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Lucius D. Clay Kaserne (German: Flugplatz Wiesbaden-Erbenheim) (IATA: WIE, ICAO: ETOU), commonly known as Clay Kaserne, formerly known as Wiesbaden Air Base and later as Wiesbaden Army Airfield, is an installation of the United States Army in Hesse, Germany. The kaserne is located within Wiesbaden-Erbenheim.
Wiesbaden-Dotzheim: closed c. 1993 Camp Pitman Weiden i.d.OPf. closed 1989 Camp Reed Rötz: closed Carl Schurz Kaserne Bremerhaven: closed 1993 named for Carl Schurz: Chiemsee Hotel Chiemsee: closed 2004 Christensen Barracks Bindlach: closed 1992 Coffey Barracks Ludwigsburg: closed 1991 Coleman Kaserne: Gelnhausen: closed 2007 Conn Barracks ...
The military training area was established in 1907 by clearing at least 58 smaller villages, [3] and used to train troops for the III Royal Bavarian Corps. [1] [4] Undergoing a major expansion from 96 to 230 square kilometres (37 to 89 square miles) in 1938 and forcibly evicting more than 3,500 people from their villages, [3] the base was used by the Wehrmacht to practice blitzkrieg tactics.
The United States Army runs a garrison in Wiesbaden. The facilities for US soldiers and families are spread across various locations including: Aukamn, Hainerberg, Mainz-Kastel and the Wiesbaden Army-Airfield, where the names of the streets are named after servicemen and women who sacrificed their lives during the Berlin Airlift.
As the entire SIGINT unit relocated to the Lucius D.Clay Barracks at Wiesbaden in 2016 as part of the new Information Processing Center (IPC) which is part of the US Consolidated Intelligence Center (CIC), which was brought into operation in the 2010s, [3] [4] the status of the Dagger complex has been changed into a military datacenter. All ...
The U.S. Army, Europe (USAREUR) headquarters, located in Heidelberg since 1952 [3] as part of the garrison, was moved to Wiesbaden to a newly built installation at Lucius D. Clay Kaserne in 2012. All military installations in Heidelberg were handed over to the German state by 2015 for conversion to civilian use. [4]
Headquartered in Wiesbaden, Germany, the 24th MI BN supports allies across the European Theater with intelligence requirements. Soldiers in the brigade ideally hold qualifications in military intelligence and counter-intelligence, depending on their specific roles. Some also hold military (NWC, NDU, AFSC etc.) and/or civilian academic degrees.
Detachment A, which was co-located with the 497th Reconnaissance Technical Group at Schierstein Barracks in Wiesbaden, was unique in that it did not exploit tactical imagery but instead exploited classified national-level imagery and imagery of Soviet and East German forces collected over the Berlin air corridors.