Misplaced Pages

37th Training Wing: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 22:50, 7 January 2012 editTParis (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Administrators30,360 edits Units: Add a little narrative about 937 TRG← Previous edit Latest revision as of 15:20, 8 January 2025 edit undoLineagegeek (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Rollbackers52,528 edits Continued previous edit 
(156 intermediate revisions by 58 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2019}}
{{lead too short|date=January 2025}}
{{Infobox military unit {{Infobox military unit
|unit_name=37th Training Wing |unit_name= 37th Training Wing
|image=] ]
|image= 37th Training Wing - BMTS.jpg
|caption=
|image_size=300
|dates= 1 February 1940–present
|caption= USAF basic trainees march in formation at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas
|country=United States
|dates=1953; 1967–1970; 1981–1992; 1993–present
|allegiance=
|country= {{USA}}
|branch=]
|branch={{air force|USA}}
|type=]
|type=Wing
|role=
|role=Training
|size=
|size=
|command_structure=] |command_structure=]
|current_commander=] Eric Axelbank |current_commander= ] Willie L. Cooper{{citation needed|date=January 2025}}
|commander2= Colonel Kelly D. McElveny{{citation needed|date=January 2025}}
|garrison=]
|commander2_label= Deputy Commander
|ceremonial_chief=
|commander3= ] Carlos F. Damian{{citation needed|date=January 2025}}
|colonel_of_the_regiment=
|commander3_label= Command Chief
|nickname=
|garrison=]-Lackland, Texas
|patron=
|nickname=
|motto=
|colors= |motto=
|colors=
|identification_symbol=
|march= |march=
|mascot= |mascot=
|battles= ]<br> ] (American Theater)<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>] (1989)<br>]<br>1991 Gulf War (Defense of Saudi Arabia; Liberation of Kuwait){{citation needed|date=January 2025}}
|battles=
|notable_commanders= ] <br /> ] |notable_commanders= ]<br />]
|anniversaries= |anniversaries=
|decorations=]<br>Distinguished Unit Citation<br>]<br>] with ] (2x) <br>]<br>] (6x)<br>]<br>Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm<ref name=37TWfacts>{{cite web |url= http://www.afhra.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=9686 |last1=Robertson|first1=Patsy|title=Factsheet 37 Training Wing (AETC)|date=6 February 2015|publisher=Air Force Historical Research Agency|url-status=dead|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20160304062755/http://www.afhra.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=9686 |archive-date=4 March 2016|access-date=26 January 2017}}</ref>{{efn|The wing is entitled by temporary bestowal to the honors earned by the 37th Operations Group.}}<ref name="Hagedorn">Hagedorn, {{page needed|date=January 2017}}</ref>
|decorations=] ] <br /> ] ] <br /> ] ]
|battle_honours= |battle_honours=
<!-- Insignia -->
|identification_symbol= ]
|identification_symbol_label= 37th Training Wing emblem{{efn|Approved 4 August 1953, reinstated 10 March 1992. Description: ], a ] ].}}<ref name=37TWfacts/>
|identification_symbol_2= ]
|identification_symbol_2_label= 37th Tactical Fighter Wing emblem{{efn|Approved 23 March 1990.}}<ref name=37TWfacts/>
}} }}


The '''37th Training Wing''' is a unit of the ] assigned to the ] and the ]. As the host unit to ], ], Texas, the ] is the predominant unit on the installation and is the largest training wing in the USAF. Known as the "Gateway to the Air Force", the 37th Training Wing replaced the Lackland Training Center as the single ] for the USAF.<ref name="USAF"></ref>
The '''37th Training Wing''' ('''37 TRW''') is a ] of the ] stationed at ] in ], Texas.


At the same time, the 37th TRW also conducts technical training for security forces, logistics, and professional military education and hosts the ] component (]) of the ]. Its four primary training functions graduate more than 85,000 students annually. Colonel Willie L. Cooper is the Commander of the 37th Training Wing and Carlos F. Damian is the ].<ref>{{cite web|title=Colonel Willie L. Cooper|url=https://www.37trw.af.mil/About/Biographies/Display/Article/3797610/willie-l-cooper/|access-date=7 July 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Chief Master Sgt. Carlos F. Damian|url= https://www.37trw.af.mil/About/Biographies/Display/Article/3496710/carlos-f-damian/ |access-date=7 July 2024}}</ref>
The 37th TRW provides basic military, professional and technical skills, and English language training for the Air Force, other military services, government agencies, and allies.

Its four primary training functions graduate more than 86,000 students annually.

As of 6 June 2011, the commander of the 37th Training Wing is Colonel Eric Axelbank.


==Units== ==Units==
The 37th Training Wing consists of five training groups and graduates more than 80,000 students annually. These five missions include basic military training of all enlisted recruits entering the Air Force, Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard; technical training encompassing hundreds of courses for a wide array of career fields and functions; Nursing and Health Services Admin officer courses and enlisted medical courses; English language training for international military personnel attending the Defense Language Institute; and specialized maintenance and security training as well as the International Squadron Officer School and International Non-Commissioned Officer Academy conducted in Spanish by active-duty Airmen for Latin American students attending the Inter-American Air Forces Academy.<ref name="USAF"/>
The 37th Training Group is made up of 1,600 personnel from all four military services. The group conducts professional and technical training to more than 36,000,000 military and civilians in the armed forces, international community, and other federal agencies. The 937th Training Group is the Air Force component of the ] at ], Texas.
*]37th Training Wing

** '''37th Training Wing Staff Agencies'''
In addition, the 37th Training Wing staff agencies provide a variety of support services for wing and tenant units at Lackland AFB.
** '''37th Training Group''' USAF Technical School:
{{Col-begin}}
*** ]'''37th Training Support Squadron'''
{{Col-break|width=33%}}
*** ]'''341st Training Squadron''' Provides trained military working dogs (MWDs) used in patrol, drug and explosive detection, and specialized mission functions for the Department of Defense (DoD) and other government agencies. Conduct operational training of MWD handlers and supervisors. Sustain DoD MWD program through logistical support, veterinary care, and research and development for security efforts worldwide.<ref name="37TGU"></ref>
* '''37th Training Group'''
*** ]'''342d Training Squadron''' Home of all Air Force Battlefield Airman (BA) entry-level training for Pararescue (PJ), Combat Control (CCT), Special Operations Weather (SOWT), and Tactical Air Control Party (TACP).<ref name="37TGU" />
** 37th Training Support Squadron
*** ]'''343d Training Squadron''' Hosts the Air Force's Security Forces Training. Its training areas are housed on Lackland AFB and Camp Bullis, both located in the San Antonio area.<ref name="37TGU" />
** 341st Training Squadron
*** ]'''344th Training Squadron''' Provides technical training for more than 10,000 active duty, Reserve, Guard, international and civilian students annually in Career Enlisted Aviator, Vehicle Maintenance, Logistics Readiness Officer, Logistics Plans, Materiel Management, Contracting, Recruiting, Safety, Cryptological, and TEMPEST courses.<ref name="37TGU" />
** 342d Training Squadron
*** ]'''345th Training Squadron''' Trains, develops and educates technical training students into skilled graduates in the Services, Air Transportation, Hazardous Material Transportation School (HAZMAT) and Traffic Management Office career fields.<ref name="37TGU" />
** 343d Training Squadron
** '''737th Training Group''' ]
** 344th Training Squadron
** 345th Training Squadron *** ]737th Training Support Squadron
*** ]319th Training Squadron

*** ]320th Training Squadron
* '''37th Medical Group'''
** 37th Medical Operations Squadron *** ]321st Training Squadron
*** ]322d Training Squadron
** 37th Aero-Medical Squadron
*** ]323d Training Squadron
{{Col-break|width=34%}}
*** ]324th Training Squadron
* '''737th Training Group'''
** 737th Training Support Squadron *** ]326th Training Squadron
** 319th Training Squadron *** ]331st Training Squadron
** ] English Language Center (DLIELC). DLIELC provides world-wide English language training and resident cultural immersion to enable ] and International partners to communicate in support of ] Security Cooperation objectives.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Defense Language Institute English Language Center (DLIELC) |url=https://www.37trw.af.mil/About/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/461220/defense-language-institute-english-language-center-dlielc/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.37trw.af.mil%2FAbout%2FFact-Sheets%2FDisplay%2FArticle%2F461220%2Fdefense-language-institute-english-language-center-dlielc%2F |access-date=2024-07-21 |website=37th Training Wing |language=en-US}}</ref>
** 320th Training Squadron
** 321st Training Squadron *** ]332nd Training Squadron (Academics)
*** ]637th International Support Squadron (Operations)
** 322d Training Squadron
** 323d Training Squadron *** ]637th Training Support Squadron
** Inter-American Air Forces Academy (IAAFA). IAAFA is an ] organization focused on Education, Training, and Security Cooperation. It is the only ] institution that delivers technical and professional training in Spanish to 32 Partner Nations across the Western Hemisphere. The academy offers a wide range of courses and graduates over 900 students per year.<ref>{{Cite web |title=37th Training Wing > Units > Inter-American Air Forces Academy |url=https://www.37trw.af.mil/Units/Inter-American-Air-Forces-Academy/ |access-date=2024-07-21 |website=www.37trw.af.mil}}</ref>
** 324th Training Squadron
** 326th Training Squadron
** 331st Training Squadron
{{Col-break|width=33%}}
* '''937th Training Group''' (Location: ])
** 937th Training Support Squadron
** 381st Training Squadron
** 382d Training Squadron
** 383d Training Squadron
{{Col-end}}


==History== ==History==
===World War II=== ===Korean War===
The 37th was established on 3 March 1953 as the ] '''37th Fighter-Bomber Wing''' as part of the buildup on the Air Force due to the ]. It was assigned to ] of ] and was activated on 8 April 1953 at ], New Mexico.<ref name="37TFW">Short History of the 37th Training Wing, {{page needed|date=January 2017}}</ref>
The 37th Pursuit Group was originally activated at ], ] on 1 February 1940. During the early years of World War II, the unit was part of the ] defense force. It was inactivated on 1 November 1943.


