67th Fighter Squadron

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67th Fighter Squadron
290px
67th Fighter Squadron F-15C Eagle in 2008
Active 15 January 1941 - present
Country United States
Branch United States Air Force
Type Fighter
Part of Pacific Air Forces
5th Air Force
18th Wing
18th Operations Group
Garrison/HQ Kadena Air Base
Engagements Guadalcanal Campaign
Decorations Navy Presidential Unit Citation
Distinguished Unit Citation
Presidential Unit Citation
Air Force Outstanding Unit Award with Combat V Device
Philippine Presidential Unit Citation
Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation
Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Brig Gen Robbie Risner
Gregory S. Martin
Insignia
67th Fighter Squadron Patch emblem (Approved 8 March 1945)[1] 67th Fighter Squadron.jpg

The 67th Fighter Squadron "Fighting Cocks" (67 FS) are part of the 18th Operations Group at Kadena Air Base, Japan.

Mission

The 67th Fighter Squadron is one of two F-15 Eagle squadrons in the Asian-Western Pacific area of operations, conducting air superiority missions.

History

World War II

File:Bell P-400 Guadalcanal Aug 1942.jpg
67th FS P-400s on Guadalcanal, August 1942.

Continually active since January 1941, the 67th was activated as a single-engine fighter operational and replacement training unit as part of the 58th Pursuit Group. It was initially assigned to III Fighter Command, and reassigned to I Fighter Command in 1942. Used P-39 Airacobras and P-40 Warhawks for training. Converted to an operational squadron, 1943, re-eqipped with P-47 Thunderbolts.

Deployed to South Pacific Area, 1943, being assigned to the 347th Fighter Group, Thirteenth Air Force. Began combat operations in February 1944, providing protection for U.S. bases and escorting transports initially, then escorting bombers over New Guinea and sea convoys to Admiralty Islands. From Noemfoor, bombed and strafed Japanese airfields and installations on Ceram, Halmahera, and the Kai Islands.

Moved to the Philippines in Nov, flew fighter sweeps against enemy airfields, supported U.S. ground forces, and protected sea convoys and transport routes. Beginning in July 1945, attacked railways, airfields, and enemy installations in Korea and Kyushu, Japan from Okinawa.

After V-J Day, flew reconnaissance missions over Japan. Moved without personnel or equipment to the Philippines in December and demobilized, aircraft sent to depots in the Philippines. Became part of the defense forces of Far East Air Forces in the postwar years at Clark Air Base, being deployed assigned to Okinawa in 1949.[2]

Korean War

As a result of the North Korean invasion of South Korea in June 1950, the squadron was moved from the Philippines to Taegu AB (K-37), South Korea in July. At Taego, the squadron exchanged it's P-80 Shooting Star jets for propeller-driven F-51D Mustangs which were more suited to the ground attack and support role. Combat targets included tanks and armored vehicles, locomotives and trucks, artillery and antiaircraft guns, fuel and ammunition dumps, warehouses and factories, and troop concentrations.

File:67th Fighter-Bomber Squadron North American F-86F-25-NH Sabre 52-5371.jpg
North American F-86F-25-NH Sabre 52-5371, Korea, 1953

In August, advancing communist forces and insufficient aircraft parking at Taegu forced the unit to move to Japan, but it returned to South Korea the following month to support UN forces in a counteroffensive. Because the front advanced so rapidly, operations from Pusan East (K-9) soon became impractical, and the unit moved in November to Pyongyang East Air Base (K-24), North Korea.

The Chinese Communist (CCF intervention) caused the unit to move twice in as many weeks, first to Suwon AB (K-13), South Korea, then to Chinhae (K-10). From there the unit continued to support ground forces and carry out armed reconnaissance and interdiction missions. Throughout the conflict, the squadron moved from base to base in South Korea. In January 1953 the squadron rejoined the wing at Osan-ni AB (K-55) where it transitioned to the F-86 Sabre without halting the fight against the enemy. It flew its first F-86 counter air mission on 26 February 1953. In the final days of the war, the squadron attacked dispersed enemy aircraft at Sinuiju and Uiju Airfields.

The squadron remained in Korea for some time after the armistice. It was reassigned to Kadena Air Base, Okinawa in November 1954, performing tactical fighter operations in South Korea, Japan, Formosa (later Taiwan), and the Philippines with frequent deployments. In 1957, the squadron upgraded to the North American F-100 Super Sabre.

Vietnam War

A 67th TFS EF-4C over North Vietnam, December 1972.

Was re-equipped with the F-105 Thunderchief in 1962. As a result of the increased level of combat in Southeast Asia, the squadron was deployed to Korat RTAFB, Thailand, where it carried out tactical bombardment missions over North and South Vietnam in 1965, returning to Kadena AB at the end of October.

Was moved to Misawa AB, Japan in December 1967, being reassigned to the 39th Air Division. Equipment was changed to the F-4 Phantom II, with a to rotate squadrons to South Korea, providing air defense of the nation. Remained in Japan/South Korea until returned to Kadena AB in March 1971, being reassigned back to the 18th Tactical Fighter Wing.

Until 1975, primary mission was the air defense of Taiwan, performing frequent rotational TDYs to Ching Chaun Kang AB. Chinese air defense mission ended with United States' political recognition of Communist China and end of United States military deployments to Taiwan.

Modern era

For the past 35 years, the squadron has operated from Kadena Air Base, providing air defense in the Far East.[2]

2013 Sequestration

Air Combat Command officials announced a stand down and reallocation of flying hours for the rest of the fiscal year 2013 due to mandatory budget cuts. The across-the board spending cuts, called sequestration, took effect 1 March when Congress failed to agree on a deficit-reduction plan.[3]

Squadrons either stood down on a rotating basis or kept combat ready or at a reduced readiness level called “basic mission capable” for part or all of the remaining months in fiscal 2013.[3] This affected the 67th Fighter Squadron with a reduction of its flying hours, placing it into a basic mission capable status from 5 April-30 September 2013.[3]

Lineage

  • Constituted 67th Pursuit Squadron (Interceptor) on 20 November 1940
Activated on 15 January 1941
Redesignated: 67th Fighter Squadron on 15 May 1942
Redesignated: 67th Fighter Squadron, Single Engine, on 20 August 1943
Redesignated: 67th Fighter Squadron, Two Engine, on 24 May 1944
Redesignated: 67th Fighter Squadron, Single Engine, on 6 May 1946
Redesignated: 67th Fighter Squadron, Jet Propelled, on 17 July 1946
Redesignated: 67th Fighter Squadron, Single Engine, on 14 March 1947
Redesignated: 67th Fighter Squadron, Jet, on 10 November 1949
Redesignated: 67th Fighter-Bomber Squadron on 20 January 1950
Redesignated: 67th Tactical Fighter Squadron on 1 July 1958
Redesignated: 67th Fighter Squadron on 1 October 1991.

Assignments

Attached to: Southwest Pacific Area, c. 26 February 1942
Attached to: South Pacific Area, c. 15 March 1942
Attached to: Americal Division, c. 28 April – 2 October 1942
Attached to: Air Task Group 5, Provisional, 27 January – 17 February 1955
Attached to: Air Task Force 13, Provisional, 1 July – 1 October 1955
Attached to: 18th Fighter-Bomber Wing, 1 February – 30 September 1957
Attached to: 2d Air Division, 18 February – 26 April 1965 and 16 August – 23 October 1965
Attached to: Fifth Air Force ADVON, 7 October – 8 December 1968, 3 March – 3 April 1969, 2 June – 2 July 1969, 30 August – 1 October 1969, 1–18 January 1970, 16 February – 2 March 1970, and 29 March – 8 April 1970
Attached to: Detachment 1, HQ 475th Tactical Fighter Wing, 8–12 April 1970, 10–24 May 1970, 21 June – 4 July 1970, 18 July – 25 August 1970, 15–29 November 1970, 10–22 January 1971, and 5–15 February 1971
Attached to: 3d Tactical Fighter Wing, 2 June – 28 July 1972 and 8 September – 16 October 1972
Attached to: 327th Air Division, 8 November 1972 – 14 July 1973, 5–26 August 1973, 16 September – 7 October 1973, 28 October – 18 November 1973, 9–30 December 1973, 20 January – 10 February 1974, 2–23 March 1974, 13 April – 4 May 1974, 25 May – 15 June 1974, 2–27 July 1974, 16 October – 1 December 1974, 9 January – 20 February 1975, and 20 April – 30 May 1975

Stations

Aircraft

Operations

See also

References

Notes

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. 2.0 2.1 AFHRA 67 FS Page
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Reduced flying hours forces grounding of 17 USAF combat air squadrons

bibliography

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Air Force Historical Research Agency.

External links

Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons