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Kadena Air Base

Kadena Air Base (嘉手納飛行場, Kadena Hikōjō) (IATA: DNA, ICAO: RODN) is a United States Air Force base in the towns of Kadena and Chatan and the city of Okinawa, in Okinawa Prefecture, Japan. It is often referred to as the "Keystone of the Pacific" because of its highly strategic location.[2] It is located 650 km (400 mi) off the coast of China and at a distance of 770 km (480 mi) from Shanghai, a major economic hub. It is home to the USAF's 18th Wing, the 353rd Special Operations Wing, reconnaissance units, 1st Battalion, 1st Air Defense Artillery Regiment, and a variety of associated units. Over 20,000 American servicemembers, family members, and Japanese employees live or work at Kadena Air Base.[3] It is the largest and most active U.S. Air Force base in East Asia.[4]

Kadena Air Base
嘉手納飛行場
Kadena Hikōjō
Kadena, Okinawa Prefecture in Japan
A U.S. Air Force E-3 Sentry from the 961st Airborne Air Control Squadron taxis on the runway before take-off from Kadena Air Base in 2015.
Kadena AB
Kadena AB
Kadena AB
Kadena AB
Coordinates26°21′06″N 127°46′10″E / 26.35167°N 127.76944°E / 26.35167; 127.76944 (Kadena AFB)
TypeU.S. Air Force Base
Site information
OwnerVarious (leased by Government of Japan and made available to the U.S.)
OperatorU.S. Air Force
Controlled byPacific Air Forces (PACAF)
StatusOperational
Websitewww.kadena.af.mil
Site history
Built1945 (1945) (as Yara Hikojo Airfield)
In use1945 – present
Garrison information
Current
commander
Brig. Gen. David Eaglin
Garrison18th Wing (Host)
Airfield information
IdentifiersIATA: DNA, ICAO: RODN, WMO: 479310
Elevation43.6 metres (143 ft) AMSL
Runways
Direction Length and surface
05R/23L 3,688 metres (12,100 ft) Asphalt and Concrete
05L/23R 3,688 metres (12,100 ft) Asphalt and Concrete
Other airfield
facilities
1x V/STOL pad
Source: Japanese AIP at AIS Japan[1]
Kadena Air Base in the center

History edit

Kadena Air Base's history dates back to just before the Battle of Okinawa in April 1945, when a local construction firm completed a small airfield named Yara Hikojo near the village of Kadena. The airfield, used by the Imperial Japanese Army Air Force, was one of the first targets of the Tenth United States Army 7th Infantry Division. The United States seized it from the Japanese during the battle.

World War II edit

 
View of Kadena Air Base

What the Americans captured was a 4,600 feet (1,400 m) strip of badly-damaged coral runway. "The initial work at Kadena was accomplished by the 1901st Aviation Engineer Battalion 7th U.S. Infantry Division and Naval Construction Battalion Maintenance Unit CBMU 624 on 4 April",[5] by nightfall the same day, the runway could accept emergency landings. Eight days later, and after some 6 inches (150 mm) of coral were added, the airfield was declared operational and put into immediate service by artillery spotting aircraft. Additional construction was performed by the 807th Engineering Aviation Battalion to improve the airfield for USAAF fighter and bomber use with fuel tank farms, a new 6,500 feet (2,000 m) bituminous runway, and a 7,500 feet (2,300 m) runway for bomber aircraft, by August.

Kadena airfield was initially under the control of Seventh Air Force, however on 16 July 1945, Headquarters Eighth Air Force was transferred, without personnel, equipment, or combat elements to the town of Sakugawa, near Kadena from RAF High Wycombe England. Upon reassignment, its headquarters element absorbed the command staff of the inactivated XX Bomber Command. Kadena was used by the headquarters staff for nationalists' requirements.

Upon its reassignment to the Pacific Theater, Eighth Air Force was assigned to the U.S. Army Strategic Air Forces with a mission to train new B-29 Superfortress bomber groups arriving from the United States for combat missions against Japan. In the planned invasion of Japan, the mission of Eighth Air Force would be to conduct strategic bombing raids from Okinawa. However, the atomic bombings of Japan led to the Japanese surrender before Eighth Air Force saw action in the Pacific theater.

The surrender of Japanese forces in the Ryukyu Islands came on 7 September. General Joseph Stilwell accepted the surrender in an area that would later become Kadena's Stearley Heights housing area.

Known World War II units assigned to Kadena were:

  • 319th Bombardment Group (Light) (July–November 1945) (A-26 Invader)
    Assigned to Seventh Air Force and flew missions to Japan and China, attacking airdromes, shipping, marshalling yards, industrial centers, and other objectives.
  • 317th Troop Carrier Group (August–September 1945) (C-46 Commando, C-47 Skytrain)
    Assigned to Seventh Air Force in the Philippines. Deployed aircraft to Kadena and flew courier and passenger routes to Japan, Guam, Korea, and the Philippines, and transported freight and personnel in the area.
  • 333d Bombardment Group (Very Heavy) (August 1945 – May 1946) (B-29)
    Assigned to Eighth Air Force for planned invasion of Japan. Operations terminated before the group could enter combat. For a time after the war the group ferried Allied prisoners of war from Japan to the Philippines. Inactivated May 1946.
  • 346th Bombardment Group (Very Heavy) (August 1945 – June 1946) (B-29)
    Assigned to Eighth Air Force for planned invasion of Japan. Operations terminated before the group could enter combat. After the war the group participated in several show-of-force missions over Japan and for a time ferried Allied prisoners of war from Okinawa to the Philippines. Inactivated June 1946.
  • 316th Bombardment Wing (September 1945 – June 1948)
    Assigned to Eighth Air Force for planned invasion of Japan. Operations terminated before the group could enter combat. Reassigned to U.S. Far East Air Forces January 1946. Redesignated as 316th Composite Wing in January 1946, and 316th Bombardment Wing (Very Heavy) in May 1946. Inactivated June 1948.
  • 413th Fighter Group (November 1945 – October 1946) (P-47N)
    Assigned to Eighth Air Force and served as a part of the air defense and occupation force for the Ryukyu Islands after the war. Inactivated October 1946.

On 7 June 1946, Headquarters Eighth Air Force moved without personnel or equipment to MacDill AAF, Florida. It was replaced by the 1st Air Division which directed fighter reconnaissance, and bomber organizations and provided air defense for the Ryukyu Islands until December 1948.

Twentieth Air Force became the command and control organization for Kadena on 16 May 1949.

Korean War edit

The Korean War emphasized the need for maintaining a naval presence on Okinawa. On 15 February 1951, the U.S. Naval Facility, Naha, was activated and later became commissioned on 18 April. Commander Fleet Activities, Ryukyus was commissioned on 8 March 1957. On 15 May 1972, upon reversion of Okinawa to Japanese administration, the two organizations were combined to form Commander Fleet Activities, Okinawa. With the relocations of Commander Fleet Activities, Okinawa to Kadena Air Base on 7 May 1975, the title then became Commander Fleet Activities, Okinawa/US Naval Air Facility, Kadena.

Twentieth Air Force was inactivated in March 1955. Fifth Air Force became the command and control organization for Kadena. Known major postwar USAAF/USAF units assigned to Kadena have been:

  • 6th Bombardment Group (Very Heavy) (June 1947 – October 1948) (B-29)
    Participated in show-of-force flights over Japan and dropped food and other relief supplies to newly freed Allied prisoners of war. Inactivated October 1948.
  • 71st Tactical Reconnaissance Wing (August 1948 – October 1948) (F-5, F-6, RF-51, RF-61)
    Equipped with reconnaissance aircraft, flew aerial photographing missions over Japan and southern Korea. Inactivated October 1948. The 71st Air Base Group provided base host unit support for organizations assigned to Kadena.
  • 32d Composite Wing (August 1948 – April 1949) (RB/SB-17G, C-46, RB/SB-29)
    Replaced 71st Tactical Reconnaissance Wing. Provided photographic reconnaissance and search and rescue support. The 32d Air Base Group provided base host unit support for organizations assigned to Kadena.
  • 6332d Air Base Group (April 1949 – January 1950) (redesignated 6332d Air Base Wing (January 1950 – May 1955), 6313th Air Base Wing (October 1957 – December 1964))
    Provided base host unit support for organizations assigned to Kadena.
  • 19th Bombardment Group (Medium) (July 1950 – May 1954) (B-29)
    Deployed from Andersen AFB, Guam. Flew combat missions over Korea. Reassigned May 1954 to Pinecastle AFB, Florida.
  • 22d Bombardment Group (Medium) (July 1950 – October 1950) (B-29)
    Deployed from March AFB, California. Flew combat missions over Korea
  • 307th Bombardment Group (Medium) (September 1950 – February 1951) (B-29)
    Deployed from MacDill AFB Florida to engage in combat operations during the Korean War. While on Okinawa, the 307th was awarded the Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation for its air strikes against enemy forces in Korea. It was also awarded the Distinguished Unit Citation and several campaign streamers. The 307th BG returned from deployment during February 1951, however elements of the group remained deployed on Okinawa on a semi-permanent basis until 1954.
  • 581st Air Resupply Group (September 1953 – September 1956) (B-29)
    reassigned from the inactivating 581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing at Clark AB, Philippines. Performed unconventional warfare and counterinsurgency psychological operations. Inactivated and mission transferred to U.S. Navy.

At the end of the Eisenhower presidency, around 1,700 nuclear weapons were deployed on shore in the Pacific, 800 of which were at Kadena Air Base.[6]

18th Wing edit

On 1 November 1954, the 18th Fighter-Bomber Wing arrived from Osan Air Base, South Korea. Under changing designations, the wing has been the main USAF flying force at Kadena for over 50 years.[7] The wing has maintained assigned aircraft, crews, and supporting personnel in readiness to respond to orders from Fifth Air Force and Pacific Air Forces. The wing initially was flying three squadrons of North American F-86 Sabre: the 12th, 44th and 67th Fighter Squadrons. The wing flew tactical fighter sorties from Okinawa, and made frequent deployments to South Korea, Japan, Formosa, and the Philippines. In 1957, the wing upgraded to the F-100 Super Sabre and the designation was changed to the 18th Tactical Fighter Wing. In 1960, a tactical reconnaissance mission was added to the wing with the arrival of the McDonnell F-101 Voodoo and the 15th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron.

Vietnam War era edit

Beginning in 1961, the 18th TFW was sending its tactical squadrons frequently to South Vietnam and Thailand, initially with its RF-101 reconnaissance jets,[8] and beginning in 1964 with its tactical fighter forces supporting USAF combat missions in the Vietnam War.[8]: 257  In 1963, the F-105 Thunderchief replaced the Super Sabres. During the Temporary duty assignment (TDY) deployments to Southeast Asia, the 12th TFS lost four aircraft, the 44th TFS lost one F-105D, and the 67th TFS lost nine aircraft, including three on the first day of Operation Rolling Thunder. The deployments to Southeast Asia continued until the end of United States involvement in the conflict.

The RF-4C Phantom II replaced the RF-101 in the reconnaissance role in 1967. An electronic warfare capability was added to the wing in late 1968 with the attachment of the 19th Tactical Electronic Warfare Squadron from Shaw AFB South Carolina flying the EB-66 Destroyer. The B-66s remained until 1970, flying daily over the skies of Southeast Asia.

During the 1968 Pueblo crisis, the 18th deployed between January and June to Osan AB, South Korea following the North Korean seizure of the vessel. Frequent deployments to South Korea have been performed ever since to maintain the air defense alert mission there.

In 1972, the 1st Special Operations Squadron was assigned, bringing their specialized C/MC-130 Hercules aircraft to the wing. The squadron was reassigned in 1978. The reconnaissance mission ended in 1989 with the retirement of the RF-4Cs, and the inactivation of the 15th TRS.

Post-Vietnam edit

The F/RF-4C Phantom II replaced the F-105s in 1971, and a further upgrade to the F-15 Eagle was made in 1979.

On 6 November 1972, the 18th Tactical Fighter Wing dispatched the McDonnell Douglas F-4C / D Phantom II fighter jets of the 44th Tactical Fighter Squadron and the 67th Tactical Fighter Squadron to the Ching Chuan Kang Air Base, Taiwan until 31 May 1975. Assist Taiwan ’s air defense against threats from China.

The designation of the wing changed on 1 October 1991 to the 18th Wing with the implementation of the Objective Wing concept. With the objective wing, the mission of the 18th expanded to the Composite Air Wing concept of multiple different wing missions with different aircraft. The mission of the 18th was expanded to include aerial refueling with KC-135 Stratotanker tanker aircraft; and surveillance, warning, command and control E-3 Sentry, and communications. Added airlift mission in June 1992 with the C-12 Huron, transporting mission critical personnel, high-priority cargo and distinguished visitors. In February 1993, the 18th Wing gained responsibility for coordinating rescue operations in the Western Pacific and Indian Ocean.

Arrival of Patriot unit edit

In November 2006, the U.S. Army's 1st Battalion, 1st Air Defense Artillery Regiment, a Patriot PAC-III unit, deployed to Kadena from Fort Bliss Texas.[9] Originally assigned to 31st ADA Brigade of Fort Bliss, they were reassigned to the 94th AAMDC, USINDOPACOM. The move was part of the BRAC consolidation of U.S. Army bases and security agreements between the U.S. and Japan. The battalion's mission is to defend the base against tactical ballistic missiles from North Korea. The deployment was controversial on Okinawa, being greeted with protests.[10]

Foreign units edit

Other U.S. allies [who?] who had expressed intention with the approval of both the Japanese government and the United States Air Force to host units in the air base to further impose united cooperation against regional threats; North Korea, Russian Siberia, Russian Far East and the growing influence of China in the Asia Pacific.[citation needed]

Australia and New Zealand edit

 
An Australian AP-3C Orion at Kadena Air Base in October 2018

In early September 2018, Australian Defence Minister Christopher Pyne and New Zealand's Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters stated that it was in their interest to aid both Japan and the United States against North Korea with patrol aircraft. These units would provide additional capability to prevent North Korean vessels conducting illegal trading out at sea in violation of UN sanctions.[11] The Royal Australian Air Force deployed two AP-3C aircraft, along with a P-3K2 Orion from the RNZAF. RAAF P-8 Poseidons have subsequently been periodically deployed to Kadena as part of Operation Argos.[12] RNZAF Orions also periodically operate from Kadena, with four such deployments having been made as of April 2021.[13]

Other units edit

 
Lockheed SR-71 side view the first SR-71A-LO delivered (SN 61-7950) 061122-F-1234P-045

Other major units assigned to Kadena since 1954 have been:

  • 313th Air Division (March 1955 – October 1991)
    Assumed responsibility for air defense of the Ryukyu Islands and tactical operations in the Far East, maintaining assigned forces at the highest possible degree of combat readiness. In addition, it supported Fifth Air Force in the development, planning, and coordination of requirements for future Air Force operations in the Ryukyu Islands. The division also supported numerous exercises such as Cope Thunder, Cope Diamond, Team Spirit and Cope North. Provided base host unit support for organizations assigned to Kadena (May 1955 – October 1957, December 1964 – October 1974). The newly-considated 18th Wing replaced the 313th Air Division in 1991.
  • Kadena Task Force (Provisional) (SAC) (May 1955 – May 1958) (RB/ERB-47H)
    Performed Electronic Reconnaissance and Countermeasures activities.
  • 498th Tactical Missile Group (February 1961 – October 1969) (TM-76B/CGM-13B)
    Equipped with the TM-76B, renumbered in 1963 to CGM-13B Mace guided cruise missile, four hard site launch sites.
  • 4252d Strategic Wing (SAC) (January 1965 – April 1970)
    376th Strategic Wing (SAC) (April 1970 – August 1973) (B-52, KC-135, EC-135)
    Activated by SAC at Kadena. Replaced 4252nd Strategic Wing. Conducted B-52 combat operations in Southeast Asia from January 1965 to September 1970, when Arc Light Missions from the base were terminated.[14] The distance to targets in South Vietnam resulted in reduced payload and greater air-refueling demands for Kadena and Guam based B-52s and from April 1967 the USAF began basing B-52s at U-Tapao Royal Thai Navy Airfield, this together with Japanese opposition to the war led to reducing B-52 operations from Kadena.[15] Conducted KC-135 air refueling and RC-135 electronic reconnaissance from April 1970 to 1991. Conducted airborne radio relay operations, April–November 1970, February–June 1971 and March 1972 – August 1973. Until 1991, the wing controlled the 909th Air Refueling Squadron (KC-135A/Q/R) and supported rotational reconnaissance aircraft (TR-1, SR-71) after the inactivation of the 9th SRW in 1974. The Wing was inactivated at Kadena on 30 October 1991 with the drawdown of strategic forces. Its mission was absorbed by the 18th Wing.
  • 9th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing (SAC) (1968–1974) (A-12, SR-71)
    Deployed from Beale Air Force Base, California, Performed strategic reconnaissance over North Vietnam and Laos. In March 1968 SR-71's began arriving at Kadena from Beale AFB.[16] On 15 March Det OL-8 was declared Operational Ready for SR-71 sorties.[16] The SR-71s averaged approximately one sortie a week for nearly two years. By 1970, the SR-71s were averaging two sorties per week. By 1972, the SR-71 was flying nearly one sortie every day. While deployed on Okinawa, the SR-71s and their aircrew members gained the nickname Habu (as did the A-12s preceding them) after a southeast Asian pit viper which the Okinawans thought the plane resembled. With the completion of each mission a "Habu" was painted on the bird.[16] The SR 71 mission on Okinawa ended in 1990.
  • 18th Combat Support Wing (1985–1991)
    The 18 CSW was originally the 18th Combat Support Group of the 18th Tactical Fighter Wing before being elevated to a Wing in 1985. It acted as the installation management command and controlled all the services requried to run the installation. With the consolidation of numerous missions into the 18th Wing in 1991, the 18 CSW was downgraded and redesignated the 18th Support Group. It was redesignated again as the 18th Mission Support Group in 2002.

Beacon edit

Name type Call sign Frequency Operating time
Kadena VOR KAD 112 MHz 24hour
TACAN 1018 MHz
The USAF is responsible for maintenance.

Role and operations edit

The 18th Wing is the host unit at Kadena AB. In addition, the base hosts associate units from five other Air Force major commands, the United States Navy, and other Department of Defense agencies and direct reporting units. Associate units operate more than 20 permanently assigned, forward-based or deployed aircraft from the base on a daily basis.

18th Wing edit

The 18th Wing is the Air Force's largest and most diverse combat wing. The Wing is broken down into five groups: the 18th Operations Group, the 18th Maintenance Group, the 18th Mission Support Group, the 18th Civil Engineer Group, and the 18th Medical Group. Kadena's fleet of F-15C/D Eagle (the 44th and 67th Fighter Squadron); KC-135R/T Stratotanker (the 909th Air Refueling Squadron); E-3B/C Sentry (the 961st Airborne Air Control Squadron); and HH-60 Pave Hawks (the 33rd Rescue Squadron).

353rd Special Operations Wing edit

The 353rd Special Operations Wing is an element of the Air Force Special Operations Command, Hurlburt Field, Florida. The 750 Airmen of the group are organized into the 1st Special Operations Squadron, the 21st Special Operations Squadron, the 353rd Special Operations Aircraft Maintenance Squadron, the 753rd Special Operations Aircraft Maintenance Squadron, the 320th Special Tactics Squadron, and the 353rd Special Operations Support Squadron. The flying squadrons operate the MC-130J Commando II and the CV-22B Osprey.

733rd Air Mobility Squadron edit

This 733rd Air Mobility Squadron manage all passengers and cargo traveling by air in and out of Kadena. This Air Mobility Command unit supports about 650 aircraft arrivals and departures every month, moving more than 12,000 passengers and nearly 3,000 tons of cargo.

82nd Reconnaissance Squadron edit

Air Combat Command's 82nd Reconnaissance Squadron maintains aircraft; prepares combat-ready aircrews; and analyzes, processes, and disseminates intelligence data launch in support of RC-135V/W Rivet Joint, RC-135U Combat Sent and WC-135 Constant Phoenix missions flown in the Pacific Theater.

390th Intelligence Squadron edit

This Air Intelligence Agency squadron conducts information operations by providing tailored combat intelligence and assessing the security of friendly command, control, communication and computer systems to enhance warfighting survivability, situation awareness and targeting.

US Army edit

The U.S. Army's 1st Battalion, 1st Air Defense Artillery Regiment, assigned to the 94th AAMDC is a Patriot PAC-3 battalion. It consists of four Patriot missile batteries (Alpha through Delta), a maintenance company (Echo) and a headquarters battery (HHB).

Housing Management Office edit

The Air Force Housing Management Office (HMO) manages Military Family Housing (MFH) for all service members assigned to Okinawa.[17] Kadena Air Base contains nearly 4,000 family housing units, in apartment, townhouse, and single family home styles.[18]

Other units edit

  • American Forces Network Detachment 11, AFNEWS
  • Det 3, PACAF Air Postal Squadron
  • Det 3, United States Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine
  • 525 EMXS, Support Center Pacific
  • Det 3, Wr-Alc Air Force Petroleum Office
  • Det 624, Air Force Office of Special investigations
  • Det 233, Air Force Audit Agency
  • Field Training Detachment Det 15, 372nd Training Squadron
  • Det 1, Okuma Recreation Facility
  • Defense Commissary Agency
  • DoDEA Pacific Director's Office
  • Department of Defense Education Activity Pacific-Okinawa District
  • Marine Wing Liaison Kadena
  • American Red Cross

Based units edit

Flying and notable non-flying units based at Kadena Air Base.[19]

Units marked GSU are Geographically Separate Units, which although based at Kadena, are subordinate to a parent unit based at another location.

United States Air Force edit

Naval Communications Detachment Okinawa edit

The mission of NAVCOMM Det Okinawa is to provide communications support for the Seventh Fleet and supporting units, U.S. Naval Forces Japan, U.S. Naval Forces Korea, Defense Information Systems Agency and the Japanese Maritime Self Defense Force. The detachment has four work centers:

  1. TSCCOMM provides telecommunications support for Patrol Wing ONE Det Kadena, deployed patrol squadrons and Marine Wing Detachment
  2. CMS provides communications security (COMSEC) materials and cryptographic equipment to Patrol Squadrons and detachments, and to Commander Amphibious Group One/CTF76, located at White Beach
  3. Naval Radio Transmitter Facility (NRTF) Awase provides HF transmitter support to the fleet and area commanders and LF transmitter support for submarines operating in the Pacific and Indian Oceans
  4. SURTASS supports command and control functions to SURTASS ships operating in the Indian Ocean and Western Pacific.

Major commands to which assigned edit

Redesignated: Far East Air Force, 1 January 1947
Redesignated: Pacific Air Forces, 1 July 1957

Base facilities edit

  • Gate 5 Park
  • Kadena Passenger Terminal
  • Kadena Base Exchange
  • Schilling Community Center
  • Rocker Enlisted Club
  • Officers Club
  • EDIS (Early Developmental Intervention Services)
  • Kadena Aeroclub
  • Banyan Tree Golf Course
  • Jack's Place Restaurant (originally Skoshi KOOM – Kadena Officers Open Mess)[20]
  • Kadena High School
  • Kadena Middle School
  • Kadena Elementary School
  • Bob Hope Primary School
  • Ryukyu Middle School
  • Amelia Earhart Intermediate School
  • Stearley Heights Elementary School
  • The Asian Division of University of Maryland University College (UMUC)[21]
  • Kadena Commissary

Environmental concerns edit

In June 2013, the government of Japan discovered 22 barrels buried on former base property that tests showed had previously contained dioxins and herbicides. Tests on the surrounding soils found dioxin levels at 8.4 times and groundwater at 280 times the legal limit. The land in question is a soccer field bordering the base's Bob Hope Primary School and Amelia Earhart Intermediate School. Angry parents accused base officials, under base commanders Brigadier General Matt H. Molloy[22] and Brigadier General James B. Hecker, of failing to notify them of the toxins near the school and not investigating into the matter. The parents established a Facebook group on 10 January 2014 titled, "Bob Hope/AEIS – Protect Our Kids." After the issue was reported in the Japan Times and Stars and Stripes, USAF officials tested the soil and water at the schools and said that no excessive toxic substances were found.[23][24]

Soil on the base tested positive for very high levels of polychlorinated biphenylchemicals (PCBs), in the thousands of parts per million, much higher than most other contamination sites in the world, according to a report issued in 1987 after an investigation prompted by a small unrelated spill of transformer oil.[25]

Accidents and incidents edit

  • 30 June 1959: an F-100 from the wing crashed on Okinawa during a training flight after suffering an engine fire. The pilot successfully ejected and suffered no harm, but the aircraft crashed into a local elementary school, killing 11 students plus six residents of the nearby neighborhood, and injuring 210.[26]
  • 19 November 1968: B-52 of the 4252d Strategic Wing broke up and caught fire after the aircraft aborted takeoff on an Arc Light bombing mission to South Vietnam. 2 crewmen died of their injuries.
  • 20 July 1972: SR-71 61-7978 ran off the runway on its second landing approach due to high crosswinds ahead of Typhoon Rita, severely damaging the underside of the plane. Both crewmembers were uninjured. The plane was salvaged for usable parts and the rest scrapped in Okinawa.[27]
  • 2 November 1987: RF-4C 66-0416 (15 TRS / 18 TFW) entered a spin at 16,500 feet in a Whiskey area approximately 95 miles Northeast of Kadena. Both crew members ejected. One crewmember’s body was never recovered. The other crew member survived.
  • 28 May 2013: F-15C of the 44th Fighter Squadron crashed into the ocean off Okinawa. The pilot ejected and was rescued by the Air Rescue Wing Naha Detachment of the Japan Air Self-Defense Force.[28][29][30]
  • 11 June 2018: F-15C from the 44th Fighter Squadron crashed into the sea off Okinawa. The pilot was rescued by the JASDF Air Rescue Wing Naha Detachment.[31][32]

See also edit

Notes edit

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

  1. ^ "RODN – Kadena". Japan Aeronautical Information Service Centre. 15 January 2020. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  2. ^ "Kadena Air Force Base in Okinawa, Japan | MilitaryBases.com". Military Bases. Retrieved 14 February 2019.
  3. ^ "Homepage of Kadena Air Base".
  4. ^ "Kadena Air Base".
  5. ^ Building the Navy's Bases in World War II, History of the Bureau of Yards and Docks and the Civil Engineer Corps, 1940–1946, Volume II, UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON, 1947, p. 402 [1]
  6. ^ Norris, Robert S.; Arkin, William M.; Burr, William (November 1999). "Where They Were". Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. 55 (6): 26–35. doi:10.2968/055006011.
  7. ^ Ravenstein, Charles A. (1984). Air Force Combat Wings, Lineage & Honors Histories 1947–1977. Office of Air Force History. p. 35. ISBN 0912799129.
  8. ^ a b Futrell, Robert (1981). (PDF). Office of Air Force History. pp. 229–30. LCCN 80024547. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 November 2016. Retrieved 26 July 2018.
  9. ^ 1-1 ADA PAC-3 Battalion officially at Kadena 21 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine 18th Wing Public Affairs- U.S. Air Force 11 November 2006
  10. ^ U.S. missile defense under way on Okinawa 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Asahi Shimbun-27 October 2006
  11. ^ "Australia, NZ deploy aircraft to Japan to help enforce North Korea sanctions". SBS News. Retrieved 7 September 2018.
  12. ^ Senator the Hon Marise Payne (24 February 2021). "Defence's continued commitment to Operation ARGOS". Media release. Department of Defence.
  13. ^ "New Zealand to provide further support to UN North Korea sanctions". Media release. New Zealand Government. 20 April 2021. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  14. ^ Nalty, Bernard (2000). The United States Air Force in Southeast Asia: The War in South Vietnam Air War over South Vietnam 1968–1975 (PDF). Air Force History and Museums Program. p. 242. ISBN 9781478118640.
  15. ^ Schlight, John (1999). The United States Air Force in Southeast Asia: The War in South Vietnam The Years of the Offensive 1965–1968 (PDF). Office of Air Force History. pp. 150–3. ISBN 9780912799513.
  16. ^ a b c SR-71 Blackbirds web-page No. 46, USAF SR-71 Kadena Operations, published 31 December 2000. revised 29 March 2004 [2]
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 February 2014. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
  18. ^ http://www.housing.af.mil/photos/slideshow.asp?id={6D4ED796-E876-4287-9693-82FFDE047917} 24 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ "Agencies – Team Kadena". Kadena Air Base. U.S. Air Force. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  20. ^ Sr-71 Revealed: The Inside Story – Richard H. Graham – Google Books
  21. ^ "UMUC Asia | Quality academic programs for U.S. Military communities".
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 February 2014. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
  23. ^ Mitchell, Jon, "Kadena moms demand truth", Japan Times, 22 January 2014
  24. ^ Tritten, Travis J., "Air Force: Kadena school area near where tainted drums found 'completely safe'", Stars and Stripes, 24 January 2014
  25. ^ U.S. military report suggests cover-up over toxic pollution in Okinawa Jon Mitchell, Japan Times, 17 March 2014
  26. ^ "Okinawa school marks 50th year since deadly U.S. fighter crash". Japan Times. 1 July 2009. Retrieved 1 July 2009.
  27. ^ Crickmore, Paul F. (2000). Lockheed SR-71: The Secret Missions Exposed (Rev. ed.). Oxford: Osprey. p. 141. ISBN 9781841760988. OCLC 47776805.
  28. ^ LaGrone, Sam (28 May 2013). "Okinawa F-15 Crashes, Pilot Safe". news.usni.org. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  29. ^ Roth, Betty (28 May 2013). "U.S. Air Force Pilot Survives F-15 Crash Off Okinawa". Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  30. ^ "Officials release report on F-15 accident near Kadena AB". af.mil. 22 January 2014. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  31. ^ Tan, Michelle (11 June 2018). "Kadena Air Base F-15 crashes off Okinawa". Retrieved 11 June 2018.
  32. ^ Rogoway, Tyler (10 June 2018). "A USAF F-15C Eagle Crashed Off Okinawa, Pilot Rescued Alive After Ejection". thedrive.com. The Drive. Retrieved 11 June 2018.

Bibliography edit

  • Fletcher, Harry R. (1989) Air Force Bases Volume II, Active Air Force Bases outside the United States of America on 17 September 1982. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-53-6
  • Martin, Patrick (1994). Tail Code: The Complete History of USAF Tactical Aircraft Tail Code Markings. Schiffer Military Aviation History. ISBN 0-88740-513-4.
  • Maurer, Maurer. Air Force Combat Units of World War II. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office 1961 (republished 1983, Office of Air Force History, ISBN 0-912799-02-1).
  • Rogers, Brian (2005). United States Air Force Unit Designations Since 1978. Hinkley, England: Midland Publications. ISBN 1-85780-197-0.

External links edit

  • Official site
  • globalsecurity.org on Kadena
  • 498th Tactical Missile Group at Kadena
  • 静かな夜を返せ!/未明離陸に抗議集会[permanent dead link]

kadena, base, 嘉手納飛行場, kadena, hikōjō, iata, icao, rodn, united, states, force, base, towns, kadena, chatan, city, okinawa, okinawa, prefecture, japan, often, referred, keystone, pacific, because, highly, strategic, location, located, coast, china, distance, fr. Kadena Air Base 嘉手納飛行場 Kadena Hikōjō IATA DNA ICAO RODN is a United States Air Force base in the towns of Kadena and Chatan and the city of Okinawa in Okinawa Prefecture Japan It is often referred to as the Keystone of the Pacific because of its highly strategic location 2 It is located 650 km 400 mi off the coast of China and at a distance of 770 km 480 mi from Shanghai a major economic hub It is home to the USAF s 18th Wing the 353rd Special Operations Wing reconnaissance units 1st Battalion 1st Air Defense Artillery Regiment and a variety of associated units Over 20 000 American servicemembers family members and Japanese employees live or work at Kadena Air Base 3 It is the largest and most active U S Air Force base in East Asia 4 Kadena Air Base嘉手納飛行場Kadena HikōjōKadena Okinawa Prefecture in JapanA U S Air Force E 3 Sentry from the 961st Airborne Air Control Squadron taxis on the runway before take off from Kadena Air Base in 2015 Kadena ABShow map of AsiaKadena ABShow map of JapanKadena ABShow map of Okinawa PrefectureKadena ABShow map of North PacificCoordinates26 21 06 N 127 46 10 E 26 35167 N 127 76944 E 26 35167 127 76944 Kadena AFB TypeU S Air Force BaseSite informationOwnerVarious leased by Government of Japan and made available to the U S OperatorU S Air ForceControlled byPacific Air Forces PACAF StatusOperationalWebsitewww wbr kadena wbr af wbr milSite historyBuilt1945 1945 as Yara Hikojo Airfield In use1945 presentGarrison informationCurrentcommanderBrig Gen David EaglinGarrison18th Wing Host Airfield informationIdentifiersIATA DNA ICAO RODN WMO 479310Elevation43 6 metres 143 ft AMSLRunwaysDirection Length and surface05R 23L 3 688 metres 12 100 ft Asphalt and Concrete05L 23R 3 688 metres 12 100 ft Asphalt and ConcreteOther airfieldfacilities1x V STOL padSource Japanese AIP at AIS Japan 1 Kadena Air Base in the center Contents 1 History 1 1 World War II 1 2 Korean War 1 3 18th Wing 1 3 1 Vietnam War era 1 3 2 Post Vietnam 1 3 3 Arrival of Patriot unit 1 4 Foreign units 1 4 1 Australia and New Zealand 1 5 Other units 1 6 Beacon 2 Role and operations 2 1 18th Wing 2 2 353rd Special Operations Wing 2 3 733rd Air Mobility Squadron 2 4 82nd Reconnaissance Squadron 2 5 390th Intelligence Squadron 2 6 US Army 2 7 Housing Management Office 2 8 Other units 3 Based units 3 1 United States Air Force 3 2 United States Army 3 3 United States Marine Corps 4 Naval Communications Detachment Okinawa 5 Major commands to which assigned 6 Base facilities 7 Environmental concerns 8 Accidents and incidents 9 See also 10 Notes 11 Bibliography 12 External linksHistory editKadena Air Base s history dates back to just before the Battle of Okinawa in April 1945 when a local construction firm completed a small airfield named Yara Hikojo near the village of Kadena The airfield used by the Imperial Japanese Army Air Force was one of the first targets of the Tenth United States Army 7th Infantry Division The United States seized it from the Japanese during the battle World War II edit nbsp View of Kadena Air BaseWhat the Americans captured was a 4 600 feet 1 400 m strip of badly damaged coral runway The initial work at Kadena was accomplished by the 1901st Aviation Engineer Battalion 7th U S Infantry Division and Naval Construction Battalion Maintenance Unit CBMU 624 on 4 April 5 by nightfall the same day the runway could accept emergency landings Eight days later and after some 6 inches 150 mm of coral were added the airfield was declared operational and put into immediate service by artillery spotting aircraft Additional construction was performed by the 807th Engineering Aviation Battalion to improve the airfield for USAAF fighter and bomber use with fuel tank farms a new 6 500 feet 2 000 m bituminous runway and a 7 500 feet 2 300 m runway for bomber aircraft by August Kadena airfield was initially under the control of Seventh Air Force however on 16 July 1945 Headquarters Eighth Air Force was transferred without personnel equipment or combat elements to the town of Sakugawa near Kadena from RAF High Wycombe England Upon reassignment its headquarters element absorbed the command staff of the inactivated XX Bomber Command Kadena was used by the headquarters staff for nationalists requirements Upon its reassignment to the Pacific Theater Eighth Air Force was assigned to the U S Army Strategic Air Forces with a mission to train new B 29 Superfortress bomber groups arriving from the United States for combat missions against Japan In the planned invasion of Japan the mission of Eighth Air Force would be to conduct strategic bombing raids from Okinawa However the atomic bombings of Japan led to the Japanese surrender before Eighth Air Force saw action in the Pacific theater The surrender of Japanese forces in the Ryukyu Islands came on 7 September General Joseph Stilwell accepted the surrender in an area that would later become Kadena s Stearley Heights housing area Known World War II units assigned to Kadena were 319th Bombardment Group Light July November 1945 A 26 Invader Assigned to Seventh Air Force and flew missions to Japan and China attacking airdromes shipping marshalling yards industrial centers and other objectives 317th Troop Carrier Group August September 1945 C 46 Commando C 47 Skytrain Assigned to Seventh Air Force in the Philippines Deployed aircraft to Kadena and flew courier and passenger routes to Japan Guam Korea and the Philippines and transported freight and personnel in the area 333d Bombardment Group Very Heavy August 1945 May 1946 B 29 Assigned to Eighth Air Force for planned invasion of Japan Operations terminated before the group could enter combat For a time after the war the group ferried Allied prisoners of war from Japan to the Philippines Inactivated May 1946 346th Bombardment Group Very Heavy August 1945 June 1946 B 29 Assigned to Eighth Air Force for planned invasion of Japan Operations terminated before the group could enter combat After the war the group participated in several show of force missions over Japan and for a time ferried Allied prisoners of war from Okinawa to the Philippines Inactivated June 1946 316th Bombardment Wing September 1945 June 1948 Assigned to Eighth Air Force for planned invasion of Japan Operations terminated before the group could enter combat Reassigned to U S Far East Air Forces January 1946 Redesignated as 316th Composite Wing in January 1946 and 316th Bombardment Wing Very Heavy in May 1946 Inactivated June 1948 413th Fighter Group November 1945 October 1946 P 47N Assigned to Eighth Air Force and served as a part of the air defense and occupation force for the Ryukyu Islands after the war Inactivated October 1946 On 7 June 1946 Headquarters Eighth Air Force moved without personnel or equipment to MacDill AAF Florida It was replaced by the 1st Air Division which directed fighter reconnaissance and bomber organizations and provided air defense for the Ryukyu Islands until December 1948 Twentieth Air Force became the command and control organization for Kadena on 16 May 1949 Korean War edit The Korean War emphasized the need for maintaining a naval presence on Okinawa On 15 February 1951 the U S Naval Facility Naha was activated and later became commissioned on 18 April Commander Fleet Activities Ryukyus was commissioned on 8 March 1957 On 15 May 1972 upon reversion of Okinawa to Japanese administration the two organizations were combined to form Commander Fleet Activities Okinawa With the relocations of Commander Fleet Activities Okinawa to Kadena Air Base on 7 May 1975 the title then became Commander Fleet Activities Okinawa US Naval Air Facility Kadena Twentieth Air Force was inactivated in March 1955 Fifth Air Force became the command and control organization for Kadena Known major postwar USAAF USAF units assigned to Kadena have been 6th Bombardment Group Very Heavy June 1947 October 1948 B 29 Participated in show of force flights over Japan and dropped food and other relief supplies to newly freed Allied prisoners of war Inactivated October 1948 71st Tactical Reconnaissance Wing August 1948 October 1948 F 5 F 6 RF 51 RF 61 Equipped with reconnaissance aircraft flew aerial photographing missions over Japan and southern Korea Inactivated October 1948 The 71st Air Base Group provided base host unit support for organizations assigned to Kadena 32d Composite Wing August 1948 April 1949 RB SB 17G C 46 RB SB 29 Replaced 71st Tactical Reconnaissance Wing Provided photographic reconnaissance and search and rescue support The 32d Air Base Group provided base host unit support for organizations assigned to Kadena 6332d Air Base Group April 1949 January 1950 redesignated 6332d Air Base Wing January 1950 May 1955 6313th Air Base Wing October 1957 December 1964 Provided base host unit support for organizations assigned to Kadena 19th Bombardment Group Medium July 1950 May 1954 B 29 Deployed from Andersen AFB Guam Flew combat missions over Korea Reassigned May 1954 to Pinecastle AFB Florida 22d Bombardment Group Medium July 1950 October 1950 B 29 Deployed from March AFB California Flew combat missions over Korea 307th Bombardment Group Medium September 1950 February 1951 B 29 Deployed from MacDill AFB Florida to engage in combat operations during the Korean War While on Okinawa the 307th was awarded the Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation for its air strikes against enemy forces in Korea It was also awarded the Distinguished Unit Citation and several campaign streamers The 307th BG returned from deployment during February 1951 however elements of the group remained deployed on Okinawa on a semi permanent basis until 1954 581st Air Resupply Group September 1953 September 1956 B 29 reassigned from the inactivating 581st Air Resupply and Communications Wing at Clark AB Philippines Performed unconventional warfare and counterinsurgency psychological operations Inactivated and mission transferred to U S Navy At the end of the Eisenhower presidency around 1 700 nuclear weapons were deployed on shore in the Pacific 800 of which were at Kadena Air Base 6 18th Wing edit On 1 November 1954 the 18th Fighter Bomber Wing arrived from Osan Air Base South Korea Under changing designations the wing has been the main USAF flying force at Kadena for over 50 years 7 The wing has maintained assigned aircraft crews and supporting personnel in readiness to respond to orders from Fifth Air Force and Pacific Air Forces The wing initially was flying three squadrons of North American F 86 Sabre the 12th 44th and 67th Fighter Squadrons The wing flew tactical fighter sorties from Okinawa and made frequent deployments to South Korea Japan Formosa and the Philippines In 1957 the wing upgraded to the F 100 Super Sabre and the designation was changed to the 18th Tactical Fighter Wing In 1960 a tactical reconnaissance mission was added to the wing with the arrival of the McDonnell F 101 Voodoo and the 15th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron Vietnam War era edit Beginning in 1961 the 18th TFW was sending its tactical squadrons frequently to South Vietnam and Thailand initially with its RF 101 reconnaissance jets 8 and beginning in 1964 with its tactical fighter forces supporting USAF combat missions in the Vietnam War 8 257 In 1963 the F 105 Thunderchief replaced the Super Sabres During the Temporary duty assignment TDY deployments to Southeast Asia the 12th TFS lost four aircraft the 44th TFS lost one F 105D and the 67th TFS lost nine aircraft including three on the first day of Operation Rolling Thunder The deployments to Southeast Asia continued until the end of United States involvement in the conflict The RF 4C Phantom II replaced the RF 101 in the reconnaissance role in 1967 An electronic warfare capability was added to the wing in late 1968 with the attachment of the 19th Tactical Electronic Warfare Squadron from Shaw AFB South Carolina flying the EB 66 Destroyer The B 66s remained until 1970 flying daily over the skies of Southeast Asia During the 1968 Pueblo crisis the 18th deployed between January and June to Osan AB South Korea following the North Korean seizure of the vessel Frequent deployments to South Korea have been performed ever since to maintain the air defense alert mission there In 1972 the 1st Special Operations Squadron was assigned bringing their specialized C MC 130 Hercules aircraft to the wing The squadron was reassigned in 1978 The reconnaissance mission ended in 1989 with the retirement of the RF 4Cs and the inactivation of the 15th TRS Post Vietnam edit The F RF 4C Phantom II replaced the F 105s in 1971 and a further upgrade to the F 15 Eagle was made in 1979 On 6 November 1972 the 18th Tactical Fighter Wing dispatched the McDonnell Douglas F 4C D Phantom II fighter jets of the 44th Tactical Fighter Squadron and the 67th Tactical Fighter Squadron to the Ching Chuan Kang Air Base Taiwan until 31 May 1975 Assist Taiwan s air defense against threats from China The designation of the wing changed on 1 October 1991 to the 18th Wing with the implementation of the Objective Wing concept With the objective wing the mission of the 18th expanded to the Composite Air Wing concept of multiple different wing missions with different aircraft The mission of the 18th was expanded to include aerial refueling with KC 135 Stratotanker tanker aircraft and surveillance warning command and control E 3 Sentry and communications Added airlift mission in June 1992 with the C 12 Huron transporting mission critical personnel high priority cargo and distinguished visitors In February 1993 the 18th Wing gained responsibility for coordinating rescue operations in the Western Pacific and Indian Ocean Arrival of Patriot unit edit In November 2006 the U S Army s 1st Battalion 1st Air Defense Artillery Regiment a Patriot PAC III unit deployed to Kadena from Fort Bliss Texas 9 Originally assigned to 31st ADA Brigade of Fort Bliss they were reassigned to the 94th AAMDC USINDOPACOM The move was part of the BRAC consolidation of U S Army bases and security agreements between the U S and Japan The battalion s mission is to defend the base against tactical ballistic missiles from North Korea The deployment was controversial on Okinawa being greeted with protests 10 Foreign units edit Other U S allies who who had expressed intention with the approval of both the Japanese government and the United States Air Force to host units in the air base to further impose united cooperation against regional threats North Korea Russian Siberia Russian Far East and the growing influence of China in the Asia Pacific citation needed Australia and New Zealand edit nbsp An Australian AP 3C Orion at Kadena Air Base in October 2018In early September 2018 Australian Defence Minister Christopher Pyne and New Zealand s Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters stated that it was in their interest to aid both Japan and the United States against North Korea with patrol aircraft These units would provide additional capability to prevent North Korean vessels conducting illegal trading out at sea in violation of UN sanctions 11 The Royal Australian Air Force deployed two AP 3C aircraft along with a P 3K2 Orion from the RNZAF RAAF P 8 Poseidons have subsequently been periodically deployed to Kadena as part of Operation Argos 12 RNZAF Orions also periodically operate from Kadena with four such deployments having been made as of April 2021 13 Other units edit nbsp Lockheed SR 71 side view the first SR 71A LO delivered SN 61 7950 061122 F 1234P 045Other major units assigned to Kadena since 1954 have been 313th Air Division March 1955 October 1991 Assumed responsibility for air defense of the Ryukyu Islands and tactical operations in the Far East maintaining assigned forces at the highest possible degree of combat readiness In addition it supported Fifth Air Force in the development planning and coordination of requirements for future Air Force operations in the Ryukyu Islands The division also supported numerous exercises such as Cope Thunder Cope Diamond Team Spirit and Cope North Provided base host unit support for organizations assigned to Kadena May 1955 October 1957 December 1964 October 1974 The newly considated 18th Wing replaced the 313th Air Division in 1991 Kadena Task Force Provisional SAC May 1955 May 1958 RB ERB 47H Performed Electronic Reconnaissance and Countermeasures activities 498th Tactical Missile Group February 1961 October 1969 TM 76B CGM 13B Equipped with the TM 76B renumbered in 1963 to CGM 13B Mace guided cruise missile four hard site launch sites 4252d Strategic Wing SAC January 1965 April 1970 376th Strategic Wing SAC April 1970 August 1973 B 52 KC 135 EC 135 Activated by SAC at Kadena Replaced 4252nd Strategic Wing Conducted B 52 combat operations in Southeast Asia from January 1965 to September 1970 when Arc Light Missions from the base were terminated 14 The distance to targets in South Vietnam resulted in reduced payload and greater air refueling demands for Kadena and Guam based B 52s and from April 1967 the USAF began basing B 52s at U Tapao Royal Thai Navy Airfield this together with Japanese opposition to the war led to reducing B 52 operations from Kadena 15 Conducted KC 135 air refueling and RC 135 electronic reconnaissance from April 1970 to 1991 Conducted airborne radio relay operations April November 1970 February June 1971 and March 1972 August 1973 Until 1991 the wing controlled the 909th Air Refueling Squadron KC 135A Q R and supported rotational reconnaissance aircraft TR 1 SR 71 after the inactivation of the 9th SRW in 1974 The Wing was inactivated at Kadena on 30 October 1991 with the drawdown of strategic forces Its mission was absorbed by the 18th Wing 9th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing SAC 1968 1974 A 12 SR 71 Deployed from Beale Air Force Base California Performed strategic reconnaissance over North Vietnam and Laos In March 1968 SR 71 s began arriving at Kadena from Beale AFB 16 On 15 March Det OL 8 was declared Operational Ready for SR 71 sorties 16 The SR 71s averaged approximately one sortie a week for nearly two years By 1970 the SR 71s were averaging two sorties per week By 1972 the SR 71 was flying nearly one sortie every day While deployed on Okinawa the SR 71s and their aircrew members gained the nickname Habu as did the A 12s preceding them after a southeast Asian pit viper which the Okinawans thought the plane resembled With the completion of each mission a Habu was painted on the bird 16 The SR 71 mission on Okinawa ended in 1990 18th Combat Support Wing 1985 1991 The 18 CSW was originally the 18th Combat Support Group of the 18th Tactical Fighter Wing before being elevated to a Wing in 1985 It acted as the installation management command and controlled all the services requried to run the installation With the consolidation of numerous missions into the 18th Wing in 1991 the 18 CSW was downgraded and redesignated the 18th Support Group It was redesignated again as the 18th Mission Support Group in 2002 Beacon edit Name type Call sign Frequency Operating timeKadena VOR KAD 112 MHz 24hourTACAN 1018 MHzThe USAF is responsible for maintenance Role and operations editThe 18th Wing is the host unit at Kadena AB In addition the base hosts associate units from five other Air Force major commands the United States Navy and other Department of Defense agencies and direct reporting units Associate units operate more than 20 permanently assigned forward based or deployed aircraft from the base on a daily basis 18th Wing edit The 18th Wing is the Air Force s largest and most diverse combat wing The Wing is broken down into five groups the 18th Operations Group the 18th Maintenance Group the 18th Mission Support Group the 18th Civil Engineer Group and the 18th Medical Group Kadena s fleet of F 15C D Eagle the 44th and 67th Fighter Squadron KC 135R T Stratotanker the 909th Air Refueling Squadron E 3B C Sentry the 961st Airborne Air Control Squadron and HH 60 Pave Hawks the 33rd Rescue Squadron 353rd Special Operations Wing edit The 353rd Special Operations Wing is an element of the Air Force Special Operations Command Hurlburt Field Florida The 750 Airmen of the group are organized into the 1st Special Operations Squadron the 21st Special Operations Squadron the 353rd Special Operations Aircraft Maintenance Squadron the 753rd Special Operations Aircraft Maintenance Squadron the 320th Special Tactics Squadron and the 353rd Special Operations Support Squadron The flying squadrons operate the MC 130J Commando II and the CV 22B Osprey 733rd Air Mobility Squadron edit This 733rd Air Mobility Squadron manage all passengers and cargo traveling by air in and out of Kadena This Air Mobility Command unit supports about 650 aircraft arrivals and departures every month moving more than 12 000 passengers and nearly 3 000 tons of cargo 82nd Reconnaissance Squadron edit Air Combat Command s 82nd Reconnaissance Squadron maintains aircraft prepares combat ready aircrews and analyzes processes and disseminates intelligence data launch in support of RC 135V W Rivet Joint RC 135U Combat Sent and WC 135 Constant Phoenix missions flown in the Pacific Theater 390th Intelligence Squadron edit This Air Intelligence Agency squadron conducts information operations by providing tailored combat intelligence and assessing the security of friendly command control communication and computer systems to enhance warfighting survivability situation awareness and targeting US Army edit The U S Army s 1st Battalion 1st Air Defense Artillery Regiment assigned to the 94th AAMDC is a Patriot PAC 3 battalion It consists of four Patriot missile batteries Alpha through Delta a maintenance company Echo and a headquarters battery HHB Housing Management Office edit The Air Force Housing Management Office HMO manages Military Family Housing MFH for all service members assigned to Okinawa 17 Kadena Air Base contains nearly 4 000 family housing units in apartment townhouse and single family home styles 18 Other units edit American Forces Network Detachment 11 AFNEWS Det 3 PACAF Air Postal Squadron Det 3 United States Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine 525 EMXS Support Center Pacific Det 3 Wr Alc Air Force Petroleum Office Det 624 Air Force Office of Special investigations Det 233 Air Force Audit Agency Field Training Detachment Det 15 372nd Training Squadron Det 1 Okuma Recreation Facility Defense Commissary Agency DoDEA Pacific Director s Office Department of Defense Education Activity Pacific Okinawa District Marine Wing Liaison Kadena American Red CrossBased units editFlying and notable non flying units based at Kadena Air Base 19 Units marked GSU are Geographically Separate Units which although based at Kadena are subordinate to a parent unit based at another location United States Air Force edit Pacific Air Forces PACAF Fifth Air Force 18th Wing Host Wing Headquarters 18th Wing 18th Comptroller Squadron 18th Operations Group 18th Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron 18th Operations Support Squadron 31st Rescue Squadron 33rd Rescue Squadron HH 60G Pave Hawk 44th Fighter Squadron F 15C D Eagle 67th Fighter Squadron F 15C D Eagle 623rd Air Control Squadron 909th Air Refueling Squadron KC 135R Stratotanker 961st Airborne Air Control Squadron E 3B C Sentry 18th Civil Engineer Group 18th Civil Engineer Squadron 718th Civil Engineer Squadron 18th Maintenance Group 18th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron 18th Component Maintenance Squadron 18th Equipment Maintenance Squadron 18th Munitions Squadron 718th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron 18th Medical Group 18th Aerospace Medicine Squadron 18th Dental Squadron 18th Medical Operations Squadron 18th Medical Support Squadron 18th Mission Support Group 18th Contracting Squadron 18th Communications Squadron 18th Force Support Squadron 18th Logistics Readiness Squadron 18th Security Forces Squadron 718th Force Support Squadron 18th Air Expeditionary Wing 5th Expeditionary Airborne Command and Control Squadron E 8C J STARS Pacific Air Forces Air Postal Squadron Seventh Air Force 554th RED HORSE Squadron Detachment 1 GSU Air Force Special Operations Command AFSOC 353rd Special Operations Wing 1st Special Operations Squadron MC 130J Commando II 21st Special Operations Squadron CV 22B Osprey Based at Yokota Air Base 320th Special Tactics Squadron 353rd Special Operations Support Squadron 353rd Special Operations Aircraft Maintenance Squadron 753rd Special Operations Aircraft Maintenance SquadronAir Mobility Command AMC 55th Wing 55th Operations Group 82nd Reconnaissance Squadron GSU RC 135 390th Intelligence Squadron GSU United States Air Force Expeditionary Center 515th Air Mobility Operations Wing 515th Air Mobility Operations Group 733rd Air Mobility Squadron GSU Air Combat Command ACC Sixteenth Air Force 363rd Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance Wing 361st Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance Group 43rd Intelligence Squadron Detachment 1 GSU Civil Air Patrol CAP Overseas Group Okinawa Cadet Squadron NHQ 100 United States Army edit U S Army Pacific USARPAC 94th Army Air and Missile Defense Command 38th Air Defense Artillery Brigade 1st Battalion 1st Air Defense Artillery Regiment MIM 104 PatriotUnited States Marine Corps edit Marine Forces Pacific MARFORPAC III Marine Expeditionary Force 1st Marine Aircraft Wing Marine Wing Liaison KadenaNaval Communications Detachment Okinawa editThe mission of NAVCOMM Det Okinawa is to provide communications support for the Seventh Fleet and supporting units U S Naval Forces Japan U S Naval Forces Korea Defense Information Systems Agency and the Japanese Maritime Self Defense Force The detachment has four work centers TSCCOMM provides telecommunications support for Patrol Wing ONE Det Kadena deployed patrol squadrons and Marine Wing Detachment CMS provides communications security COMSEC materials and cryptographic equipment to Patrol Squadrons and detachments and to Commander Amphibious Group One CTF76 located at White Beach Naval Radio Transmitter Facility NRTF Awase provides HF transmitter support to the fleet and area commanders and LF transmitter support for submarines operating in the Pacific and Indian Oceans SURTASS supports command and control functions to SURTASS ships operating in the Indian Ocean and Western Pacific Major commands to which assigned editTenth United States Army 1 April 1945 Eighth Air Force 16 July 1945 Pacific Air Command United States Army PACUSA 6 December 1945Redesignated Far East Air Force 1 January 1947 Redesignated Pacific Air Forces 1 July 1957Base facilities editGate 5 Park Kadena Passenger Terminal Kadena Base Exchange Schilling Community Center Rocker Enlisted Club Officers Club EDIS Early Developmental Intervention Services Kadena Aeroclub Banyan Tree Golf Course Jack s Place Restaurant originally Skoshi KOOM Kadena Officers Open Mess 20 Kadena High School Kadena Middle School Kadena Elementary School Bob Hope Primary School Ryukyu Middle School Amelia Earhart Intermediate School Stearley Heights Elementary School The Asian Division of University of Maryland University College UMUC 21 Kadena CommissaryEnvironmental concerns editIn June 2013 the government of Japan discovered 22 barrels buried on former base property that tests showed had previously contained dioxins and herbicides Tests on the surrounding soils found dioxin levels at 8 4 times and groundwater at 280 times the legal limit The land in question is a soccer field bordering the base s Bob Hope Primary School and Amelia Earhart Intermediate School Angry parents accused base officials under base commanders Brigadier General Matt H Molloy 22 and Brigadier General James B Hecker of failing to notify them of the toxins near the school and not investigating into the matter The parents established a Facebook group on 10 January 2014 titled Bob Hope AEIS Protect Our Kids After the issue was reported in the Japan Times and Stars and Stripes USAF officials tested the soil and water at the schools and said that no excessive toxic substances were found 23 24 Soil on the base tested positive for very high levels of polychlorinated biphenylchemicals PCBs in the thousands of parts per million much higher than most other contamination sites in the world according to a report issued in 1987 after an investigation prompted by a small unrelated spill of transformer oil 25 Accidents and incidents edit30 June 1959 an F 100 from the wing crashed on Okinawa during a training flight after suffering an engine fire The pilot successfully ejected and suffered no harm but the aircraft crashed into a local elementary school killing 11 students plus six residents of the nearby neighborhood and injuring 210 26 19 November 1968 B 52 of the 4252d Strategic Wing broke up and caught fire after the aircraft aborted takeoff on an Arc Light bombing mission to South Vietnam 2 crewmen died of their injuries 20 July 1972 SR 71 61 7978 ran off the runway on its second landing approach due to high crosswinds ahead of Typhoon Rita severely damaging the underside of the plane Both crewmembers were uninjured The plane was salvaged for usable parts and the rest scrapped in Okinawa 27 2 November 1987 RF 4C 66 0416 15 TRS 18 TFW entered a spin at 16 500 feet in a Whiskey area approximately 95 miles Northeast of Kadena Both crew members ejected One crewmember s body was never recovered The other crew member survived 28 May 2013 F 15C of the 44th Fighter Squadron crashed into the ocean off Okinawa The pilot ejected and was rescued by the Air Rescue Wing Naha Detachment of the Japan Air Self Defense Force 28 29 30 11 June 2018 F 15C from the 44th Fighter Squadron crashed into the sea off Okinawa The pilot was rescued by the JASDF Air Rescue Wing Naha Detachment 31 32 nbsp World War II portalSee also editNaval Base OkinawaNotes edit nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency RODN Kadena Japan Aeronautical Information Service Centre 15 January 2020 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Kadena Air Force Base in Okinawa Japan MilitaryBases com Military Bases Retrieved 14 February 2019 Homepage of Kadena Air Base Kadena Air Base Building the Navy s Bases in World War II History of the Bureau of Yards and Docks and the Civil Engineer Corps 1940 1946 Volume II UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON 1947 p 402 1 Norris Robert S Arkin William M Burr William November 1999 Where They Were Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 55 6 26 35 doi 10 2968 055006011 Ravenstein Charles A 1984 Air Force Combat Wings Lineage amp Honors Histories 1947 1977 Office of Air Force History p 35 ISBN 0912799129 a b Futrell Robert 1981 The United States Air Force in Southeast Asia The Advisory Years to 1965 PDF Office of Air Force History pp 229 30 LCCN 80024547 Archived from the original PDF on 23 November 2016 Retrieved 26 July 2018 1 1 ADA PAC 3 Battalion officially at Kadena Archived 21 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine 18th Wing Public Affairs U S Air Force 11 November 2006 U S missile defense under way on Okinawa Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Asahi Shimbun 27 October 2006 Australia NZ deploy aircraft to Japan to help enforce North Korea sanctions SBS News Retrieved 7 September 2018 Senator the Hon Marise Payne 24 February 2021 Defence s continued commitment to Operation ARGOS Media release Department of Defence New Zealand to provide further support to UN North Korea sanctions Media release New Zealand Government 20 April 2021 Retrieved 18 July 2021 Nalty Bernard 2000 The United States Air Force in Southeast Asia The War in South Vietnam Air War over South Vietnam 1968 1975 PDF Air Force History and Museums Program p 242 ISBN 9781478118640 Schlight John 1999 The United States Air Force in Southeast Asia The War in South Vietnam The Years of the Offensive 1965 1968 PDF Office of Air Force History pp 150 3 ISBN 9780912799513 a b c SR 71 Blackbirds web page No 46 USAF SR 71 Kadena Operations published 31 December 2000 revised 29 March 2004 2 Air Force Housing Okinawa Archived from the original on 3 February 2014 Retrieved 24 January 2014 http www housing af mil photos slideshow asp id 6D4ED796 E876 4287 9693 82FFDE047917 Archived 24 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine Agencies Team Kadena Kadena Air Base U S Air Force Retrieved 23 January 2020 Sr 71 Revealed The Inside Story Richard H Graham Google Books UMUC Asia Quality academic programs for U S Military communities Kadena Air Base List of commanders Archived from the original on 3 February 2014 Retrieved 22 January 2014 Mitchell Jon Kadena moms demand truth Japan Times 22 January 2014 Tritten Travis J Air Force Kadena school area near where tainted drums found completely safe Stars and Stripes 24 January 2014 U S military report suggests cover up over toxic pollution in Okinawa Jon Mitchell Japan Times 17 March 2014 Okinawa school marks 50th year since deadly U S fighter crash Japan Times 1 July 2009 Retrieved 1 July 2009 Crickmore Paul F 2000 Lockheed SR 71 The Secret Missions Exposed Rev ed Oxford Osprey p 141 ISBN 9781841760988 OCLC 47776805 LaGrone Sam 28 May 2013 Okinawa F 15 Crashes Pilot Safe news usni org Retrieved 15 June 2018 Roth Betty 28 May 2013 U S Air Force Pilot Survives F 15 Crash Off Okinawa Retrieved 15 June 2018 Officials release report on F 15 accident near Kadena AB af mil 22 January 2014 Retrieved 15 June 2018 Tan Michelle 11 June 2018 Kadena Air Base F 15 crashes off Okinawa Retrieved 11 June 2018 Rogoway Tyler 10 June 2018 A USAF F 15C Eagle Crashed Off Okinawa Pilot Rescued Alive After Ejection thedrive com The Drive Retrieved 11 June 2018 Bibliography editFletcher Harry R 1989 Air Force Bases Volume II Active Air Force Bases outside the United States of America on 17 September 1982 Maxwell AFB Alabama Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 53 6 Martin Patrick 1994 Tail Code The Complete History of USAF Tactical Aircraft Tail Code Markings Schiffer Military Aviation History ISBN 0 88740 513 4 Maurer Maurer Air Force Combat Units of World War II Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1961 republished 1983 Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 02 1 Rogers Brian 2005 United States Air Force Unit Designations Since 1978 Hinkley England Midland Publications ISBN 1 85780 197 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kadena Air Base Official site globalsecurity org on Kadena 498th Tactical Missile Group at Kadena 1 1 ADA Battalion s Official Homepage 静かな夜を返せ 未明離陸に抗議集会 permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kadena Air Base amp oldid 1185330321, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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