Although activated, the ] was neither manned nor equipped and it was inactivated on 25 June as a result of the Armistice in Korea and the subsequent need for deployment to the war zone being unnecessary.<ref name="37TFW"/>
===Cold War===
The 37th Fighter-Bomber Wing was established on 3 March 1953 and activated on 8 April 1953 at ], ]. It was neither manned or equipped and was inactivated on 25 June 1953.


===Vietnam War=== ===Vietnam War===
]
] from Phu Cat AB]]
] ] from Phu Cat AB]]
] ]
]
On 1 March 1967, the '''37th Tactical Fighter Wing''' was activated in place at ], ] to become the host unit. The 37th TFW received its manpower and equipment from various units transferred from the United States and elsewhere, and tactical operations did not commence until mid-April. The newly-formed wing was assigned to Seventh Air Force.
With the escalation of the ] in 1965–1966, the Air Force reactivated the unit and redesignated it as the '''37th Tactical Fighter Wing''' and activated it on 26 October 1966.<ref name=Ravenstein>{{cite book|last=Ravenstein|first=Charles A.|title=Air Force Combat Wings, Lineage & Honors Histories 1947-1977|url=https://media.defense.gov/2010/Sep/21/2001330257/-1/-1/0/AFD-100921-047.pdf|year=1984|publisher=Office of Air Force History|isbn=0-912799-12-9}}{{PD-notice}}</ref>{{rp|65}} The wing was activated at the newly built ], South Vietnam and it was assigned to ]. It was organized on 1 March 1967 and assigned to ]. Personnel for the wing headquarters and tactical components were in transit from the United States and elsewhere, and tactical operations did not commence until mid-April.<ref name=Ravenstein/>{{rp|65}}


The 37th Wing was assigned several ] squadrons, its mission was to provide tactical air power in support of South Vietnamese and United States Army and Marine units engaged in combat against communist forces attempting to overthrow the government of South Vietnam.<ref name="37TFW"/> Initial squadrons assigned were:<ref name=Ravenstein/>{{rp|65-6}}
Its attached squadrons were:
* ]: 15 April 1967 – 27 May 1969 (F-100D/F Tail Code: HE) * ]: 15 April 1967 – 27 May 1969{{efn|Transferred from the ] at ].<ref name=Ravenstein/>{{rp|10}}}} (F-100D/F Tail Code: HE){{cn|date=January 2025}}
* Det 1, 612th Tactical Fighter Squadron: 8 June 1967 – 13 April 1969 (F-100D/F Tail Code: HS) * Detachment 1, ]: 8 June 1967 – 13 April 1969{{efn|Transferred from the ] at ].<ref name="Martin">Martin, {{page needed|date=March 2023}}</ref>}} (F-100D/F Tail Code: HS){{cn|date=January 2025}}


The 416th TFS was deployed from the 3d TFW at Bien Hoa AB, Det 1, 612th TFS from the 35th TFW at Phan Rang AB. On 15 April, the 37TFW began combat operations with strikes by 416TFS (F-100D aircraft) en route from ] to their new home. On 8 June, Det 1., 612th TFS began operations, also after flying a mission en route from their former home at ]. By 28 February 1968, the 37th TFW squadrons completed 18,000 combat hours and 13,000 combat sorties without a major aircraft accident. On 15 April, the 37th began combat operations with strikes by 416 Squadron (F-100D aircraft) en route from Bien Hoa to their new home. On 8 June, Detachment 1 of the 612th Squadron began operations, also after flying a mission en route from their former home at Phan Rang. From June 1967 to May 1969, the 37th also used F-100F two-seat trainers for visual and weather reconnaissance and forward air control operations. The latter mission came to be known as "Fast FAC." Up until this time, the Air Force used slow propeller-driven O-1, O-2 and OV-10 aircraft for this mission.<ref name="37TFW"/> By 28 February 1968, wing squadrons completed 18,000 combat hours and 13,000 combat sorties without a major aircraft accident.<ref name="37TFW"/>


In the spring of 1968, the two squadrons of the 37th TFW were augmented by two additional squadrons deployed from the United States: In the spring of 1968, the two squadrons of the wing were augmented by two additional squadrons deployed from the United States. With this augmentation, the wing was then composed of four F-100 combat squadrons with approximately 90 aircraft being assigned.<ref name="37TFW"/><ref name=Ravenstein/>{{rp|65}}
* ]: 14 May 1968 – 11 May 1969 (Iowa ANG) (F-100C/F Tail Code: HA) * ]: 14 May 1968 – 11 May 1969{{efn|The 174th was federalized along with Air National Guard personnel and aircraft from the ] of the ] at [[Sioux City Municipal Airport.}}<ref name="Martin"/> (F-100C/F Tail Code: HA){{cn|date=January 2025}}
* ]: 3 February 1968 – 15 May 1969 (F-100D/F Tail Code: HP) * ]: 3 February 1968 – 15 May 1969{{efn|Reassigned from the ] at ] South Carolina.}}<ref name="Martin"/> (F-100D/F Tail Code: HP){{cn|date=January 2025}}


As 355th Squadron personnel completed their TDY that same month the personnel and aircraft returned to Myrtle Beach AFB. They were replaced by Air National Guardsmen from ] and Washington DC, who were manning Myrtle Beach at the time. These newly deployed personnel were sent to ] along with their F-100 D/F aircraft.<ref name="37TFW"/>
The 174th TFS was federalized Air National Guard personnel and aircraft from the 185th Tactical Fighter Group of the Iowa ANG at Sioux City MAP; the 355th TFS was deployed from the 354th TFW at ] ]. The wing was then composed of four F-100 combat squadrons with approximately 90 aircraft being assigned.


In 1969, the Air Force began withdrawing the F-100 from combat duty in South Vietnam, replacing it with the ]. Two Phantom squadrons were transferred to the 37th from the ], ]:<ref name=Ravenstein/>{{rp|194}}
As 355th TFS personnel completed their TDY that same month the personnel and aircraft returned to Myrtle Beach AFB. They were replaced by Air National Guardsmen from ] and Washington DC, who were manning Myrtle Beach at the time. These newly deployed personnel were sent to ] along with their F-100 D/F aircraft.
* ]: 15 April 1969 – 31 March 1970<ref name="Martin"/> (F-4D Tail Code: HK){{cn|date=January 2025}}
* ]: 15 June 1969 – 31 March 1970<ref name="Martin"/> (F-4D Tail Code: HB){{cn|date=January 2025}}


The wing continued its combat operations in South Vietnam until 30 March 1970 when it was inactivated as part of the drawdown of American forces in South Vietnam. The wing was replaced by the ] which moved without assets from ].<ref name=Ravenstein/>{{rp|27}}
In the spring of 1969, the 416th TFS and its F-100s were transferred to ], while Det 1., 612th TFS was returned to the 35th TFW, now at ]. Two F-4D squadrons were transferred from Da Nang Air Base replaced them:


During the wing's combat tour in South Vietnam, it was awarded the ], eight Vietnam campaign streamers, two ]s with ], and the ].<ref name=Ravenstein/>{{rp|65-6}}
* ]: 15 April 1969 – 31 March 1970 (F-4D Tail Code: HK)
* ]: 15 June 1969 – 31 March 1970 (F-4D Tail Code: HB)


===Tactical Air Command===
The US withdrawals from Vietnam continued during 1970, resulting in the inactivation of 37th TFW at Phu Cat AB on 31 March.
====George Air Force Base====
]
]
The 37th was reactivated on 30 March 1981 by ] at ] in Victorville, California. Its mission was to provide pilot transition training to the F-4G Phantom II "Wild Weasel" radar suppression aircraft. The mission was transferred to the 37th from the 35th Tactical Fighter Wing, which was TAC's primary F-4E Phantom II training organization in a mission realignment. Both wings were under the TAC's ].<ref name="37TFW"/> Assigned squadrons of the 37th (Tail Code: "WW") at George were:<ref name="Rogers">Rogers, {{page needed|date=January 2017}}</ref>
* ]: 30 March 1981 – 5 October 1989 (Yellow Tail Stripe){{cn|date=January 2025}}
* ]: 30 March 1981 – 5 October 1989 (Blue Tail Stripe){{cn|date=January 2025}}
* 563rd Tactical Fighter Squadron (red tail stripe){{cn|date=January 2025}}


As the only "Wild Weasel" training wing in the world, it provided instructor pilots and qualified aircrews for the other two "Wild Weasel" wings in the Philippines and West Germany. As part of the training mission, the wing participated in numerous tactical, maritime, and electronic warfare exercises locally and worldwide in hunter/killer tactics, suppression of enemy air defenses, force escort operations and dissimilar air combat training with ] and ] squadrons, and various allies. Wing aircrews and ground personnel won the United States Air Force Worldwide Fighter gunnery meet in 1985 and 1987.<ref name="37TFW"/>
===George AFB===
When reactivated in 1981 the 37th gained assets of ] at ], California.


In 1988, George was scheduled in the first round of base closures passed by Congress under the ] program. On 5 October 1989, the 37th turned over its F-4G aircraft to the host 35th Tactical Fighter Wing at George.<ref name="37TFW"/>
The wing's mission was pilot transition training to the ] "Wild Weasel" radar suppression aircraft. As the only "Wild Weasel" training wing in the world, it provided instructor pilots and qualified aircrews for the other two "Wild Weasel" wings in the Philippines and West Germany. As part of the training mission, the wing participated in numerous tactical, maritime, and electronic warfare exercises locally and worldwide in hunter/killer tactics, suppression of enemy air defenses, force escort operations and dissimilar air combat training with US Armed Forces Air National Guard and Reserves, and various allies. Wing aircrews and ground personnel won the United States Air Force Worldwide Fighter gunnery meet in 1985 and 1987.


====Tonopah Test Range Airport====
In 1988, George AFB was scheduled in the first round of base closures passed by Congress under the Base Realignment and Closure program. On 5 Oct 1989, the 37th TFW turned over F-4G aircraft to the host 35th TFW at George AFB.
]
]
On 10 November 1988, the Air Force officially announced the existence of the Lockheed ] to the public. With this announcement, the formerly clandestine Tactical Air Command ], which had transitioned the F-117 from a development to operational weapons system was put on the road to inactivation when the Air Force decided to increase the 4450th TG to a Wing level organization.<ref name="37TFW"/>


As part of the phasedown of operations at George, the 37th Tactical Fighter Wing moved without equipment or personnel to ], Nevada on 5 October 1989, and assumed the aircraft, personnel, equipment and mission of the provisional 4450th Tactical Group . As part of the transition from the provisional group to 37th TFW, the F-117A squadrons were inactivated and re-designated as follows:<ref name="37TFW"/>
===Tonopah Test Range Airport===
* 4450th Tactical Squadron; replaced by the ] (Nightstalkers)
On 5 October 1989 the ] at ], Nevada was re-designated the '''37th Tactical Fighter Wing''' in a name-only transfer. The 37th TFW absorbed the manpower, equipment, and the world's first ] fighter, the ].
* 4451st Tactical Squadron; replaced by the ] (Ghostriders)
* 4453d Test and Evaluation Squadron; replaced by the ] (Bandits){{cn|date=January 2025}}


The uncoded aircraft of the 4450th Group were given the USAF Tail Code of "TR", and subdued squadron emblems were affixed to the 37th TFW's aircraft. The choice of the 415th, 416th and 417th Tactical Fighter Squadrons was significant, as these were all ] ] night fighter squadrons. The mission of the F-117 was night stealth tactical fighter operations; the squadron designations were chosen to honor these pioneering World War II squadrons, which were bestowed their lineages and histories. The wing trained to integrate stealth technology with more conventional methods of combat operations.<ref name="37TFW"/>
The 4450th's subordinate F-117 squadrons were re-designated as follows:
* 4450th Tactical Squadron (Nightstalkers-Atlantic) ---> ] (Nightstalkers)
* 4451st Tactical Squadron (Grim Reapers-Pacific) ---> ] (Ghostriders)
* 4453d Tactical Evaluation Squadron (Bandits) ---> ] ("Bandits").


The 415th and 416th squadrons each flew 18 production F-117As, whereas the 417th flew the 6 pre-production F-117As (79-10780 – 79–10785). The 417th also operated ] and AT-38B Talon trainers for chase and training.<ref name="37TFW"/>
These had been the designations of the first Army Air Force night-fighter squadron designations during World War II. The wing trained to integrate stealth technology with more conventional methods of combat operations.


====Operation Just Cause==== =====Operation Just Cause=====
On 19 December 1989, just 13 months after the Pentagon had disclosed the existence of the F-117A, it was used in combat for the first time. This was in ], the invasion of Panama intended to dislodge and arrest General ].<ref name="Pace">Pace, {{page needed|date=January 2017}}</ref>
The 37th dropped the first bombs in ] of ] on 20 December 1989.


In early 1988, Panama's military dictator, Gen. ], had been indicted by two Florida grand juries on charges of laundering drug money. He laughed off the charges and dismissed Panama's president in February. During the May 1989 presidential election campaign, Noriega's "Dignity Battalion" goon squad beat up opposition candidate Guillermo Endara. Endara won the election, but on October 1, Noriega prevented him fromtaking office. Two days later, a coup attempt was made but collapsed when loyalist ] (PDF) rescued Noriega. The coup leaders were executed the following day. On December 15, Noriega declared a state of war between the United States and Panama. The following evening, PDF soldiers killed a marine lieutenant and arrested a navy lieutenant and his wife who had witnessed the shooting. The officer was beaten and his wife was threatened with sexual abuse. In early 1988, Panama's military dictator, Gen. Manuel Noriega, had been indicted by two Florida grand juries on charges of laundering drug money. He laughed off the charges and dismissed Panama's president in February. During the May 1989 presidential election campaign, Noriega's "Dignity Battalion" goon squad beat up opposition candidate ]. Endara won the election, but on 1 October, Noriega prevented him from taking office. Two days later, a coup attempt was made but collapsed when loyalist ] (PDF) rescued Noriega. The coup leaders were executed the following day. On 15 December, Noriega declared a state of war between the United States and Panama. The following evening, PDF soldiers killed a marine lieutenant and arrested a navy lieutenant. The Lieutenant and his wife had witnessed the shooting. The officer was beaten and his wife was threatened with sexual abuse.<ref name="Pace"/>


In response to these events, President ] issued orders to invade Panama. One of the targets was the Battalian 2000 barracks at ]. ] were to be dropped at the adjoining airfield. The PDF troops would have to be neutralized before the[airdrop. Army Lt. Gen. Carl W. Stiner, the XVIII Airborne Corps com-mander, requested F-117As be used. The F-117s would not bomb the two barracks, but rather the 2,000-pound LBGs with time-delay fuzes would be directed to aim points near the buildings. They would act as "a giant stungrenade," to confuse the PDF troops without killing them. The use of F-117As was based on their night-bombing accuracy, rather than stealth, as the PDF lacked heavy air defenses. In response to these events, President ] issued orders to invade Panama. One of the targets was the Battalion 2000 barracks at ]. ] were to be dropped at the adjoining airfield. The PDF troops would have to be neutralized before the airdrop. Army Lt. Gen. Carl W. Stiner, the XVIII Airborne Corps commander, requested F-117As be used. The F-117s would not bomb the two barracks, but rather the 2,000-pound LBGs with time-delay fuses would be directed to aim points near the buildings. They would act as "a giant stun grenade," to confuse the PDF troops without killing them. The use of F-117As was based on their night-bombing accuracy, rather than stealth, as the PDF lacked heavy air defenses.<ref name="Pace"/>


On the night of December 19, 1989, six F-117As from the 415th TFS took off from TTR Airport. The flight would require five in-flight refuelings. Two of the planes were targeted on Rio Hato Airfield, two more were to provide support for an attempt to capture Noriega, and the final pair were in-flight spares should any of the others suffer malfunctions. As the two F-117As approached the release point, a moment of confusion occurred that would mar their debut. The original plan was for the lead plane to drop its bomb in a field near the barracks on the left, while his wingman would drop his bomb in a field near a barracks on the right. Just before the drop, the wind direction changed. One bomb, intended to land about 100 yards from the 7th Company barracks, actually landed 260 yards away. This was only 18 yards from the 6th Company barracks, which was too close. The other bomb impacted near a basketball court, about 40 yards farther from the barracks than intended. On the night of 19 December 1989, six F-117As from the 415th TFS took off from TTR Airport. The flight would require five in-flight refuelings. Two of the planes were targeted on Rio Hato Airfield, two more were to provide support for an attempt to capture Noriega, and the final pair were in-flight spares should any of the others suffer malfunctions. As the two F-117As approached the release point, a moment of confusion occurred that would mar their debut. The original plan was for the lead plane to drop its bomb in a field near the barracks on the left, while his wingman would drop his bomb in a field near a barracks on the right. Just before the drop, the wind direction changed. One bomb, intended to land about 100 yards from the 7th Company barracks, actually landed 260 yards away. This was only 18 yards from the 6th Company barracks, which was too close. The other bomb impacted near a basketball court, about 40 yards farther from the barracks than intended.<ref name="Pace"/>


Despite these problems, the explosions caused the desired confusion. Initial reports spoke of PDF soldiers running around in their underwear,while others threw down their weapons. Several Rangers were killed in thesubsequent firefight, but the airfield was taken and U.S. aircraft were landing within two hours. Despite these problems, the explosions caused the desired confusion. Initial reports spoke of PDF soldiers running around in their underwear, while others threw down their weapons. Several Rangers were killed in the subsequent firefight, but the airfield was taken and U.S. aircraft were landing within two hours.<ref name="Pace"/>


However, it was revealed three months later that one of the bombs had missed its target by a considerable amount. It seems that there had been some mis-communication in the final stages of the mission planning, and the pilot had been given the wrong coordinates for the target. However, the media jumped on this event and concluded that the F-117A had been a failure on its first mission.<ref name="Pace"/>
====1991 Gulf War====
] during ].]]
On 1 August 1990, was the 35th anniversary of the first test flight of the ] at ], Nevada. At Tonopah TR Airport, the Lockheed F-117A Nighthawk, also tested at Groom Lake sat on the parking ramp. As the afternoon passed, the shadows from the mountains lengthened toward darkness. In the Mideast, it was now 2:00 A.M., August 2, 1990. Suddenly, three Iraqi armored divisions, backed up with MiGs and heli-copters, attacked ]. Within hours, resistance had collapsed and Kuwait became ]'s "19th province." It seemed that Iraqi dictator ]'s ambition would not end there. Soon after the invasion, seven more Iraqi divisions took uppositions along the ] border. This was followed by a series of border incursions.


On 21 April 1990, stung perhaps by the press criticism, the Pentagon released more information on the F-117A. More photos of better quality were released, and at ] there was a public display of two F-117As.<ref name="Pace"/>
On 6 August, Saudi King Fahdibn Abd al-Aziz Al Saud invited U.S. troops into the country. Within two days, F-15s and the first Army elements had arrived to draw "a line in the sand." The third great conflict of the 20th century had begun.


=====1991 Gulf War=====
On 17 August, Colonel Alton Whitley, was named commander of the 37th Fighter Wing. Four hours later, he was ordered to deploy the 415th TFS to Saudi Arabia. On August 20, eighteen F-117As were on their way. They landed at ] at noon the next day. The brand-new base was located at the southern tip of Saudi Arabia, outside the range of Iraqi ]s. It had state-of-the-art hardened aircraft shelters and even hardened crew quarters. The base was soon dubbed "Tonopah East"
], Virginia, prior to being deployed to Saudi Arabia for ] ]]
Less than a year after the wing saw combat in Panama, in response to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait on 2 August 1990, the 415th Squadron deployed to ], Saudi Arabia on 19 August to provide air defense over the Saudi capital of ].<ref name="Pace"/>


In November 1990, President Bush ordered ] to prepare for offensive operations against Iraq after negotiations with President ] of Iraq were at an impasse. The 416th Squadron deployed from Tonopah on 1 December 1990 and in January 1991, a portion of the 417th Squadron also deployed to Saudi Arabia. In spite of the massive Coalition buildup, Saddam Hussein of Iraq refused to withdraw his troops from Kuwait.<ref name="Pace"/>
To keep up morale, a longtime tradition was revived: nose art. To remain stealthy, it was applied to the bomb bay doors. There were names such as "Unexpected Guest," "Dark Angel," "The Toxic Avenger," "Habu II," "The Overachiever," "Once Bitten," and "Christine." The Saudis nicknamed the F-117 Shaba, Arabic for "ghost" On 8 November 1990, President Bush ordered a major increase in U.S.forces in the Gulf. As part of this, another twenty F-117As from the 416th TFS flew to Tonopah East, arriving on December 4. The forward-deployed unit was re-designated the '''37th Tactical Fighter Wing (Provisional)'''. 36 aircraft, both squadrons of combat F-117As had now been deployed.


In the early morning of 17 January 1991, the ] along with air forces from Coalition nations began an air offensive to remove Iraqi troops from Kuwait. F-117A Nighthawk stealth bombers, flying from Saudi Arabia, were the first aircraft to engage in offensive operations. The stealth technology of the plane allowed it to fly directly to the Iraqi capital of ] without detection. Mission planners had assigned critical strategic Iraqi command and control installations to the F-117s, counting on the aircraft's ability to hit precisely at well-defended targets without being seen or detected by Iraqi air defenses. Other vital targets included key communications centers, research and development facilities for nuclear and chemical weapons, plus hardened aircraft shelters on Iraqi airfields.<ref name="Pace"/>
On January 12, 1991, the ] approved the use of force to back up a ] (UN) resolution calling on the ] to withdraw from Kuwait. It was, in every sense of the term, a declaration of war. The UN deadline expired on January 15, and President Bush ordered combat operations to begin. The pilots reported for duty at 3:00 P.M. and were told they would attack Iraq that night. Each pilot was then given his target data. This war would begin over Baghdad and would strike at the heart of Iraqi air defenses and communications facilities. The F-117As would strike the National Air Defense Operations Center in ], the regional Sector Operation Centers (SOCs), and the local Intercept Operation Centers (lOCs). This air-defens network controlled some five hundred radars, the SA-2, SA-3, SA-6, SA-8,and Roland SAMs, and some eight thousand anti-aircraft guns. Baghdad alone was protected by about four thousand anti-aircraft guns and SAM launchers. The complete system provided a thicker air defense than any in ] or ], while the defenses of Baghdad rivaled that of ] or ]. And the F-117 pilots would have to face it all alone.


On the first night of combat operations, an F-117A dropped a 2000-pound laser-guided ] bomb right through the roof of the general communications building in downtown Baghdad. In another attack on the communications building next to the ], another GBU-27 Paveway III was dropped through an air shaft in the center of the roof atop the building and blew out all four walls.<ref name="Pace"/>
On January 16, 1991, the F-117 pilots were told to get a good meal. They began to suspect something was afoot. The maintenance and weapons personnel were ordered to make one simple change in the bomb loading procedures the arming lanyards were attached to the bombs. The first wave was made up of 415th TFS pilots; they had been at Tonopah East since August, so Colonel Whitley felt they should have the honor of being first. Just after midnight, the first F-117A took off; by 12:22A.M., January 17, the last was gone.
]
During the first three weeks of the air offensive, F-117As obliterated many hardened targets with unprecedented precision. The 37th TFW flew 1271 combat sorties and maintained an 85.5 percent mission-capable rate. The 43 F-117As of the 37th TFW dropped more than 2000 tons of precision ordnance and attacked some 40 percent of the high-value targets that were struck by the Coalition forces. Not one F-117A was hit, shot down, or lost to mechanical failure.<ref name="Pace"/>


There is no evidence that the F-117A was ever detected or tracked by Iraqi radar installations, either ground or airborne. After combat operations ceased in February 1991, some wing personnel and aircraft remained on indefinite alert in Saudi Arabia as a component member of the post-Desert Storm task force in Southwest Asia, although most returned to Tonopah by the end of March.<ref name="37TFW"/>
At 6:35 P.M. EST (2:35 A.M. in Baghdad), ]'s ] was interviewing former defense secretary ]. He stopped and said, "We're going to ] in Baghdad." Shaw began his report: "This is something is happening outside. . . . The skies over Baghdad have been illuminated. We're seeing bright flashes going off all over the sky." The sky above Baghdad had erupted with anti-aircraft fire, but, as yet, there were no U.S. aircraft over Baghdad. At 2:39 A.M., only minutes after CNN began broadcasting from Baghdad, United States Army Apache helicopters blasted two Iraqi Army early warning radar sites. This opened a gap in the air defense radar coverage,and USAF ]s flew through it to strike ] sites in western Iraq. Two F-117As had already crossed into Iraq. They were followed by six more. Unlike the F-15Es, they did not have support from ]A jamming aircraft. It was one of these follow-on F-117As that opened the Black Jet's war.


=====F-117 transfer to Holloman AFB=====
The target was the ] IOC in the ] of western Iraq. Located in a hardened bunker, it could coordinate attacks on the incoming F-15Es and the follow-on strikes. The pilot located the target and released the bomb at 2:51 A.M. He saw the bomb penetrate the bunker's roof and blow off its doors. He turned toward hissecond target, an SOC at the ]. When he looked back, he pilot saw the night sky was filled with antiaircraft fire, triggered by the bomb's explosion. When he looked toward the second target, he saw the whole sky wasalive with ground fire.
After Desert Storm, the 37th transitioned to the Air Force Objective Wing organization, and the 37th Tactical Fighter Wing was redesignated the 37th Fighter Wing on 1 October 1991.


As a result of the end of the ], reduced defense budgets were the order of the day. In reviewing its tactical bases and the costs of maintaining them, It was determined that the operations from Tonopah required considerable logistics support via commercial air and trucking. All military personnel were permanently assigned to Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada, and were transported once each week by air. Also the security requirements of the F-117A had been lessened with its introduction into the Air Force inventory as an operational weapons system. It was determined that a considerable amount of money would be saved by moving the F-117 operations out of the remote site at Tonopah. Tactical Air Command also believed, while Tonopah Airport was adequate for testing and development of aircraft, it was unsuitable as a fully operational tactical base.<ref name="37TFW"/>
As the other F-117As closed on Baghdad, anti-aircraft fire seemed suspended above the city. The firing at the empty sky had been going on for a full twenty minutes, but at 2:56 A.M., a cease-fire order was issued. A stillness fell over the city. From their cockpits, the pilots could see the eerie glow suddenly disappear. Through the Infrared (IR) displays, individual buildings took shape. Baghdad was still brightly lit, and car headlights could be seen streaming out of the city. As the F-117s moved unseen and unheard above, CNN reporters Bernard Shaw and ] were discussing what had happened. As they spoke the pilot of an F-117 placed the cross hairs of the targeting system on the fourteen-story Al-Karak telephone and telegraph center. The plane's bomb door opened and a ] ] (LGB) fell free. At that instant, the GBU-27 punched through the Al-Karak's roof and destroyed the communications equipment, cutting off CNN. Within five minutes of the 3:00 A.M. H-hour, Another F-117 had destroyed the Al-Kark communications tower, another F-117 LGB dropped through a roof vent on the new ] headquarters, while another F-117 struck the National Air Defense Operations Center, and another F-117 bombed ]'s lakeside palace-command center. As the first bombs exploded, the F-117 pilots saw anti-aircraft fire rise above the city.
]
Also, the Air Force wanted to retire the ] operated by the ] at ], New Mexico, most of which were manufactured in the mid-1970s and were costing more and more to operate. As a result, plans were put in place to construct suitable facilities for the F-117A at Holloman and to retire the F-15A/B models of the 49th.<ref name="37TFW"/>


There was also debate about which unit designation would be adopted at Holloman. The 37th was a senior organization to the 49th, and initially it was announced that the 49th would be inactivated and the 37th would become the new host unit at Holloman. This was changed when General ], USAF Chief of Staff, determined that the 49th had a more notable history than the 37th, would remain active and the 37th would be inactivated.<ref name="37TFW"/>
Another F-117, following one minute behind, dropped two ] LGBs through the hole blasted by the first bomb on the fourteen-story Al-Karak telephone and telegraph center. Unlike the GBU-27, which was designed for attacking hard targets, the GBU-10 had a thin casing and a greater blast effect. The two bombs gutted the building. As his plane cleared the area, the pilot looked back and beheld the wall of fire he and the other pilots had flown through. The F-117As sped away from Baghdad. Some, with both bombs expended, headed home. Others headed for their second target; one bombed the deep National Command alternate bunker at the North Taji military complex. Its thirty-feet-thick roof proved too much even for a GBU-27, and it remained intact. More successful were attacks on a communications facility at ], the SOCs at ] and ], and an IOC at ].


On 8 July 1992, shortly after the inactivation of Tactical Air Command and the activation of ], the assets of the 37th Fighter Wing were moved to Holloman and was it was inactivated; the aircraft, personnel, equipment and mission being transferred to the 49th Fighter Wing.<ref name="37TFW"/>
At 4:00 A.M., a second F-117A wave restruck the air force headquarters and the National Air Defense Operations Center. Other targets hit were the lOCs at ] and ] as well as leadership andcommunications facilities from the ] border to Kuwait. In all, the two waves had dropped thirty-three bombs and scored twenty-three hits. The third wave followed shortly before dawn. Their targets were chemical and biological weapons storage bunkers. The late hour was selected because sunlight would reduce the danger from ] spores. As they approached their targets, a weather front moved into central Iraq, with thin clouds at 5,000 feet. The F-117A's bombing system required a clear view of the target or the LGB would lose its lock. Of the sixteen bombs dropped, only five were hits. As the F-117 pilots turned for home, their mood was somber. They knew they had won a great victory, but they were sure the cost had been high. At Tonopah East, the ground crews awaited the planes' return. The first wave landed at night, while the second and third came back after sunrise. One by one, the returning planes were counted. Everyone returned.


===Air Education and Training Command===
As the tapes of the strikes were reviewed, it became clear that something remarkable had occurred. A handful of planes had faced an air-defense network that was one of the most capable in the world, struck at the heart of the enemy capital, and emerged without a scratch. The Iraqi air-defense system died that night; with the headquarters hit and the lOCs and SOCs damaged and out of action, the individual anti-aircraft guns and SAM sites were isolated. The operators were unable to operate their tracking and fire control radar, for fear a ] would destroy them. Iraqui Army units in the field had limited communications with each otherand with higher command. Electrical power was out in Baghdad. The three F-117A waves, a wave of ]s, and a decoy raid, tightly interrelated in time and space, had left the Iraqis unable to inflict significant losses on Coalition air operations.
]
]
]
However, the inactivation was of short duration. On 1 July 1993, HQ USAF redesignated ] as ] (AETC). At the same time, HQ AETC replaced all of its training centers with numbered wings. As a result, the 37th was redesignated the '''37th Training Wing''' and activated at ], Texas. It replaced the Lackland Training Center and most of its units that had performed the training mission since 1949.<ref name="37TFW"/>


Assigned to the 37th Training Wing were five group-level establishments.
The wing continued interdiction missions throughout the war. The Nighthawk conducted more than 1,250 sorties, dropped more than 2,000 tons of bombs and flew more than 6,900 hours. It Served as a member of ] post-Desert Storm task force in Southwest Asia.
* 37th Technical Training Group
* 37th Military Training Group
* Defense Language Institute English Language Center
* 37th Support Group
* 37th Logistics Group<ref name="37TFW"/>


Additional changes came on 1 April 1994 when HQ USAF redesignated the technical training group as the 37th Training Group and the military training group as the 737th Training Group.<ref name="37TFW"/>
Just as the Gulf War had begun on live television, so too, did it end. One image was that of Iraqi prisoners. In small groups or huge columns, they willingly surrendered. They had expected the air war to last several days, ora week at most. Instead, it had continued for six weeks. They were helpless before it, without the means to survive or fight back. Another image was ]'s press conference, describing how the 100-hour ground war had been fought. Yet another was the crowds of Kuwaitis welcoming victorious U.S. and Coalition troops.


The 37th also inherited a fourth training mission, one which the Lackland Training Center had gained on 2 June 1993, when the Air Force decided to make Lackland the permanent home of the ]. The academy had brought its technical training mission to Lackland in August 1992 from the hurricane-wrecked Homestead AFB in Florida. The Inter-American Air Forces Academy had trained officer and enlisted members of various air forces in Latin America since its organization in the Panama Canal Zone on 31 October 1948. On 1 July 1993, IAAFA was reassigned to the 37th Training Wing.<ref name="37TFW"/>
And there was that final image, which put to rest a ghost from the past. It was a photo of a ] helicopter, hovering on the roof of the U.S. embassy in ]. Special Forces troops were climbing from the Blackhawk onto the roof. Sixteen years before, it had been another roof-top, another helicopter, the last helicopter out of ].


While the wing gained IAAFA's technical training missions, it lost the officer training mission which AETC reassigned to ] on 1 July 1993 and shortly thereafter moved to ], Alabama. The wing also gained extensive technical training courses from two closing bases — ] in Illinois and ] in Colorado. The courses consisted of much of the Air Force's training for base support and operations. As the new courses began to come on line in 1993, the wing's technical trainee accessions grew significantly. In 1994, technical training entries almost reached 20,000, while basic military training remained at its pre-1986 level of about 35,000. In 1995, the wing reached near parity between basic military and technical training missions in terms of members trained.<ref name="37TFW"/>
In a very real sense, two wars ended that day


In the twenty-first century, the 937th Training Group, the Air Force component of the ] located at ], was replaced by the 59th Training Group, part of the ].
===Holloman Air Force Base===
In April 1990, the F-117 was placed on public display for the first time at ], Nev. Some 150,000 people saw the aircraft that day, including families who hadn’t been allowed to know what their parents and spouses were doing between the time they flew away Monday morning and returned home Friday afternoon. To Col. Al Whitley, it was quite a contrast to his returns from two tours in ]. In May, the town of Tonopah held a parade for the F-117 pilots and ground crews. A crowd of some three thousand turned out. A six-foot stone statue commemorating the plane and its crews was unveiled.


==Lineage==
Even before the Gulf War, in January 1990, Secretary of Defense ] proposed that the stealth fighters be relocated from Tonopah, to ] in New Mexico's Tularosa Basin. This would allow the pilots' families to join them
* Established as the '''37th Fighter-Bomber Wing''' on 3 March 1953
: Activated on 8 April 1953
After years of operations at Tonopah, the F-117s were redeployed to ], ] in May/June 1992, where they became part of the ]. With the transfer of all its assets to the 49th FW, the 37th Fighter Wing was inactivated on 8 July 1992.
: Inactivated on 25 June 1953

* Redesignated '''37th Tactical Fighter Wing''' and activated on 26 October 1966 (not organized)
===Lackland Training Center===
: Organized on 1 March 1967
A year later, the '''37th Training Wing''' was activated at ], Texas, on 1 July 1993 as a non-flying organization to conduct all Air Force ].
: Inactivated on 31 March 1970

* Activated on 30 March 1981
On 4 November 2009, Colonel Joseph Romano, commander of the wing's 37th Training Group, was convicted by an Italian court of kidnapping ] as part of the ] and sentenced to five years in prison. Romano was also ordered to pay 1&nbsp;million Euros to Nasr and 500,000 Euros to Nasr's wife.<ref>Barry, Colleen (Associated Press), "", '']'', 4 November 2009.</ref>
: Redesignated '''37th Fighter Wing''' on 1 October 1991

: Inactivated on 8 July 1992
===Lineage===
* Redesignated '''37th Training Wing''' and activated on 1 July 1993<ref name=37TWfacts/>
* Constituted as '''37th Pursuit Group (Interceptor)''' on 22 December 1939.
** Inactivated 1 February 1940.
* Redesignated '''37th Fighter Group''' in May 1942.
** Disbanded 1 November 1943.
* Established as '''37th Fighter-Bomber Wing''' on 3 March 1953.
** Activated on 8 April 1953.
** Inactivated on 25 June 1953.
* Redesignated '''37th Tactical Fighter Wing''', and activated, on 26 October 1966.
** Organized on 1 March 1967
** Inactivated on 31 March 1970
** Activated on 30 March 1981
** Redesignated '''37th Fighter Wing''' on 1 October 1991
** Inactivated on 8 July 1992.
* Redesignated '''37th Training Wing''', and activated, on 1 July 1993.


===Assignments=== ===Assignments===
* Ninth Air Force, 8 April – 25 June 1953
* ], 1 February 1940
* Pacific Air Forces, 26 October 1966 (not organized)
* ], 19 November 1940
: Redesignated: Caribbean Air Force. 5 August 1941 * Seventh Air Force, 1 March 1967 – 31 March 1970
* 831st Air Division, 30 March 1981
* ], 18 September 1942 – 1 November 1943
* ], 8 April – 25 June 1953
* ], 26 October 1966
* ], 1 March 1967 – 31 March 1970
* ], 30 March 1981
* ], 5 October 1989 – 8 July 1992 * ], 5 October 1989 – 8 July 1992
* ], 1 July 1993–present * ], 1 July 1993–present<ref name=37TWfacts/>


===Components=== ===Components===
'''Group''' '''Groups'''
* 37th Fighter-Bomber (later, 37th Operations): 8 April – 25 June 1953; 1 November 1991 – 8 July 1992 * 37th Fighter-Bomber Group (later 37th Operations Group): 8 April – 25 June 1953; 1 November 1991 – 8 July 1992<ref name=37TWfacts/>
* 37th Training Group{{cn|date=January 2025}}
* 737th Training Group{{cn|date=January 2025}}
* 937th Training Group (now inactivated){{cn|date=January 2025}}


'''Squadron''' '''Squadrons'''
* ]: 1 February 19401 November 1943 * 174th Tactical Fighter Squadron: 14 May 196811 May 1969
* ]: 1 February 1940 1 November 1943; 28 April25 June 1953 * 355th Fighter Squadron: attached 3 February 4 July 1968, assigned 5 July 196815 May 1969
* ]: 1 February 19401 November 1943 * 389th Fighter Squadron: 15 June 196931 March 1970
* ]: 14 May 196811 May 1969 * 415th Tactical Fighter Squadron: 5 October 19891 November 1991
* ]: attached 3 February4 July 1968, assigned 5 July 196815 May 1969 * 416th Tactical Fighter Squadron: 15 April 196727 May 1969; 5 October 19891 November 1991
* ]: 15 June 196931 March 1970 * 417th Tactical Fighter Training Squadron (later 417th Fighter Squadron): 5 October 19891 November 1991
* ]: 5 October 19891 November 1991 * 480th Tactical Fighter Squadron: 15 April 196931 March 1970
* ]: 15 April 1967 27 May 1969; 5 October 1989-1 November 1991 * 561st Tactical Fighter Squadron: 30 March 1981 – 5 October 1989
* ] (later, 417th Fighter): 5 October 1989 – 1 November 1991 * 562d Tactical Fighter Training Squadron: 30 March 1981 – 5 October 1989
* ]: 15 April 196931 March 1970 * ] 30 March 19815 October 1989<ref name=37TWfacts/>
* ]: 30 March 1981 – 5 October 1989
* ]: 30 March 1981 – 5 October 1989
* ] 30 March 1981 – 5 October 1989.


'''Detachment''' '''Detachment'''
* Det 1., 612th Tactical Fighter Squadron: attached 8 June 1967 – 13 April 1969. * Detachment 1, ]: attached 8 June 1967 – 13 April 1969.<ref name=37TWfacts/>


===Bases Assigned=== ===Stations===
* Clovis Air Force Base, New Mexico, 8 April −25 June 1953
* ], ] (1940–1943)
* Phu Cat Air Base, South Vietnam, 1 March 1967 – 31 March 1970
* ], ] (1943)
* ], ] (1953) (Inactive) * George Air Force Base, California, 30 March 1981
* Tonopah Test Range Airport, Nevada, 5 October 1989 – 8 July 1992
* ], ] (1967–1970)
* Lackland Air Force Base (later Joint Base San Antonio–Lackland), Texas, 1 July 1993 – present<ref name=37TWfacts/>
* ], California (1981–1989)
* ], ] (1989–1992)
* ], Texas (1993–present)


===Aircraft Operated=== ===Aircraft===
* North American F-100 Super Sabre (1967–1969)
* ] (1940–1943)
* McDonnell F-4 Phantom II (1969–1970, 1981–1989)
* ] (1967–1969)
* F-117 Nighthawk (1989–1992)
* ] (1969–1970, 1981–1989)
* ] (1989–1992) * Northrop T-38 Talon (1989–1992)<ref name=37TWfacts/>

* ] (1989–1992)
==See also==

* ]


==References== ==References==
===Notes===
{{Portal box|United States Air Force|Military of the United States|World War II}}
; Explanatory notes
{{AFHRA}}
{{Reflist}} {{Notelist}}

{{Refbegin}}
; Citations
* Maurer, Maurer (1983). Air Force Combat Units Of World War II. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-89201-092-4.
{{Reflist|30em}}
* Ravenstein, Charles A. (1984). Air Force Combat Wings Lineage and Honors Histories 1947–1977. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-12-9.

* Rogers, Brian (2005). United States Air Force Unit Designations Since 1978. Hinkley, England: Midland Publications. ISBN 1-85780-197-0.
===Bibliography===
{{Refend}}
{{Air Force Historical Research Agency}}
* {{cite book|last=Hagedorn|first=Dan|title=Alae Supra Canalem: Wings Over the Canal|year=1995|publisher=Turner Publishing|location=Nashville, TN|isbn=1-56311-153-5}}
* {{cite book|last=Martin|first=Patrick|title=Tail Code: The Complete History of USAF Tactical Aircraft Tail Code Markings|year=1994|publisher=Schiffer Military Aviation History|location=Atglen, PA|isbn=0-88740-513-4}}
* {{cite book|editor=Maurer, Maurer|title=Air Force Combat Units of World War II|orig-year= 1961|url= http://media.defense.gov/2010/Sep/21/2001330256/-1/-1/0/AFD-100921-044.pdf|access-date= 17 December 2016|edition=reprint|year=1983|publisher= Office of Air Force History|location=Washington, DC|isbn=0-912799-02-1|lccn=61060979}}
* {{cite book|editor=Maurer, Maurer|title=Combat Squadrons of the Air Force, World War II|orig-year=1969|url= http://media.defense.gov/2010/Dec/02/2001329899/-1/-1/0/AFD-101202-002.pdf |edition= reprint|access-date= 17 December 2016|year=1982|publisher=Office of Air Force History|location=Washington, DC|isbn=0-405-12194-6|oclc=72556|lccn=70605402}}
* {{cite book|last=Pace|first=Steve|title=F-117 Stealth Fighter|series=Aero Series|edition=1st|year= 1992|publisher=Aero Publishers
|location=Fallbrook, CA|isbn=978-0830627950}}
* {{cite book|last=Ravenstein|first=Charles A.|title=Air Force Combat Wings, Lineage & Honors Histories 1947–1977|url=https://archive.org/details/airforcecombatwi0000rave|access-date=17 December 2016|year=1984|publisher=Office of Air Force History|location=Washington, DC|isbn=0-912799-12-9|url-access=registration}}
* {{cite book|last=Rogers|first=Brian.|title=United States Air Force Unit Designations Since 1978|date=2005|publisher=Midland Publications|location=Hinkley, UK|isbn=1-85780-197-0}}
* {{cite web|url= http://www.37trw.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-061212-030.pdf |title=A Short History of the 37th Training Wing|date=2 January 2008|publisher=37th Training Wing Office of History|location=Lackland Air Force Base, TX|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20131022154452/http://www.37trw.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-061212-030.pdf |archive-date=22 October 2013|access-date=26 January 2017}}


==External links== ==External links==
* *


{{US Air Force navbox}} {{US Air Force navbox}}
{{USAF Air Education and Training Command}} {{USAF Air Education and Training Command}}
{{USAAF 6th Air Force World War II}} {{USAAF 6th Air Force World War II}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2011}}


] ]
]
]
] ]

Latest revision as of 15:20, 8 January 2025

This article's lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points. Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article. (January 2025)
37th Training Wing
USAF basic trainees march in formation at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas
Active1953; 1967–1970; 1981–1992; 1993–present
Country United States
Branch United States Air Force
TypeWing
RoleTraining
Part ofAir Education and Training Command
Garrison/HQJoint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas
Engagements
World War II (American Theater)

Vietnam War

Operation Just Cause (1989)

1991 Gulf War (Defense of Saudi Arabia; Liberation of Kuwait)
Decorations
Distinguished Unit Citation

Air Force Outstanding Unit Award with Combat "V" Device (2x)

Air Force Outstanding Unit Award (6x)

Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm
Commanders
Current
commander
Colonel Willie L. Cooper
Deputy CommanderColonel Kelly D. McElveny
Command ChiefChief Master Sergeant Carlos F. Damian
Notable
commanders
Joseph Ashy
Gabriel P. Disosway
Insignia
37th Training Wing emblem
37th Tactical Fighter Wing emblem
Military unit

The 37th Training Wing is a unit of the United States Air Force assigned to the 2nd Air Force and the Air Education and Training Command. As the host unit to Lackland Air Force Base, Joint Base San Antonio, Texas, the wing is the predominant unit on the installation and is the largest training wing in the USAF. Known as the "Gateway to the Air Force", the 37th Training Wing replaced the Lackland Training Center as the single basic military training for the USAF.

At the same time, the 37th TRW also conducts technical training for security forces, logistics, and professional military education and hosts the English component (DLIELC) of the Defense Language Institute. Its four primary training functions graduate more than 85,000 students annually. Colonel Willie L. Cooper is the Commander of the 37th Training Wing and Carlos F. Damian is the Command Chief Master Sergeant.

Units

The 37th Training Wing consists of five training groups and graduates more than 80,000 students annually. These five missions include basic military training of all enlisted recruits entering the Air Force, Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard; technical training encompassing hundreds of courses for a wide array of career fields and functions; Nursing and Health Services Admin officer courses and enlisted medical courses; English language training for international military personnel attending the Defense Language Institute; and specialized maintenance and security training as well as the International Squadron Officer School and International Non-Commissioned Officer Academy conducted in Spanish by active-duty Airmen for Latin American students attending the Inter-American Air Forces Academy.

  • 37th Training Wing
    • 37th Training Wing Staff Agencies
    • 37th Training Group USAF Technical School:
      • 37th Training Support Squadron
      • 341st Training Squadron Provides trained military working dogs (MWDs) used in patrol, drug and explosive detection, and specialized mission functions for the Department of Defense (DoD) and other government agencies. Conduct operational training of MWD handlers and supervisors. Sustain DoD MWD program through logistical support, veterinary care, and research and development for security efforts worldwide.
      • 342d Training Squadron Home of all Air Force Battlefield Airman (BA) entry-level training for Pararescue (PJ), Combat Control (CCT), Special Operations Weather (SOWT), and Tactical Air Control Party (TACP).
      • 343d Training Squadron Hosts the Air Force's Security Forces Training. Its training areas are housed on Lackland AFB and Camp Bullis, both located in the San Antonio area.
      • 344th Training Squadron Provides technical training for more than 10,000 active duty, Reserve, Guard, international and civilian students annually in Career Enlisted Aviator, Vehicle Maintenance, Logistics Readiness Officer, Logistics Plans, Materiel Management, Contracting, Recruiting, Safety, Cryptological, and TEMPEST courses.
      • 345th Training Squadron Trains, develops and educates technical training students into skilled graduates in the Services, Air Transportation, Hazardous Material Transportation School (HAZMAT) and Traffic Management Office career fields.
    • 737th Training Group USAF Enlisted Basic Training
      • 737th Training Support Squadron
      • 319th Training Squadron
      • 320th Training Squadron
      • 321st Training Squadron
      • 322d Training Squadron
      • 323d Training Squadron
      • 324th Training Squadron
      • 326th Training Squadron
      • 331st Training Squadron
    • Defense Language Institute English Language Center (DLIELC). DLIELC provides world-wide English language training and resident cultural immersion to enable US military and International partners to communicate in support of Department of Defense Security Cooperation objectives.
      • 332nd Training Squadron (Academics)
      • 637th International Support Squadron (Operations)
      • 637th Training Support Squadron
    • Inter-American Air Forces Academy (IAAFA). IAAFA is an AETC organization focused on Education, Training, and Security Cooperation. It is the only USAF institution that delivers technical and professional training in Spanish to 32 Partner Nations across the Western Hemisphere. The academy offers a wide range of courses and graduates over 900 students per year.

History

Korean War

The 37th was established on 3 March 1953 as the United States Air Force 37th Fighter-Bomber Wing as part of the buildup on the Air Force due to the Korean War. It was assigned to Ninth Air Force of Tactical Air Command and was activated on 8 April 1953 at Clovis Air Force Base, New Mexico.

Although activated, the wing was neither manned nor equipped and it was inactivated on 25 June as a result of the Armistice in Korea and the subsequent need for deployment to the war zone being unnecessary.

Vietnam War

612th TFS F-100D 53-3513 taxiing on the parking apron
355th TFS North American F-100D-80-NH Super Sabre Serial 56–3374 on a mission into North Vietnam from Phu Cat AB
389th TFS McDonnell F-4D-31-MC Phantom 66–7715 at Phu Cat AB, South Vietnam 1969
480th TFS McDonnell F-4D-31-MC Phantom 66–7733 at Phu Cat AB, South Vietnam 1969

With the escalation of the Vietnam War in 1965–1966, the Air Force reactivated the unit and redesignated it as the 37th Tactical Fighter Wing and activated it on 26 October 1966. The wing was activated at the newly built Phù Cát Air Base, South Vietnam and it was assigned to Pacific Air Forces. It was organized on 1 March 1967 and assigned to Seventh Air Force. Personnel for the wing headquarters and tactical components were in transit from the United States and elsewhere, and tactical operations did not commence until mid-April.

The 37th Wing was assigned several North American F-100 Super Sabre squadrons, its mission was to provide tactical air power in support of South Vietnamese and United States Army and Marine units engaged in combat against communist forces attempting to overthrow the government of South Vietnam. Initial squadrons assigned were:

On 15 April, the 37th began combat operations with strikes by 416 Squadron (F-100D aircraft) en route from Bien Hoa to their new home. On 8 June, Detachment 1 of the 612th Squadron began operations, also after flying a mission en route from their former home at Phan Rang. From June 1967 to May 1969, the 37th also used F-100F two-seat trainers for visual and weather reconnaissance and forward air control operations. The latter mission came to be known as "Fast FAC." Up until this time, the Air Force used slow propeller-driven O-1, O-2 and OV-10 aircraft for this mission. By 28 February 1968, wing squadrons completed 18,000 combat hours and 13,000 combat sorties without a major aircraft accident.

In the spring of 1968, the two squadrons of the wing were augmented by two additional squadrons deployed from the United States. With this augmentation, the wing was then composed of four F-100 combat squadrons with approximately 90 aircraft being assigned.

As 355th Squadron personnel completed their TDY that same month the personnel and aircraft returned to Myrtle Beach AFB. They were replaced by Air National Guardsmen from New Jersey and Washington DC, who were manning Myrtle Beach at the time. These newly deployed personnel were sent to Tuy Hoa Air Base along with their F-100 D/F aircraft.

In 1969, the Air Force began withdrawing the F-100 from combat duty in South Vietnam, replacing it with the McDonnell F-4D Phantom II. Two Phantom squadrons were transferred to the 37th from the 366th Tactical Fighter Wing, Da Nang Air Base:

The wing continued its combat operations in South Vietnam until 30 March 1970 when it was inactivated as part of the drawdown of American forces in South Vietnam. The wing was replaced by the 12th Tactical Fighter Wing which moved without assets from Cam Ranh Bay Air Base.

During the wing's combat tour in South Vietnam, it was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation, eight Vietnam campaign streamers, two Air Force Outstanding Unit Awards with Combat"V" Device, and the Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm.

Tactical Air Command

George Air Force Base

562d Tactical Fighter Training Squadron McDonnell Douglas F-4G Phantom 69-7234
561st Tactical Fighter Squadron – F-4G Phantom II formation, 1982

The 37th was reactivated on 30 March 1981 by Tactical Air Command at George Air Force Base in Victorville, California. Its mission was to provide pilot transition training to the F-4G Phantom II "Wild Weasel" radar suppression aircraft. The mission was transferred to the 37th from the 35th Tactical Fighter Wing, which was TAC's primary F-4E Phantom II training organization in a mission realignment. Both wings were under the TAC's 831st Air Division. Assigned squadrons of the 37th (Tail Code: "WW") at George were:

As the only "Wild Weasel" training wing in the world, it provided instructor pilots and qualified aircrews for the other two "Wild Weasel" wings in the Philippines and West Germany. As part of the training mission, the wing participated in numerous tactical, maritime, and electronic warfare exercises locally and worldwide in hunter/killer tactics, suppression of enemy air defenses, force escort operations and dissimilar air combat training with Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve squadrons, and various allies. Wing aircrews and ground personnel won the United States Air Force Worldwide Fighter gunnery meet in 1985 and 1987.

In 1988, George was scheduled in the first round of base closures passed by Congress under the Base Realignment and Closure program. On 5 October 1989, the 37th turned over its F-4G aircraft to the host 35th Tactical Fighter Wing at George.

Tonopah Test Range Airport

F-117A Nighthawk 84–0827 on the ramp at Tonopah TTR Airport, shortly after the transfer of the 4450th TG to the 37th TFW.
Northrop T-38A-75-NO Talon 68–8016 at Tonopah Test Range Airport

On 10 November 1988, the Air Force officially announced the existence of the Lockheed F-117A Nighthawk to the public. With this announcement, the formerly clandestine Tactical Air Command 4450th Tactical Group, which had transitioned the F-117 from a development to operational weapons system was put on the road to inactivation when the Air Force decided to increase the 4450th TG to a Wing level organization.

As part of the phasedown of operations at George, the 37th Tactical Fighter Wing moved without equipment or personnel to Tonopah Test Range Airport, Nevada on 5 October 1989, and assumed the aircraft, personnel, equipment and mission of the provisional 4450th Tactical Group . As part of the transition from the provisional group to 37th TFW, the F-117A squadrons were inactivated and re-designated as follows:

The uncoded aircraft of the 4450th Group were given the USAF Tail Code of "TR", and subdued squadron emblems were affixed to the 37th TFW's aircraft. The choice of the 415th, 416th and 417th Tactical Fighter Squadrons was significant, as these were all World War II Northrop P-61 Black Widow night fighter squadrons. The mission of the F-117 was night stealth tactical fighter operations; the squadron designations were chosen to honor these pioneering World War II squadrons, which were bestowed their lineages and histories. The wing trained to integrate stealth technology with more conventional methods of combat operations.

The 415th and 416th squadrons each flew 18 production F-117As, whereas the 417th flew the 6 pre-production F-117As (79-10780 – 79–10785). The 417th also operated Northrop T-38A Talon and AT-38B Talon trainers for chase and training.

Operation Just Cause

On 19 December 1989, just 13 months after the Pentagon had disclosed the existence of the F-117A, it was used in combat for the first time. This was in Operation Just Cause, the invasion of Panama intended to dislodge and arrest General Manuel Noreiga.

In early 1988, Panama's military dictator, Gen. Manuel Noriega, had been indicted by two Florida grand juries on charges of laundering drug money. He laughed off the charges and dismissed Panama's president in February. During the May 1989 presidential election campaign, Noriega's "Dignity Battalion" goon squad beat up opposition candidate Guillermo Endara. Endara won the election, but on 1 October, Noriega prevented him from taking office. Two days later, a coup attempt was made but collapsed when loyalist Panamanian Defense Forces (PDF) rescued Noriega. The coup leaders were executed the following day. On 15 December, Noriega declared a state of war between the United States and Panama. The following evening, PDF soldiers killed a marine lieutenant and arrested a navy lieutenant. The Lieutenant and his wife had witnessed the shooting. The officer was beaten and his wife was threatened with sexual abuse.

In response to these events, President George H. W. Bush issued orders to invade Panama. One of the targets was the Battalion 2000 barracks at Rio Hato Airfield. United States Army Rangers were to be dropped at the adjoining airfield. The PDF troops would have to be neutralized before the airdrop. Army Lt. Gen. Carl W. Stiner, the XVIII Airborne Corps commander, requested F-117As be used. The F-117s would not bomb the two barracks, but rather the 2,000-pound LBGs with time-delay fuses would be directed to aim points near the buildings. They would act as "a giant stun grenade," to confuse the PDF troops without killing them. The use of F-117As was based on their night-bombing accuracy, rather than stealth, as the PDF lacked heavy air defenses.

On the night of 19 December 1989, six F-117As from the 415th TFS took off from TTR Airport. The flight would require five in-flight refuelings. Two of the planes were targeted on Rio Hato Airfield, two more were to provide support for an attempt to capture Noriega, and the final pair were in-flight spares should any of the others suffer malfunctions. As the two F-117As approached the release point, a moment of confusion occurred that would mar their debut. The original plan was for the lead plane to drop its bomb in a field near the barracks on the left, while his wingman would drop his bomb in a field near a barracks on the right. Just before the drop, the wind direction changed. One bomb, intended to land about 100 yards from the 7th Company barracks, actually landed 260 yards away. This was only 18 yards from the 6th Company barracks, which was too close. The other bomb impacted near a basketball court, about 40 yards farther from the barracks than intended.

Despite these problems, the explosions caused the desired confusion. Initial reports spoke of PDF soldiers running around in their underwear, while others threw down their weapons. Several Rangers were killed in the subsequent firefight, but the airfield was taken and U.S. aircraft were landing within two hours.

However, it was revealed three months later that one of the bombs had missed its target by a considerable amount. It seems that there had been some mis-communication in the final stages of the mission planning, and the pilot had been given the wrong coordinates for the target. However, the media jumped on this event and concluded that the F-117A had been a failure on its first mission.

On 21 April 1990, stung perhaps by the press criticism, the Pentagon released more information on the F-117A. More photos of better quality were released, and at Nellis Air Force Base there was a public display of two F-117As.

1991 Gulf War
F-117A aircraft from the 37th Tactical Fighter Wing at Langley AFB, Virginia, prior to being deployed to Saudi Arabia for Operation Desert Shield

Less than a year after the wing saw combat in Panama, in response to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait on 2 August 1990, the 415th Squadron deployed to King Khalid International Airport, Saudi Arabia on 19 August to provide air defense over the Saudi capital of Riyadh.

In November 1990, President Bush ordered United States Central Command to prepare for offensive operations against Iraq after negotiations with President Saddam Hussein of Iraq were at an impasse. The 416th Squadron deployed from Tonopah on 1 December 1990 and in January 1991, a portion of the 417th Squadron also deployed to Saudi Arabia. In spite of the massive Coalition buildup, Saddam Hussein of Iraq refused to withdraw his troops from Kuwait.

In the early morning of 17 January 1991, the United States Central Command Air Forces along with air forces from Coalition nations began an air offensive to remove Iraqi troops from Kuwait. F-117A Nighthawk stealth bombers, flying from Saudi Arabia, were the first aircraft to engage in offensive operations. The stealth technology of the plane allowed it to fly directly to the Iraqi capital of Baghdad without detection. Mission planners had assigned critical strategic Iraqi command and control installations to the F-117s, counting on the aircraft's ability to hit precisely at well-defended targets without being seen or detected by Iraqi air defenses. Other vital targets included key communications centers, research and development facilities for nuclear and chemical weapons, plus hardened aircraft shelters on Iraqi airfields.

On the first night of combat operations, an F-117A dropped a 2000-pound laser-guided GBU-27 Paveway III bomb right through the roof of the general communications building in downtown Baghdad. In another attack on the communications building next to the Tigris River, another GBU-27 Paveway III was dropped through an air shaft in the center of the roof atop the building and blew out all four walls.

37th Tactical Fighter Wing (Provisional) F-117A Nighthawk leading a formation of Royal Saudi Air Force aircraft over the desert during Operation Desert Storm.

During the first three weeks of the air offensive, F-117As obliterated many hardened targets with unprecedented precision. The 37th TFW flew 1271 combat sorties and maintained an 85.5 percent mission-capable rate. The 43 F-117As of the 37th TFW dropped more than 2000 tons of precision ordnance and attacked some 40 percent of the high-value targets that were struck by the Coalition forces. Not one F-117A was hit, shot down, or lost to mechanical failure.

There is no evidence that the F-117A was ever detected or tracked by Iraqi radar installations, either ground or airborne. After combat operations ceased in February 1991, some wing personnel and aircraft remained on indefinite alert in Saudi Arabia as a component member of the post-Desert Storm task force in Southwest Asia, although most returned to Tonopah by the end of March.

F-117 transfer to Holloman AFB

After Desert Storm, the 37th transitioned to the Air Force Objective Wing organization, and the 37th Tactical Fighter Wing was redesignated the 37th Fighter Wing on 1 October 1991.

As a result of the end of the Cold War, reduced defense budgets were the order of the day. In reviewing its tactical bases and the costs of maintaining them, It was determined that the operations from Tonopah required considerable logistics support via commercial air and trucking. All military personnel were permanently assigned to Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada, and were transported once each week by air. Also the security requirements of the F-117A had been lessened with its introduction into the Air Force inventory as an operational weapons system. It was determined that a considerable amount of money would be saved by moving the F-117 operations out of the remote site at Tonopah. Tactical Air Command also believed, while Tonopah Airport was adequate for testing and development of aircraft, it was unsuitable as a fully operational tactical base.

F-117A Nighthawk 85-0830 being towed at Tonopah after its return from Operation Desert Storm, 1991. Note the spotters, the armed security police with M-16s, and tow bar attached to the front landing gear.

Also, the Air Force wanted to retire the F-15A/B Eagles operated by the 49th Fighter Wing at Holloman Air Force Base, New Mexico, most of which were manufactured in the mid-1970s and were costing more and more to operate. As a result, plans were put in place to construct suitable facilities for the F-117A at Holloman and to retire the F-15A/B models of the 49th.

There was also debate about which unit designation would be adopted at Holloman. The 37th was a senior organization to the 49th, and initially it was announced that the 49th would be inactivated and the 37th would become the new host unit at Holloman. This was changed when General Merrill McPeak, USAF Chief of Staff, determined that the 49th had a more notable history than the 37th, would remain active and the 37th would be inactivated.

On 8 July 1992, shortly after the inactivation of Tactical Air Command and the activation of Air Combat Command, the assets of the 37th Fighter Wing were moved to Holloman and was it was inactivated; the aircraft, personnel, equipment and mission being transferred to the 49th Fighter Wing.

Air Education and Training Command

Basic Trainee at Lackland AFB being corrected by a TI with regards to a training issue.
Motivation by the Military Training Instructor assists these seventh week flights to exceed their run times for the final physical training assessment.
Combat skills training for Airmen

However, the inactivation was of short duration. On 1 July 1993, HQ USAF redesignated Air Training Command as Air Education and Training Command (AETC). At the same time, HQ AETC replaced all of its training centers with numbered wings. As a result, the 37th was redesignated the 37th Training Wing and activated at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. It replaced the Lackland Training Center and most of its units that had performed the training mission since 1949.

Assigned to the 37th Training Wing were five group-level establishments.

  • 37th Technical Training Group
  • 37th Military Training Group
  • Defense Language Institute English Language Center
  • 37th Support Group
  • 37th Logistics Group

Additional changes came on 1 April 1994 when HQ USAF redesignated the technical training group as the 37th Training Group and the military training group as the 737th Training Group.

The 37th also inherited a fourth training mission, one which the Lackland Training Center had gained on 2 June 1993, when the Air Force decided to make Lackland the permanent home of the Inter-American Air Forces Academy (IAAFA). The academy had brought its technical training mission to Lackland in August 1992 from the hurricane-wrecked Homestead AFB in Florida. The Inter-American Air Forces Academy had trained officer and enlisted members of various air forces in Latin America since its organization in the Panama Canal Zone on 31 October 1948. On 1 July 1993, IAAFA was reassigned to the 37th Training Wing.

While the wing gained IAAFA's technical training missions, it lost the officer training mission which AETC reassigned to Air University on 1 July 1993 and shortly thereafter moved to Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama. The wing also gained extensive technical training courses from two closing bases — Chanute Air Force Base in Illinois and Lowry Air Force Base in Colorado. The courses consisted of much of the Air Force's training for base support and operations. As the new courses began to come on line in 1993, the wing's technical trainee accessions grew significantly. In 1994, technical training entries almost reached 20,000, while basic military training remained at its pre-1986 level of about 35,000. In 1995, the wing reached near parity between basic military and technical training missions in terms of members trained.

In the twenty-first century, the 937th Training Group, the Air Force component of the Medical Education and Training Campus located at Fort Sam Houston, was replaced by the 59th Training Group, part of the 59th Medical Wing.

Lineage

  • Established as the 37th Fighter-Bomber Wing on 3 March 1953
Activated on 8 April 1953
Inactivated on 25 June 1953
  • Redesignated 37th Tactical Fighter Wing and activated on 26 October 1966 (not organized)
Organized on 1 March 1967
Inactivated on 31 March 1970
  • Activated on 30 March 1981
Redesignated 37th Fighter Wing on 1 October 1991
Inactivated on 8 July 1992
  • Redesignated 37th Training Wing and activated on 1 July 1993

Assignments

  • Ninth Air Force, 8 April – 25 June 1953
  • Pacific Air Forces, 26 October 1966 (not organized)
  • Seventh Air Force, 1 March 1967 – 31 March 1970
  • 831st Air Division, 30 March 1981
  • Twelfth Air Force, 5 October 1989 – 8 July 1992
  • Second Air Force, 1 July 1993–present

Components

Groups

  • 37th Fighter-Bomber Group (later 37th Operations Group): 8 April – 25 June 1953; 1 November 1991 – 8 July 1992
  • 37th Training Group
  • 737th Training Group
  • 937th Training Group (now inactivated)

Squadrons

  • 174th Tactical Fighter Squadron: 14 May 1968 – 11 May 1969
  • 355th Fighter Squadron: attached 3 February – 4 July 1968, assigned 5 July 1968 – 15 May 1969
  • 389th Fighter Squadron: 15 June 1969 – 31 March 1970
  • 415th Tactical Fighter Squadron: 5 October 1989 – 1 November 1991
  • 416th Tactical Fighter Squadron: 15 April 1967 – 27 May 1969; 5 October 1989 – 1 November 1991
  • 417th Tactical Fighter Training Squadron (later 417th Fighter Squadron): 5 October 1989 – 1 November 1991
  • 480th Tactical Fighter Squadron: 15 April 1969 – 31 March 1970
  • 561st Tactical Fighter Squadron: 30 March 1981 – 5 October 1989
  • 562d Tactical Fighter Training Squadron: 30 March 1981 – 5 October 1989
  • 563d Tactical Fighter Squadron 30 March 1981 – 5 October 1989

Detachment

Stations

  • Clovis Air Force Base, New Mexico, 8 April −25 June 1953
  • Phu Cat Air Base, South Vietnam, 1 March 1967 – 31 March 1970
  • George Air Force Base, California, 30 March 1981
  • Tonopah Test Range Airport, Nevada, 5 October 1989 – 8 July 1992
  • Lackland Air Force Base (later Joint Base San Antonio–Lackland), Texas, 1 July 1993 – present

Aircraft

  • North American F-100 Super Sabre (1967–1969)
  • McDonnell F-4 Phantom II (1969–1970, 1981–1989)
  • F-117 Nighthawk (1989–1992)
  • Northrop T-38 Talon (1989–1992)

See also

References

Notes

Explanatory notes
  1. The wing is entitled by temporary bestowal to the honors earned by the 37th Operations Group.
  2. Approved 4 August 1953, reinstated 10 March 1992. Description: Azure, a saltire or.
  3. Approved 23 March 1990.
  4. Transferred from the 3rd Tactical Fighter Wing at Bien Hoa Air Base.
  5. Transferred from the 35th Tactical Fighter Wing at Phan Rang Air Base.
  6. Reassigned from the 354th Tactical Fighter Wing at Myrtle Beach Air Force Base South Carolina.
Citations
  1. ^ Robertson, Patsy (6 February 2015). "Factsheet 37 Training Wing (AETC)". Air Force Historical Research Agency. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 26 January 2017.
  2. Hagedorn,
  3. ^ 37th Training Wing factsheet
  4. "Colonel Willie L. Cooper". Retrieved 7 July 2024.
  5. "Chief Master Sgt. Carlos F. Damian". Retrieved 7 July 2024.
  6. ^ 37th Training Group units
  7. "Defense Language Institute English Language Center (DLIELC)". 37th Training Wing. Retrieved 21 July 2024.
  8. "37th Training Wing > Units > Inter-American Air Forces Academy". www.37trw.af.mil. Retrieved 21 July 2024.
  9. ^ Short History of the 37th Training Wing,
  10. ^ Ravenstein, Charles A. (1984). Air Force Combat Wings, Lineage & Honors Histories 1947-1977 (PDF). Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-12-9.Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  11. ^ Martin,
  12. Rogers,
  13. ^ Pace,

Bibliography

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

External links

United States Air Force
Leadership
Structure
Commands
Direct Reporting Units
Major commands
Numbered Air Forces
Personnel and
training
Uniforms and
equipment
History and
traditions
Air Education and Training Command (AETC)
Air Forces
Bases
Wings
Groups
USAAF Sixth Air Force in World War II
Previously: Panama Canal Air Force (1940-1941); Caribbean Air Force (1941-1942)
Airfields
Caribbean
Canal Zone
Panama
Central and South
America
Units
Commands
Wings
Groups
Fighter
Bomber
Reconnaissance
Squadrons
  • United States Army Air Forces
Categories: