115th Fighter Wing

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115th Fighter Wing
Air Force Outstanding Unit Award
Commanders
Current
commander
Colonel Bart Van Roo
Insignia
115th Fighter Wing emblem
Tail CodeWI
Red stripe with "Wisconsin" in white letters

The 115th Fighter Wing is a unit of the Wisconsin Air National Guard, which is stationed at Truax Field Air National Guard Base, Madison, Wisconsin. If activated to federal service, the Wing is gained by the United States Air Force Air Combat Command.

As an Air National Guard unit, it is normally under the command of the Governor, but has a federal role as well. Currently the wing has personnel and/or aircraft assigned to Operation Noble Eagle, and has served on Operation Jump Start and the Air Expeditionary Force in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Units

The 115th Fighter Wing consists of the following units:

  • 176th Fighter Squadron
  • 115th Operations Group
  • 115th Mission Support Group
  • 115th Maintenance Group
  • 115th Medical Group

History

The

air defense
training missions until being inactivated in February 1952. The wing returned to Wisconsin state control and to its station near Milwaukee in November.

Air defense

The wing trained for its air defense mission until 1958. It was again activated in April 1961, remaining in the air defense mission, although its original group at the same station assumed the

air refueling
mission. In June 1971, the squadron again moved from General Mitchell Field to Truax Field, where the 115th Fighter-Interceptor Group was located.

In September 1972, the wing's 176th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron won the "

Canadian Air Force
and active US Air Force units worldwide. The competition included 12 teams of 48 aircraft, each team scored on aerial marksmanship, weapons control, weapons loading and maintenance.

Forward air control

In November 1974, the wing's gaining command changed from Air Defense Command to

Cessna O-2A Skymaster Forward Air Control (FAC) aircraft. The O-2 was the military version of the Cessna 337 Skymaster, a high wing, twin-boom aircraft with a unique centerline pusher/tractor twin engine configuration. The O-2A version was used in forward air control
missions, often in conjunction with a ground forward air controller and a radio operator, maintenance, and driver (ROMAD) team.

In November 1979, the O-2s were replaced by the

Republic of Vietnam Air Force
or returned to the United States. The OA-37s were received from Air National Guard units in Maryland and New York.

With most of the pilots and maintenance crews having prior jet aircraft experience with the F-102s, the unit was able to transition the OA-37 to C-1 status, (full combat ready), in less than six months. Awards during the OA-37 era included an overall rating of "Excellent" in the unit's Operational Readiness Inspection, the Distinguished Flying Award and its first

Air Force Outstanding Unit Award
.

Close air support

On 1 October 1981, the group was redesignated the 128th Tactical Fighter Wing. Along with the mission change came a new aircraft, the Fairchild Republic A-10 Thunderbolt II, nicknamed the "Warthog". The OA-37s were sent to other Air National Guard units; its survivability made the A-10 an excellent weapons delivery system for ground targets. The A-10's most dominant feature is its seven-barrel GAU-8/A 30 mm cannon, capable of firing at up to 70 "tank busting" rounds per second.

During the A-10 era, the unit received two Outstanding Unit Awards, three Air Force Flight Safety Awards, and in 1991 an "Outstanding" in its Unit Effectiveness Inspection. Deployments with the A-10 included Operation Coronet Cove to Panama, and "Checkered Flag" missions to NATO bases in West Germany and England.

Current mission

USAF F-16C block 30 #87-0278 from the 176th FS sits on the runway in Madison on 28 June 2008 during the Rhythm and Booms Fireworks display. Note the 60th Anniversary paint scheme on the tail

With the end of the Cold War, the early 1990s marked several changes. On 16 March 1992, the wing became the '128th Fighter Wing and shortly thereafter changed its mobilization command change from Tactical Air Command to the newly created Air Combat Command.

In 1993, the wing began transitioning from the A-10A to the

F-16C/D block 30 Fighting Falcon
airframes with the enlarged inlet, the A-10s were transferred to other Air National Guard units. The first F-16s arrived at Truax Air National Guard Base on 1 April 1993. The current role of the 176th FS is air-interdiction and close air support (CAS). This was the same task as when they flew the A-10, although the transition to the F-16 meant a huge change in the overall execution of this mission when comparing the A-10 with the F-16.

On 11 October 1995, the 128th Fighter Wing was renamed the 115th Fighter Wing and converted to the Objective Wing organization with its operational squadron assigned to the 115th Operations Group. The 128th designation duplicated that of the

General Mitchell Air National Guard Base
, another Wisconsin Air National Guard unit, which upgraded from group status.

Operations participated in by the 115th Fighter Wing include: Operation Coronet Chariot,

Balad AB, Iraq, 2006, 08, & 09, Africa, 2013 and Operation Noble Eagle
, from 11 September 2001 to the present.

In its

27th Fighter Wing
's F-16s were to be distributed to the 115th Fighter Wing amongst other aircraft moves.

The 176th Fighter Squadron celebrated its 60th anniversary in October 2008.

Today the wing is capable of air-to-air, close air support and precision guided bombing missions. The wing operates the latest generation of munitions such as the

AIM-9X air-to-air missile.[citation needed
]

In December 2017, the Air Force announced that the 115th was one of two Air National Guard wings selected for equipping with the

fifth-generation jet fighter is scheduled for 2023.[3][4] In April 2023, Four F-35 fighter jets were delivered to the 115th fighter wing. Eventually, a total of 20 of those aircraft are scheduled to arrive at the air field in the next year.[5]

Lineage

  • Established as the 128th Fighter Wing on 25 October 1950 and allotted to the Air National Guard
Activated on 1 November 1950 and given federal recognition
Federalized and called to active duty on 1 February 1951
Redesignated 128th Fighter-Interceptor Wing on 10 February 1951[2]
Inactivated on 6 February 1952[2]
Released from active duty, returned to Wisconsin state control and activated on 1 November 1952
Redesignated 128th Air Defense Wing on 15 April 1956
Inactivated on 10 March 1958
Activated on 1 August 1961
  • Redesignated 128th Fighter-Interceptor Wing on 1 June 1972
  • Redesignated 128th Tactical Air Support Wing on 9 November 1974
  • Redesignated 128th Tactical Fighter Wing on 15 November 1981
  • Redesignated 128th Fighter Wing on 15 March 1992
  • Redesignated 115th Fighter Wing on 11 October 1995

Assignments

Gaining commands[6]
Air Defense Command, 1 November 1952 – 19 March 1958
Air Defense Command, 1 April 1961
Tactical Air Command, 9 November 1974
Air Combat Command, 1 June 1992 - present

Components

Groups
  • 103d Tactical Fighter Group
    , 16 March 1992 – 11 October 1995
  • 105th Tactical Air Support Group
    , 1 July 1979 – 1 May 1984
  • 110th Tactical Air Support Group
    (later 110th Fighter Group), c. 1 June 1975 - 1983, c. 16 October 1991 – 11 October 1995
  • 111th Tactical Air Support Group
    (later 111th Fighter Group), c. 1 June 1975 - 1983, 31 March 1992 – 11 October 1995
  • 115th Fighter-Interceptor Group (later 115th Tactical Air Support Group, 115th Operations Group), 15 April 1956 – 10 May 1958, 1 June 1972 – 1 January 1979, 1 October 1994 - present
  • 119th Fighter Group
    , 1 April 1961 - c. 1 June 1965
  • 125th Fighter-Interceptor Group
    , c. 1 June 1972 - c. 1 October 1974
  • 128th Fighter Group (later 128th Fighter-Interceptor Group, 128th Fighter Group), 1 November 1950 – 6 February 1952,[2] 1 November 1952 – 10 March 1958
  • 148th Fighter Group, 1 April 1961 - c. 1 January 1969
  • 163d Tactical Air Support Group
    , 8 March 1975 - c. 1 October 1982
  • 169th Fighter-Interceptor Group
    , 1 June 1972 – 5 April 1975
  • 182d Tactical Air Support Group
    (later 182d Fighter Group), 1975 - 1 April 1995
Operational Squadron
  • 176th Tactical Air Support Squadron
    (later 176th Tactical Fighter Squadron, 176th Fighter Squadron), 1 January 1979 – 1 October 1994

Stations

  • Billy Mitchell Field
    , 1 November 1950
  • Truax Field, Wisconsin, 16 February 1951 – 6 February 1952
  • Billy Mitchell Field, 1 November 1952 – 10 March 1958
  • Billy Mitchell Field, 1 April 1961
  • Truax Field (later Truax Field Air National Guard Base, 1 June 1972 – present

Aircraft

References

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

  1. ^ Aircraft are F-16C block 30s serials 87-349, #87-261 and #87-262. Taken on 16 October 2008
  2. ^ a b c d e f Cornett & Johnson, p. 63
  3. ^ Staff writer, no byline (21 December 2017). "AF selects locations for next two Air National Guard F-35 bases". Secretary of the Air Force Public Affairs. Retrieved 21 December 2017.
  4. ^ "Wisconsin Airmen return home from final F-16 combat mission". 115th Fighter Wing. 19 January 2022. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
  5. ^ Lehr, Sarah (26 April 2023). "First F-35 fighter jets arrive in Madison after years of planning and some local opposition". Wisconsin Public Radio. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
  6. ^ The command to which the wing would be assigned in a general mobilization

External links