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1000th Airborne Command and Control Squadron: Andrews AFB: Nightwatch: EC-135J: NEACP (Knee Cap)- National Emergency Airborne Command Post - Inactive Replaced by 1st ACCS 6486th Airborne Command and Control Squadron: Hickam AFB: Blue Eagle: EC-135P: PACOM Airborne Command Post - Inactive Replaced by 9th ACCS 7120th Airborne Command and Control ...
961st Airborne Air Control Squadron: Pacific Air Forces: Fifth Air Force: 18 WG: 15 January 1941 Kadena AB, Japan: E-3 [108] ZZ: 962nd Airborne Air Control Squadron: Pacific Air Forces: Eleventh Air Force: 3 WG: 1 November 1943 JB Elmendorf–Richardson, Alaska: E-3 [109] AK: 963rd Airborne Air Control Squadron: Blue Knights [110] Air Combat ...
A United States Air Force airborne air control squadron is an airborne unit which provides combat air control services in the form of radar, surveillance identification, weapons control, Battle Management and theater communications data link to the forces or area it is assigned to. This list contains squadrons inactive, active, and historical.
0–9. 1st Airborne Command Control Squadron; 2d Airborne Command and Control Squadron; 7th Expeditionary Airborne Command and Control Squadron; 8th Airborne Command and Control Squadron
This Article is a list of United States Air Force aircraft control and warning squadrons active, inactive, and historical. The purpose of an aircraft control and warning squadron is to provide an airborne radar picket to detect vessels, planes, and vehicles before they enter an area of operations, as well as providing command and control in an engagement by directing aircraft strikes.
A United States Air Force air control squadron is a group assigned to provide combat air control services in the form of radar, surveillance identification, weapons control, Battle Management and theater communications data link to the forces or area it is assigned to. This list contains squadrons inactive, active, and historical.
The United States Air Force and its predecessors include a number of specialized Air Force Squadrons. These units vary widely in size and may include several hundred enlisted airmen commanded by an officer in the rank of captain to lieutenant colonel. A squadron may include two or three subordinate flights.
List of United States Air Force airborne command and control squadrons; List of United States Air Force aircraft control and warning squadrons;