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581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing

The 581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing was a United States Air Force special operations wing, last assigned to Thirteenth Air Force at Clark Air Base, Philippines, from 1951-53.

581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing
581st Wing B-29 Superfortress camouflaged for night operations[a]
Active1943–1944; 1951–1953
Country United States
Branch United States Air Force
RoleSpecial Operations
Motto(s)Libertas Per Veritatem (Latin for 'Liberty Through Truth')
Insignia
Patch showing 581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing emblem[b][1]

The wing was inactivated in 1953. In 1985, it was consolidated on paper with the 471st Bombardment Group, a World War II heavy bombardment replacement training unit, last assigned to the First Air Force at Westover Field, Massachusetts, and the two units together redesignated as the 471st Special Operations Wing. However, the new wing was not activated.

History edit

World War II edit

The 471st Bombardment Group was activated at Alexandria Army Air Base, Louisiana in the spring of 1943 with the 805th, 806th, 807th, and 808th Bombardment Squadrons assigned.[2] The group operated as a Consolidated B-24 Liberator replacement training unit. Replacement training units were oversized units which trained aircrews prior to their deployment to combat theaters.[3] In January 1944, Second Air Force began to concentrate on Boeing B-29 Superfortress training. The 471st was reassigned to First Air Force and moved to Westover Field, Massachusetts.[2] Training at Westover included long range overwater formation flights.[4]

However, the Army Air Forces found that standard military units, based on relatively inflexible tables of organization were proving less well adapted to the training mission. Accordingly, a more functional system was adopted in which each base was organized into a separate numbered unit.[5] This resulted in the 471st, along with other units at Westover, being disbanded in the spring of 1944[2] and being replaced by the 112th AAF Base Unit (Bombardment (Heavy)), which assumed the group's mission, personnel, and equipment.

Cold War edit

In 1951, the USAF created the 581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing at Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho.[6] The wing consisted of an operational group assigned four units. The 581st Air Resupply & Communications Squadron (ARCS), the 581st Airborne Materials Assembly Squadron, the 581st Holding and Briefing Squadron, and the 581st Reproduction Squadron. The mission of the 581st ARS was the infiltration, resupply, and exfiltration of guerrilla-type personnel, and the aerial delivery of psychological warfare (PSYWAR) material (leaflets and other similar materials). The wing was also assigned two support groups a communications squadron and a maintenance squadron.[6]

In early 1952, the 581st received orders to forward deploy to Clark AB, Philippines, and to be assigned to Thirteenth Air Force. The first air resupply and communications wing to deploy overseas, the composite wing arrived at Clark AB, stripped of its support groups and communications squadron, in July 1952. It retained four squadrons specifically tailored to perform the special operations mission and a maintenance squadron. Shortly before deploying, the 581st Air Resupply and Communications Group was reduced to a paper organization and its squadrons were attached to the wing. Of the five squadrons assigned or attached to the wing, the 581st ARCS was the lone squadron devoted to flying operations.

Korean War edit

 
A female intelligence agent before a drop behind enemy lines

The 581st Wing proved to be flexible, and its initial theater deployment plan, outlined in Far East Command Operations Plan (OPLAN) 3–52, capitalized on this flexibility. The OPLAN established a concept of covert operations for theater forward deployment of assigned 581st ARCW assets. A key function of the wing was to maintain the capability to introduce special agents and guerrilla units into Communist countries and Communist-held areas, to supply them by and guerrilla units operating there, and to keep in contact with them by radio for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The mission to introduce and extract special agents into Communist countries operated under the cover of psychological warfare, providing cover against inquiries into their clandestine purpose. Four of the wing's twelve Boeing B-29 Superfortresses, and associated support personnel were placed on a 60-day rotation schedule to Yokota Air Base, Japan, where they were co-located with the 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron, which also flew the B-29. The wing's B-29s were retrofitted to allow cargo or human "drops" and were stripped of armament, with the exception of the tail gun, and countermeasures in order to lighten their load and increase altitude and range. One crew member was trained as a CIA contact, known as the jumpmaster. The identities of these jumpmasters were kept secret, even from the wing commander who did not know of their CIA connection. However, the wing had a senior officer serving as a liaison with the CIA. This was Lt. Colonel George Pittman, whose identity was also kept secret from those who did not have a need to know.

 
581st SA-16 in the Philippines[c]

The four Fairchild C-119 Flying Boxcar and support personnel were placed on a 90-day rotation schedule. The commander, 315th Air Division determined where the aircraft would be deployed. Two Grumman SA-16 Albatrosses were sent to K-16 (Seoul Airport) in South Korea to augment B Flight of the 6167th Air Base Group. The four Sikorsky H-19 ChickasawA helicopters were also deployed to K-16 to support the 2157th Air Rescue Squadron (in fact, they were co-located with the 2157th but actually supported B Flight, as did the two SA-16s). "34 CCRAK,"[specify] (probably an entity associated with Combined Command Reconnaissance Activities, Korea) maintained Operational Control (OPCON) of these forces and employed them on incursions into North Korea, along with B Flight and Special Air Missions detachment aircraft.[d]

The wing's planes were painted solid black after their arrival at Clark AFB, and they flew long-range leaflet drop missions over North Korea. PSYWAR "leaflet bombs" were loaded with various forms of PSYWAR materiel and then airdropped from high altitudes. An altitude-sensitive fuse opened the container at a predetermined set altitude, dependent on pre-mission forecast winds and desired dispersal patterns.

One of the most sensational missions of the 581st in Korea occurred on 12 January 1953, when a 581st B-29 (tail number 44-62217, call sign "Stardust Four Zero") on its first leaflet drop mission with the Wing Commander, Col. John Arnold (as well as the commander of the 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Wing, Major William (Bill) Baumer) on board, was shot down on their last leaflet target just south of the Yalu River in far northern Korea near the Chinese town of Antung. At the time, Russian fighter squadrons, some equipped for night flying, were providing the Chinese with airpower. Twelve Russian MiG-15s from the 351st (and perhaps the 535th) Fighter Air Regiments intercepted the lone Superfortress south of the Yalu River, about 15 miles from the Chinese border. The MiGs were scrambled and vectored to the bomber's location by Russian radar-controlled searchlight units stationed near Antung, China. The searchlights illuminated the unarmed Superfortress and several MiGs engaged the bomber. Russian MiG pilot Senior Lt. Khabiev of the 351st regiment was credited with the intercept and downing of the B-29.

According to Soviet sources:

"...Senior Lieutenant Khabiev was to distinguish himself once again: that night, the Commander of the 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron – Major William Baumer – decided to take a look at the situation in North Korea for himself and joined the crew of an RB-29 that was about to set off on a so-called ‘paper flight’ to drop leaflets. This would appear to be an amusing mission for a strategic reconnaissance aircraft; a great deal of attention, however, was paid to psychological warfare – and the ‘flight’ that Baumer chose was a truly dangerous one. The Superfortress would need to ‘drop its bombs’ along the banks of the Yalu River in ‘MiG Alley’ itself.

At 2221, the corps’ radar system detected an aircraft that, while it was over Yangdok, was heading for Uiju. Half an hour later (at 2251), Senior Lieutenant Khabiev took off to intercept this aircraft. Khabiev was guided onto the tail of the bomber using the remote indicator screen on the ‘Periscope’ radar: … Two minutes passed in the first impulse to find this bomber, and the pilot saw two intersecting searchlights ahead and to the left of him. He made a left-hand turn and noticed an RB-29 caught in the searchlights. Approaching the enemy aircraft’s aft hemisphere at an altitude of 7,000 m at 2210 [2310] Snr Lieutenant Khabiev closed to a distance of 600 m and positioned himself below and to the right of the aircraft, attacking at an aspect angle ranging from 0/4–1/4 and a climb angle of 5–10° with one long burst of fire aimed at the starboard engine, and the enemy aircraft caught fire. Despite the fact that he had reduced the engine rpm, Khabiev turned away to the right to avert a collision owing to the difference in speed, breaking off combat underneath and to the right of the enemy aircraft. He decided to attack the enemy aircraft a second time and began to assume an initial position from which to attack. He turned to the left and as he approached the burning aircraft’s tail from behind, he closed to a distance of 500–300 m, attacking once again at an aspect angle ranging from 0/4–1/4 with three long bursts of fire. The enemy aircraft, engulfed in flames, dived steeply towards the ground."[7]

Although US sources believe the B-29 was flying in North Korean airspace at the time of its mayday call, a belief that is strongly disputed by the Chinese and Russian authorities, crew members who bailed out believe they landed in North Korean territory. Upon capture, the crew was rounded up, blindfolded and put aboard trucks, subsequently transported into China and later charged as CIA spies (the Chinese subsequently learned of the CIA connection with the air resupply units). During the highly publicized Chinese trial in Beijing in October 1954, the surviving crew members, along with captured CIA agents Fecteau and Downey, who were imprisoned two years earlier after they had been shot down while attempting to pick up their Chinese double agent, were given prison sentences ranging from 5 years to life. Not until 4 August 1955, two years after the Korean War Armistice, were the surviving Stardust Four Zero crew members released from Chinese prison. These crew members were the longest-held POW USAF captives of the war.

