States Special Operations Command (USSOCOM), United States Central Command (USCENTCOM) and other tenant units from Air Combat Command. The wing was redesignated the 6th Air Base Wing and activated on 4 January 1994 at MacDill to perform the support mission.[1]

Return to flying operations

On 1 October 1996, the wing returned to a flying mission when the 91st Air Refueling Squadron and its KC-135R aircraft moved from Malmstrom Air Force Base, Montana to MacDill.[21] The 6th Bombardment Group was reactivated as the 6th Operations Group to be the headquarters for the 91st Squadron and the wing was renamed the 6th Air Refueling Wing.[1] The following year, the wing also assumed support responsibility for Boeing EC-135 command post aircraft at MacDill supporting USCENTCOM and USSOCOM commanders and a Boeing T-43 Bobcat supporting the United States Southern Command commander in Miami, Florida. The wing provided refueling support for global air mobility missions. In 1998, it deployed crews and aircraft to support Operation Northern Watch[1]

On 1 January 2001, three C-37A Gulfstream V aircraft replaced the Bobcats.[1] with the addition of the C-37s to the wing's EC-135Ys, the 310th Airlift Squadron was activated under the 6th Operations Group,[22] and the wing was redesignated the 6th Air Mobility Wing.[1] Following the 9/11 attacks, the wing also provided refueling support for fighters flying homeland security over the southeastern United States.[1]

The wing has twice won the Air Mobility Rodeo Best Air Mobility Wing Award; in 2000 and 2005.

On 1 October 2008, the 927th Air Refueling Wing moved on paper to MacDill from Selfridge Air National Guard Base, Michigan and became a classic reserve associate unit, providing crews and support personnel sharing operation of the 6th's KC-135R aircraft.[23] The 927th had transferred its existing aircraft to the 127th Wing of the Michigan Air National Guard at Selfridge. This move resulted from a recommendation by the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission.

The wing deploys to forward locations to support the Global War on Terrorism and performs medical evacuation missions from overseas theaters of operations.[1] After the devastating earthquake in Haiti on 12 January 2010, the wing supported Operation United Response providing humanitarian aid to victims of the earthquake until June 2010.[23]

Regular associate units

In April 2008, the 911th Air Refueling Squadron was activated at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, North Carolina. The 911th is an "Active Associate" unit, partnering with the reserve 77th Air Refueling Squadron of the 916th Air Refueling Wing and using the 77th's KC-135Rs. The 911th was the first tanker active associate unit to be formed and the 77th received an additional eight airplanes for it to operate with the 911th.[24] The squadron won its second Spaatz Trophy as an associate unit.[1] [25]

In October 2009, the 99th Air Refueling Squadron, was activated at Birmingham Air National Guard Base (since renamed Sumpter Smith ANGB), Alabama, as the wing's second active associate squadron. The 99th operates the KC-135Rs of the 106th Air Refueling Squadron of the Alabama Air National Guard's 117th Air Refueling Wing.[1] [26]

On 1 October 2019, due to the deactivation of the 310th Airlift Squadron, the 6th Air Mobility Wing was redesignated as the 6th Air Refueling Wing.[27]

Lineage

Redesignated 6th Bombardment Wing, Heavy on 16 June 1952

Redesignated 6th Strategic Aerospace Wing on 1 May 1962

Redesignated 6th Strategic Wing on 25 March 1967

Redesignated 6th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing on 1 April 1988

Redesignated 6th Air Base Wing on 22 December 1993

Redesignated: 6th Air Refueling Wing on 1 October 1996

Redesignated: 6th Air Mobility Wing on 1 January 2001[1]

Redesignated: 6th Air Refueling Wing on 1 October 2019[27]

Assignments

Operational Components

Groups
Squadrons

Stations

Aircraft and missiles

See also

References

Notes

Explanatory notes
Citations

Bibliography

Further Reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Factsheet 6 Air Refueling Wing (AMC). Robertson. Patsy. 19 June 2017. Air Force Historical Research Agency. 29 January 2018.
  2. The 6th Wing is entitled to display the campaign credits and decorations earned by the 6th Operations Group prior to the establishment of the wing in 1951. Robertson.
  3. The 6th Bombardment Wing also used the distinctive unit insignia approved for the 6th Bombardment Group, which consisted of the crest of the group's coat of arms, a pirate's head, superimposed on a triangle.
  4. Unlike the bomber squadrons, the 307th was not a component of the 6th Group, but was assigned to the 307th Bombardment Wing at MacDill Air Force Base. Ravenstein, Combat Wings, p. 154.
  5. Web site: Factsheet 47 Air Division . 5 October 2007. Air Force Historical Research Agency . https://web.archive.org/web/20121017235335/http://www.afhra.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=10100 . 17 October 2012 . 4 April 2014.
  6. Both Ravenstein and Robertson list the "30th" Squadron. Since no squadron with this number was assigned to the wing, this would seem to be a repeated typographical error.
  7. Web site: Abstract (Unclassified), History of the Strategic Bomber since 1945 (Top Secret, downgraded to Secret). 1 April 1975. Air Force History Index. 4 March 2014.
  8. SAC Missile Chronology, p. 40
  9. SAC Missile Chronology, p. 46
  10. SAC Missile Chronology, p. 45
  11. SAC Missile Chronology, p. 47
  12. Web site: Factsheet 310 Expeditionary Air Refueling Flight (AMC). Kane. Robert B.. 12 August 2009. Air Force Historical Research Agency. 22 August 2017.
  13. Web site: Abstract, History 4157th Strategic Wing, Jul 1962. Air Force History Index. 30 January 2018.
  14. Web site: Abstract, History 4157th Combat Support Group, 1962. Air Force History Index. 25 April 2013.
  15. Web site: Abstract, History 4157th Strategic Wing, January 1966. Air Force History Index. 30 January 2018.
  16. Web site: Factsheet 18 Strategic Aerospace Division . Air Force Historical Research Agency . https://web.archive.org/web/20121030115716/http://www.afhra.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=10071 . 10 April 2007. 30 October 2012 . 6 April 2014.
  17. Ravenstein, Guide to Air Force Lineage and Honors, p. 12
  18. The 6th Wing is entitled to retain the honors (but not the history or lineage) of the 4157th Strategic Wing.
  19. The 24th Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron was newly constituted in December 1966. However, in September 1985, the reconnaissance and bombardment squadrons were consolidated into a single unit. Department of the Air Force/MPM Letter 662q, 19 Sep 85, Subject: Reconstitution, Redesignation, and Consolidation of Selected Air Force Tactical Squadrons
  20. The successor of the Eielson Task Force.
  21. Web site: Factsheet 91 Air Refueling Squadron (ACC). Robertson. Patsy. 17 January 2008. Air Force Historical Research Agency. 2 December 2014.
  22. Web site: Factsheet 310 Airlift Squadron (AMC). Robertson. Patsy. 29 January 2015. Air Force Historical Research Agency. https://web.archive.org/web/20150928233452/http://www.afhra.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=10650 . 28 September 2015. 26 October 2016.
  23. Web site: Factsheet 927 Air Refueling Wing (AFRC). Robertson. Patsy. 22 June 2017. Air Force Historical Research Agency. 30 January 2018.
  24. Web site: BRAC changes on the horizon for North Carolina refueling wing. Rizzo. Brandon. 6 September 2007. 27 September 2007. 916th Air Refueling Wing Public Affairs. 19 March 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140223114313/http://www.afrc.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123067049. 23 February 2014. dead.
  25. Web site: What is the 911th ARS?. Lambert. Sr Amn Whitney. 17 March 2011. 18 March 2011. 4th Fighter Wing Public Affairs. 20 March 2014.
  26. Web site: Factsheet 99 Air Refueling Squadron (AMC). Robertson. Patsy. 22 October 2009. Air Force Historical Research Agency. 17 April 2017.
  27. Web site: Ryan . Grossklag . 6th Air Refueling Wing Redesignation . MacDill Air Force Base . 30 September 2019 . 12 November 2019.