Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 32nd Air Refueling Squadron [e] is part of the 305th Air Mobility Wing at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, New Jersey.It operates the Boeing KC-46A Pegasus aircraft conducting air refueling missions.
ARS-32 1 Sep 1942 19 Dec 1945 Kingfisher: AM-25 Puget Sound Navy Yard: 27 May 1918 Fate unknown AT-135 1 Jun 1942 6 Feb 1946 Rail: AM-26 5 Jun 1918 Fate unknown AT-139 1 Jun 1942 29 Apr 1946 Pelican: AM-27 Gas Engine and Power Company: 10 Oct 1918 Sold for scrap, November 1946 AVP-6 22 Jan 1936 30 Nov 1945 Falcon: AM-28 12 Nov 1918 Fate unknown ...
The 32d Intelligence Squadron is a specialized organization that consists of teams of intelligence professionals who support global power and secure and maintain information superiority by conducting operations that support Air Force, joint, combined, and special operations in peacetime and in war.
Pittsburgh IAP ARS is the home station of the Air Force Reserve Command's (AFRC) 911th Airlift Wing (911 AW). The 911 AW is part of the 4th Air Force, and its 758th Airlift Squadron flies eight C-17A Globemaster III strategic airlift aircraft. It includes approximately 1,220 Air Force Reserve members.
In addition, the Arizona Rangers are exempt from private security regulations under ARS 32-2606 [4] authorizing the Rangers to provide armed public safety services for a variety of nonprofit organizations. In 1901, the Arizona Rangers were created to rid the Arizona Territory of outlaws and corruption. At the time, the Territory was very dangerous.
The 150th Special Operations Squadron (150 SOS), equipped with the C-32B aircraft, is a unit of the 108th Wing of the New Jersey Air National Guard.It provides global airlift to special response teams within the Department of Defense and other agencies.
Beneath this level of command is the Air Control Centre (ACC), Recognized Air Picture (RAP) Production Centre (RPC) and Sensor Fusion Post (SFP) combined in one entity called ARS. The ARS is the equivalent to the Control and Reporting Centers (CRCs) operated in the 1990s. The ACCS project comprised both static and deployable elements.
The tests revealed that the rockets did not perform as expected against aerial targets. The rocket ARS-57 was accepted into service in April 1955, with a military designation S-5. [3] Apart from the Soviet Union and then Russia, S-5 rockets were produced among others in Poland. [4] As of 2013, the only producers remained Belarus and Bulgaria. [4]