First Indochina War edit

Beginning in 1953, however, the wing's C-119s began to be employed in Southeast Asia in support of French operations in Indochina. Supplies, including ammunition, vehicles, and barbed wire, were delivered to Haiphong Airport in ever increasing quantities. As this operation was underway, the wing was inactivated and its 581st Air Resupply Group, which received the wing's remaining assets, was transferred to control of Thirteenth Air Force.

Lineage edit

Components edit

Groups

  • 581st Air Base Group: 23 July 1951 – 26 June 1952[6]
  • 581st Air Resupply and Communications Group, 23 July 1951 – 8 September 1953 (not operational after 17 April 1952)[1]
  • 581st Medical Group: 23 July 1951 – 26 June 1952[6]

Squadrons

Assignments edit

Stations edit

Aircraft edit

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

Explanatory notes
  1. ^ The aircraft is Boeing B-29A-40-BN Superfortress, serial 44-61669. This plane flew combat missions from Guam during World War II with various nicknames. After the war, it served with Strategic Air Command until assigned to the 581st. It was modified as a TB-29A, then on 18 March 1956 transferred to the Naby for use as a target at China Lake Naval Air Weapons Station. In 1981, it was restored for display at the March Field Air Museum. Baugher, Joe (10 June 2023). "1944 USAF Serial Numbers". Joe Baugher. Retrieved 20 July 2023.
  2. ^ Approved 12 June 1952. Description: On a shield azure, a torch, base argent, flame or, flame moving toward the dexter, over the flame a quill argent bend sinister, all between three links of a chain sable, the center link couped with one and one-half link on each side of the torch, on a chief gules two branches, of olive surmounted by a sword in fess, hilt and pommel to the dexter, all or.
  3. ^ Aircraft is Grumman SA-16A Albatross, serial 51-017. This plane was later transferred to the Navy as BuNo 149836. Baugher, Joe (19 July 2023). "1951 USAF Serial Numbers". Joe Baugher. Retrieved 20 July 2023.
  4. ^ The Helicopter Flight and SA-16 Flight of the 581st Air Resupply Squadron received the Korean Service Steamer for their actions in Korea, but the rest of the wing did not.
Citations
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Ravenstein< p. 289
  2. ^ a b c Maurer, Combat Units, p. 345
  3. ^ Craven & Cate, Introduction, p. xxxvi
  4. ^ "Abstract, History 804 Bombardment Squadron Jan–Feb 1944". Air Force History Index. from the original on 7 July 2021. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
  5. ^ Goss, p. 75
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Mueller, p. 432
  7. ^ Krylov and Tepsurkaev, pg 279
  8. ^ a b c d Fletcher, p. 27
  9. ^ a b c d Maurer, Combat Squadrons, p. 782

Bibliography edit

  This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency

  • Craven, Wesley F; Cate, James L, eds. (1955). The Army Air Forces in World War II. Vol. VI, Men & Planes. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press. LCCN 48-3657.
    Goss, William A. (1955). "The Organization and its Responsibilities, Chapter 2 The AAF" (PDF). In Craven, Wesley F.; Cate, James L. (eds.). The Army Air Forces in World War II. Vol. VI, Men & Planes. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. LCCN 48003657. OCLC 704158. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
  • Fletcher, Harry R (1993). Air Force Bases , Vol. II, Air Bases Outside the United States of America (PDF). Washington, DC: Center for Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-53-6.
  • Krylov, Leonid and Yuriy Tepsurkaev (2016). The Last War of the Superfortresses: MiG-15 vs B-29 over Korea. Warwick, UK: Helion and Company. ISBN 1910777854.
  • Maurer, Maurer, ed. (1983) [1961]. Air Force Combat Units of World War II (PDF) (reprint ed.). Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-02-1. LCCN 61060979.
  • Maurer, Maurer, ed. (1982) [1969]. Combat Squadrons of the Air Force, World War II (PDF) (reprint ed.). Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-405-12194-6. LCCN 70605402. OCLC 72556.
  • Mueller, Robert (1989). Air Force Bases, Vol. I, Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982 (PDF). Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-53-6.
  • Ravenstein, Charles A. (1984). Air Force Combat Wings, Lineage & Honors Histories 1947–1977. Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-12-9.

Further reading edit

  • Brown, Wallace L. (1961). The Endless Hours. The Vail-Ballou Press, WW Horton & Co. Inc., NY, NY.
  • Baumer, William H. (1999). The Extended Mission of Stardust Four Zero, Closson Press. ISBN 0-9704359-1-6.
  • Haas, Michael E. (2000). In The Devil's Shadow-U.N. Special Operations During The Korean War. Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, Maryland.
  • Haas, Michael, E. (1997). Apollo's Warriors US Air Force Special Operations During The Korean War. Air University Press, Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama.
  • Krylov, Leonid and Yuriy Tepsurkaev (2016). The Last War of the Superfortresses: MiG-15 vs B-29 over Korea. Helion and Company, Warwick, UK. ISBN 1910777854.
  • Price, Alfred (1989). The History of US Electronic Warfare, The Renaissance Years, 1946–1964. The Association of Old Crows.

External links edit

  • The Col. Arnold Story. Burns, Robert. (1998). 12 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • Clark Air Base - Philippines

581st, resupply, communications, wing, united, states, force, special, operations, wing, last, assigned, thirteenth, force, clark, base, philippines, from, 1951, 581st, wing, superfortress, camouflaged, night, operations, active1943, 1944, 1951, 1953country, u. The 581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing was a United States Air Force special operations wing last assigned to Thirteenth Air Force at Clark Air Base Philippines from 1951 53 581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing581st Wing B 29 Superfortress camouflaged for night operations a Active1943 1944 1951 1953Country United StatesBranch United States Air ForceRoleSpecial OperationsMotto s Libertas Per Veritatem Latin for Liberty Through Truth InsigniaPatch showing 581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing emblem b 1 The wing was inactivated in 1953 In 1985 it was consolidated on paper with the 471st Bombardment Group a World War II heavy bombardment replacement training unit last assigned to the First Air Force at Westover Field Massachusetts and the two units together redesignated as the 471st Special Operations Wing However the new wing was not activated Contents 1 History 1 1 World War II 1 2 Cold War 1 3 Korean War 1 4 First Indochina War 2 Lineage 2 1 Components 2 2 Assignments 2 3 Stations 2 4 Aircraft 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 Bibliography 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory editWorld War II edit The 471st Bombardment Group was activated at Alexandria Army Air Base Louisiana in the spring of 1943 with the 805th 806th 807th and 808th Bombardment Squadrons assigned 2 The group operated as a Consolidated B 24 Liberator replacement training unit Replacement training units were oversized units which trained aircrews prior to their deployment to combat theaters 3 In January 1944 Second Air Force began to concentrate on Boeing B 29 Superfortress training The 471st was reassigned to First Air Force and moved to Westover Field Massachusetts 2 Training at Westover included long range overwater formation flights 4 However the Army Air Forces found that standard military units based on relatively inflexible tables of organization were proving less well adapted to the training mission Accordingly a more functional system was adopted in which each base was organized into a separate numbered unit 5 This resulted in the 471st along with other units at Westover being disbanded in the spring of 1944 2 and being replaced by the 112th AAF Base Unit Bombardment Heavy which assumed the group s mission personnel and equipment Cold War edit In 1951 the USAF created the 581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing at Mountain Home Air Force Base Idaho 6 The wing consisted of an operational group assigned four units The 581st Air Resupply amp Communications Squadron ARCS the 581st Airborne Materials Assembly Squadron the 581st Holding and Briefing Squadron and the 581st Reproduction Squadron The mission of the 581st ARS was the infiltration resupply and exfiltration of guerrilla type personnel and the aerial delivery of psychological warfare PSYWAR material leaflets and other similar materials The wing was also assigned two support groups a communications squadron and a maintenance squadron 6 In early 1952 the 581st received orders to forward deploy to Clark AB Philippines and to be assigned to Thirteenth Air Force The first air resupply and communications wing to deploy overseas the composite wing arrived at Clark AB stripped of its support groups and communications squadron in July 1952 It retained four squadrons specifically tailored to perform the special operations mission and a maintenance squadron Shortly before deploying the 581st Air Resupply and Communications Group was reduced to a paper organization and its squadrons were attached to the wing Of the five squadrons assigned or attached to the wing the 581st ARCS was the lone squadron devoted to flying operations Korean War edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp A female intelligence agent before a drop behind enemy lines The 581st Wing proved to be flexible and its initial theater deployment plan outlined in Far East Command Operations Plan OPLAN 3 52 capitalized on this flexibility The OPLAN established a concept of covert operations for theater forward deployment of assigned 581st ARCW assets A key function of the wing was to maintain the capability to introduce special agents and guerrilla units into Communist countries and Communist held areas to supply them by and guerrilla units operating there and to keep in contact with them by radio for the Central Intelligence Agency CIA The mission to introduce and extract special agents into Communist countries operated under the cover of psychological warfare providing cover against inquiries into their clandestine purpose Four of the wing s twelve Boeing B 29 Superfortresses and associated support personnel were placed on a 60 day rotation schedule to Yokota Air Base Japan where they were co located with the 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron which also flew the B 29 The wing s B 29s were retrofitted to allow cargo or human drops and were stripped of armament with the exception of the tail gun and countermeasures in order to lighten their load and increase altitude and range One crew member was trained as a CIA contact known as the jumpmaster The identities of these jumpmasters were kept secret even from the wing commander who did not know of their CIA connection However the wing had a senior officer serving as a liaison with the CIA This was Lt Colonel George Pittman whose identity was also kept secret from those who did not have a need to know nbsp 581st SA 16 in the Philippines c The four Fairchild C 119 Flying Boxcar and support personnel were placed on a 90 day rotation schedule The commander 315th Air Division determined where the aircraft would be deployed Two Grumman SA 16 Albatrosses were sent to K 16 Seoul Airport in South Korea to augment B Flight of the 6167th Air Base Group The four Sikorsky H 19 ChickasawA helicopters were also deployed to K 16 to support the 2157th Air Rescue Squadron in fact they were co located with the 2157th but actually supported B Flight as did the two SA 16s 34 CCRAK specify probably an entity associated with Combined Command Reconnaissance Activities Korea maintained Operational Control OPCON of these forces and employed them on incursions into North Korea along with B Flight and Special Air Missions detachment aircraft d The wing s planes were painted solid black after their arrival at Clark AFB and they flew long range leaflet drop missions over North Korea PSYWAR leaflet bombs were loaded with various forms of PSYWAR materiel and then airdropped from high altitudes An altitude sensitive fuse opened the container at a predetermined set altitude dependent on pre mission forecast winds and desired dispersal patterns One of the most sensational missions of the 581st in Korea occurred on 12 January 1953 when a 581st B 29 tail number 44 62217 call sign Stardust Four Zero on its first leaflet drop mission with the Wing Commander Col John Arnold as well as the commander of the 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Wing Major William Bill Baumer on board was shot down on their last leaflet target just south of the Yalu River in far northern Korea near the Chinese town of Antung At the time Russian fighter squadrons some equipped for night flying were providing the Chinese with airpower Twelve Russian MiG 15s from the 351st and perhaps the 535th Fighter Air Regiments intercepted the lone Superfortress south of the Yalu River about 15 miles from the Chinese border The MiGs were scrambled and vectored to the bomber s location by Russian radar controlled searchlight units stationed near Antung China The searchlights illuminated the unarmed Superfortress and several MiGs engaged the bomber Russian MiG pilot Senior Lt Khabiev of the 351st regiment was credited with the intercept and downing of the B 29 According to Soviet sources Senior Lieutenant Khabiev was to distinguish himself once again that night the Commander of the 91st Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron Major William Baumer decided to take a look at the situation in North Korea for himself and joined the crew of an RB 29 that was about to set off on a so called paper flight to drop leaflets This would appear to be an amusing mission for a strategic reconnaissance aircraft a great deal of attention however was paid to psychological warfare and the flight that Baumer chose was a truly dangerous one The Superfortress would need to drop its bombs along the banks of the Yalu River in MiG Alley itself At 2221 the corps radar system detected an aircraft that while it was over Yangdok was heading for Uiju Half an hour later at 2251 Senior Lieutenant Khabiev took off to intercept this aircraft Khabiev was guided onto the tail of the bomber using the remote indicator screen on the Periscope radar Two minutes passed in the first impulse to find this bomber and the pilot saw two intersecting searchlights ahead and to the left of him He made a left hand turn and noticed an RB 29 caught in the searchlights Approaching the enemy aircraft s aft hemisphere at an altitude of 7 000 m at 2210 2310 Snr Lieutenant Khabiev closed to a distance of 600 m and positioned himself below and to the right of the aircraft attacking at an aspect angle ranging from 0 4 1 4 and a climb angle of 5 10 with one long burst of fire aimed at the starboard engine and the enemy aircraft caught fire Despite the fact that he had reduced the engine rpm Khabiev turned away to the right to avert a collision owing to the difference in speed breaking off combat underneath and to the right of the enemy aircraft He decided to attack the enemy aircraft a second time and began to assume an initial position from which to attack He turned to the left and as he approached the burning aircraft s tail from behind he closed to a distance of 500 300 m attacking once again at an aspect angle ranging from 0 4 1 4 with three long bursts of fire The enemy aircraft engulfed in flames dived steeply towards the ground 7 Although US sources believe the B 29 was flying in North Korean airspace at the time of its mayday call a belief that is strongly disputed by the Chinese and Russian authorities crew members who bailed out believe they landed in North Korean territory Upon capture the crew was rounded up blindfolded and put aboard trucks subsequently transported into China and later charged as CIA spies the Chinese subsequently learned of the CIA connection with the air resupply units During the highly publicized Chinese trial in Beijing in October 1954 the surviving crew members along with captured CIA agents Fecteau and Downey who were imprisoned two years earlier after they had been shot down while attempting to pick up their Chinese double agent were given prison sentences ranging from 5 years to life Not until 4 August 1955 two years after the Korean War Armistice were the surviving Stardust Four Zero crew members released from Chinese prison These crew members were the longest held POW USAF captives of the war First Indochina War edit Beginning in 1953 however the wing s C 119s began to be employed in Southeast Asia in support of French operations in Indochina Supplies including ammunition vehicles and barbed wire were delivered to Haiphong Airport in ever increasing quantities As this operation was underway the wing was inactivated and its 581st Air Resupply Group which received the wing s remaining assets was transferred to control of Thirteenth Air Force Lineage edit471st Bombardment Group Constituted as the 471st Bombardment Group Heavy on 22 April 1943 Activated on 1 May 1943 Disbanded on 10 April 1944 Reconstituted on 31 July 1985 and consolidated with the 581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing as the 471st Special Operations Wing 581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing Constituted as the 581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing on 9 July 1951 Activated on 23 July 1951 Inactivated on 8 September 1953 Consolidated on 31 July 1985 with the 471st Bombardment Group as the 471st Special Operations Wing remained inactive Components edit Groups 581st Air Base Group 23 July 1951 26 June 1952 6 581st Air Resupply and Communications Group 23 July 1951 8 September 1953 not operational after 17 April 1952 1 581st Medical Group 23 July 1951 26 June 1952 6 Squadrons 581st Air Resupply and Communications Squadron attached 17 April 1952 8 September 1953 1 581st Airborne Materials Assembly Squadron attached 17 April 1952 8 September 1953 6 8 581st Holding and Briefing Squadron attached 17 April 1952 8 September 1953 6 8 581st Reproduction Squadron attached 17 April 1952 8 September 1953 6 8 804th Bombardment Squadron 1 May 1943 10 April 1944 9 805th Bombardment Squadron 1 May 1943 10 April 1944 9 806th Bombardment Squadron 1 May 1943 10 April 1944 9 807th Bombardment Squadron 1 May 1943 10 April 1944 9 581st Communications Squadron 23 July 1951 26 June 1952 6 581st Maintenance Squadron 23 July 1951 6 8 September 1953 8 Assignments edit II Bomber Command 1 May 1943 I Bomber Command 28 January 10 April 1944 Air Resupply And Communications Service 23 July 1951 1 Thirteenth Air Force 12 July 1952 8 September 1953 1 Stations edit Alexandria Army Air Base Louisiana 1 May 1943 Pueblo Army Air Base Colorado 7 May 1943 Westover Field Massachusetts 28 January 1944 10 April 1944 Mountain Home AFB Idaho 23 July 1951 18 July 1952 1 Clark Air Base Philippines 18 July 1952 8 September 1953 1 Kadena Air Base Okinawa 8 September 1953 1 September 1956 1 Aircraft edit Consolidated B 24 Liberator 1943 1944 Fairchild C 119 Flying Boxcar 1951 1956 Boeing B 29 Superfortress 1951 1956 Grumman SA 16 Albatross 1951 1956 Sikorsky H 19 1952 1956 Douglas C 54 Skymaster 1956 C 118 1952 1956See also editAir Force Special Operations Command 313th Air DivisionReferences editNotes edit Explanatory notes The aircraft is Boeing B 29A 40 BN Superfortress serial 44 61669 This plane flew combat missions from Guam during World War II with various nicknames After the war it served with Strategic Air Command until assigned to the 581st It was modified as a TB 29A then on 18 March 1956 transferred to the Naby for use as a target at China Lake Naval Air Weapons Station In 1981 it was restored for display at the March Field Air Museum Baugher Joe 10 June 2023 1944 USAF Serial Numbers Joe Baugher Retrieved 20 July 2023 Approved 12 June 1952 Description On a shield azure a torch base argent flame or flame moving toward the dexter over the flame a quill argent bend sinister all between three links of a chain sable the center link couped with one and one half link on each side of the torch on a chief gules two branches of olive surmounted by a sword in fess hilt and pommel to the dexter all or Aircraft is Grumman SA 16A Albatross serial 51 017 This plane was later transferred to the Navy as BuNo 149836 Baugher Joe 19 July 2023 1951 USAF Serial Numbers Joe Baugher Retrieved 20 July 2023 The Helicopter Flight and SA 16 Flight of the 581st Air Resupply Squadron received the Korean Service Steamer for their actions in Korea but the rest of the wing did not Citations a b c d e f g h Ravenstein lt p 289 a b c Maurer Combat Units p 345 Craven amp Cate Introduction p xxxvi Abstract History 804 Bombardment Squadron Jan Feb 1944 Air Force History Index Archived from the original on 7 July 2021 Retrieved 2 October 2013 Goss p 75 a b c d e f g h i Mueller p 432 Krylov and Tepsurkaev pg 279 a b c d Fletcher p 27 a b c d Maurer Combat Squadrons p 782 Bibliography edit nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency Craven Wesley F Cate James L eds 1955 The Army Air Forces in World War II Vol VI Men amp Planes Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press LCCN 48 3657 Goss William A 1955 The Organization and its Responsibilities Chapter 2 The AAF PDF In Craven Wesley F Cate James L eds The Army Air Forces in World War II Vol VI Men amp Planes Chicago IL University of Chicago Press LCCN 48003657 OCLC 704158 Retrieved 17 December 2016 Fletcher Harry R 1993 Air Force Bases Vol II Air Bases Outside the United States of America PDF Washington DC Center for Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 53 6 Krylov Leonid and Yuriy Tepsurkaev 2016 The Last War of the Superfortresses MiG 15 vs B 29 over Korea Warwick UK Helion and Company ISBN 1910777854 Maurer Maurer ed 1983 1961 Air Force Combat Units of World War II PDF reprint ed Washington DC Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 02 1 LCCN 61060979 Maurer Maurer ed 1982 1969 Combat Squadrons of the Air Force World War II PDF reprint ed Washington DC Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 405 12194 6 LCCN 70605402 OCLC 72556 Mueller Robert 1989 Air Force Bases Vol I Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982 PDF Washington DC Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 53 6 Ravenstein Charles A 1984 Air Force Combat Wings Lineage amp Honors Histories 1947 1977 Washington DC Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 12 9 Further reading editBrown Wallace L 1961 The Endless Hours The Vail Ballou Press WW Horton amp Co Inc NY NY Baumer William H 1999 The Extended Mission of Stardust Four Zero Closson Press ISBN 0 9704359 1 6 Haas Michael E 2000 In The Devil s Shadow U N Special Operations During The Korean War Naval Institute Press Annapolis Maryland Haas Michael E 1997 Apollo s Warriors US Air Force Special Operations During The Korean War Air University Press Maxwell Air Force Base Alabama Krylov Leonid and Yuriy Tepsurkaev 2016 The Last War of the Superfortresses MiG 15 vs B 29 over Korea Helion and Company Warwick UK ISBN 1910777854 Price Alfred 1989 The History of US Electronic Warfare The Renaissance Years 1946 1964 The Association of Old Crows External links editAir Resupply Communications Association Air Resupply and Communications Association March Field Museum Boeing B 29A Superfortress 44 61669 from the 581st ARW The Col Arnold Story Burns Robert 1998 Archived 12 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Clark Air Base Philippines Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing amp oldid 1166676781, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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