| 20th Reconnaissance Squadron | |
|---|---|
Emblem of the 20th Reconnaissance Squadron |
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| Active | 1940-1949; 1965-1973; 1973-1984;[1] 1990-1991; 2011-present |
| Branch | United States Air Force |
| Type | Reconnaissance |
| Size | Squadron |
| Part of | Air Combat Command |
| Garrison/HQ | Whiteman Air Force Base |
| Engagements | World War II Vietnam |
| Decorations | |
The 20th Reconnaissance Squadron is a United States Air Force unit, based at Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri. It currently flies the MQ-1 Predator and is currently assigned to the 432d Wing at Creech Air Force Base, Nevada. Its original term of service overlapped World War II, and it was inactivated in 1949 following the War. Reactivated in 1965, it served notably for seven and a half years of combat duty during the Vietnam War, after which in 1973 it was inactivated. It was reactivated at Shaw Air Force Base in 1990, and again inactivated on 31 December 1991. Its reactivation at Creech AFB took place on 14 January 2011.
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The 20th Transport Squadron activated at France Field, Panama Canal Zone, on 15 December 1940, but had only one officer and no airplanes until February 1941. The squadron became operational by March 1941 when the Squadron obtained its first aircraft from France Field's 16th Air Base Squadron, a Douglas C-33. With this solitary aircraft, the Squadron undertook daily flights to Albrook Field and, from there, on to Rio Hato Field and return.
Flying with two or three airplanes, the Squadron began the first of a seemingly never ending series of cross-country flights to Trinidad in the British West Indies (some 1,200 air miles east, one way, front the Canal Zone) on 2 June 1941 in support of the construction of the outer defense ring of air bases in the Caribbean after the United States obtained basing rights as part of the Destroyers for Bases Agreement with the British.
By the time of the Pearl Harbor Attack on 7 December 1941, the unit had received six Douglas C-49s (commercial DC-3's had been impressed under this designation) from the United States. On 22 November 1941, six of the C-49's were detached to Howard Field in the Canal Zone as pan of what came to be known as Flight "B" (Reinforced) of the Squadron to work specifically with the Army 501st Parachute Battalion and the 550th Airborne Infantry, which were training to act as a kind of rapid deployment force in the Panama Canal defense scheme.
The 20th TCS flew many different types of aircraft between 1941 and 1949, several being one of a kind. The Squadron was transferred from France Field to Howard Field on 19 February 1942. Some aircraft to be detached to Waller Field, Trinidad (Flight "A") and Borinquen Field, Puerto Rico (Flight "C"). Flight "A" left the parent Squadron entirely on 22 December 1941 when it was detached to the 92d Air Base Group at Waller Field, Trinidad. The C-47's were followed on 19 June by two Consolidated PBY Catalinas (designated by the Army as OA-10s) amphibians and a locally procured Stinson UC-91 trimotor. In September, another 0A-10 on 12 October, none other than a single Junkers Ju 52 trimotor on 7 November (a former Brazilian and Ecuadorean Ju-52/3m, which was given USAAF serial 42-52883, and which had nominally been assigned to Flight "A" and a Hamilton UC-89, a former Panamanian registered single¬engined plane. These "local" acquisitions were a measure of the near desperate need for transport aircraft being felt by the Squadron and the Command at the time. In March 1943, a pilot was dispatched to Santiago, Chile, to fly an Italian Savoia-Marchetti SM.81 tri-motor (lately of the Italian airline LATI) back to the Canal Zone. These odd additions were necessary by the very extraordinary demands made on the Squadron as the Sixth Air Force and Antilles Air Command. On 5 July 1942, the unit was formally re-designated as the 20th Troop Carrier Squadron.
By early 1943, the unit had 30 officers and 234 other ranks and, as of January 1943, all of the Consolidated 0A-10's were transferred to other units and, the C-79, C-89 and C-91 were all occasionally grounded for extended periods as the ground crews attempted to deal with these highly non-standard aircraft. By June 1943, all had been reassigned out of the Squadron. Replacement aircraft received by the Squadron was the huge Boeing XB-15 assigned 2 April 1943 which was converted from bomber to heavy transport configuration to meet some of the Sixth Air Force's peculiar requirements — most notably the long and frequent over-water re-supply flights to Seymour Field in the Galapagos Islands. But the unit also got the first two Fairchild UC-61 Forwarders, a new Douglas C-47A and conducted long distance flights with cargo and personnel to resupply and evacuation of the small radar sites spotted around the periphery of the Canal.
As Howard Field became ever more crowded with bomber units, the Squadron was moved in June 1943 to Albrook Field. By December 1943, the detachments in the Antilles (Flights "B" and "C"), which had been leading essentially a separate existence from the "home" based Flight "A" in the Canal Zone, were finally detached from the Squadron completely, and became assets of the Antilles Air Command, and were based loosely out of Borinquen Field, Puerto Rico, and their dispersion throughout the Antilles as far as Trinidad and the Guianas continued. It was re-designated as the 20th Troop Carrier Squadron (Special) on 1 January 1944.
By November 1944, the unit had finally started benefiting from the massive aircraft production of transport types at home, and could finally approach some semblance of standardization in its fleet, although this was still very assorted. The last year of the war, with the general wind-down of the size and breadth of the Sixth Air Force, saw a gradual reduction in the previously hectic flight schedules for 20th TCS crews. By this time, the Squadron had also received some Curtiss C-46 Commandos. Routine transport operations within Panama, South and Central America continued, with a C-47 aiding a forest fire in the Peten region of Guatemala.
After the end of the war, the squadron continued being the transport arm of the USAF Caribbean Air Command, being equipped with C-54 Skymasters in 1946 and C-82 Packet transports in 1948.
The 20th TCS moved in September 1948 from Panama to Bergstrom AFB, Texas. It left all aircraft and equipment at Albrook, except for a detachment of C-54s that had left Albrook in July 1948 to participate in the Berlin Airlift. At Bergstrom, the 20th TCS received Fairchild C-82 Packet medium transports in November 1948 and began transition training. In early January 1949, the squadron's air echelon deployed seven C-82s on temporary duty to Kearney AFB, Nebraska, to transport supplies to snowbound ranchers and farmers, while the rest of the squadron moved at the end of January 1949 to Smyrna AFB, Tennessee. The C-82s and aircrews arrived at Smyrna in late February 1949. While at Smyrna, the 20th trained with U.S. Army paratroopers from Fort Campbell, Kentucky in airborne tactics and carried cargo about the United States. The squadron inactivated on 20 October 1949 due to budget reductions.
The 20th Tactical Air Support Squadron (20th TASS) was organized at Da Nang, Vietnam, on 8 May 1965. It received its first O-1 Bird Dog later that month.
The squadron was fully operational by August, 1965. It ran check flights for newly assigned aircrews, as well as flew visual reconnaissance and forward air control missions under various call signs. As it expanded, it stationed pilots and ground crews at several forward operating locations.[2] However, it did not receive its full complement of over 30 Bird Dogs until the end of the year, as the turnover process from the U. S. Army was a slow one. The army was reluctant to surrender the FAC role, but had agreed to do so under an inter-service agreement that allowed them to have helicopters.
By the end of 1965, the 20th TASS was assigned the mission of directing interdiction of the Ho Chi Minh Trail; this was dubbed Operation Tiger Hound. Its original forward operating bases for this were Khe Sanh, Kham Duc, and Kon Tum, which were very close to the trail, unlike Da Nang, which was the width of the country away from the trail. Other forward sites were added later--Dong Ha, Quảng Trị City (La Vang Airfield), Huế, Tam Ky, Quang Ngai, Dak To, and Pleiku.
In mid-July 1966, the squadron was tasked with a second Area of Operations. It was within North Vietnam, from the Demilitarized Zone 30 miles northward. These Tally Ho missions were flown from Dong Ha. During this period, it was decided that all cross-border flights would use call sign Covey. In country missions carried a variety of call signs, including Jake and Trail.
By this time, the Bird Dogs' shortcomings were becoming apparent. It was a simple plane, easily maintained, highly maneuverable, and had good visibility. The fore and aft seating allowed both pilot and observer good views, and the high wing obviously left a good ground view. However, the PAVN and VC antiaircraft defenses were increasingly dangerous, and the slow unarmored O-1 was vulnerable. Its operational times were limited by its unsophisticated instrumentation and navigational equipment, which made flying in bad weather or at night difficult (night missions were particularly challenging and dangerous). Its lack of weaponry was also frustrating, as FACs could watch the enemy disappear while the strike aircraft were still en route. Frustrated FACs sometimes resorted to strafing the enemy with M-16 rifles fired out of the plane's windows.[3]
As a result, the 20th TASS began receiving O-2 Skymasters in 1967. The O-2 was a temporary solution, meant to serve until the OV-10 Bronco came on line. The O-2 was a modified Cessna 337 civilian plane. It was dual engined, with one engine at either end of the fuselage. The 20th was the first FAC squadron in Vietnam to receive it.[4] The aircraft carried more ordinance, was capable of longer loiter times, had more power, and featured improved conventional navigation aids and in-flight instrumentation. Nevertheless, it had its own limitations.[3][4] During this period, the squadron continued to fly 0-1s.
In January, 1969, the squadron began the transition from O-1s to the OV-10 Bronco. By July, the last O-1 was history, though the squadron continued to fly 0-2s. As of October 1969, 20th TASS aircraft, pilots and ground crews were assigned to 11 forward locations, five supporting the U. S. Army and six supporting the ARVN. Its headquarters remained at Da Nang.
As the war wound down from 1970 through 1972, the squadron withdrew from its forward locations. The Easter Offensive by the People's Army of Vietnam in April 1972 made the 20th TASS return to FAC support from forward locations. It also temporarily tripled the squadron's sortie rate. When the North Vietnamese began to rocket Da Nang, the pilots of the 20th used their armed OV-10s to retaliate directly with rockets, strafing, and small bombs in addition to calling in air strikes.
In January, 1973, the squadron ceased combat. It turned over its O-2s to the Vietnamese Air Force (VNAF) and passed its Broncos along to other USAF units. On 15 January, the 20th was transferred as a paper unit to George AFB, California. On 1 April 1973, it was officially inactivated. Its service in Vietnam was over.[2] In its nearly eight years in Vietnam, it had earned five Presidential Unit Citations, four Air Force Outstanding Unit Awards (with Combat 'V' Device), and three Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Crosses with Palm.[5] In addition, its pilots and crews earned many personal decorations.
The 20th TASS lost more than 70 pilots during the Vietnam War with a large number of aircraft destroyed or damaged.[6] It's pilots and other personnel also earned many awards, citations, and distinctions.
On 19 August 1967, Captain Donald D. Stevens, flying an 0-2, risked heavy ground fire, which damaged his aircraft, for eight hours during the medical evacuation of a wounded American soldier and the extraction of a ground team sent in to help him. His gallantry won him the Air Force Cross.[7]
Four months later, on Christmas Day, Major Jerry Allan Sellers was killed when his 0-2 was shot down during a night mission in which he saved a ground patrol from being overrun by illuminating ground targets with his landing lights so that gunships could direct accurate fire at the enemy. His lights drew heavy anti-aircraft fire, and he was shot down. He also earned an Air Force Cross.[8]
On 29 June 1972, Captain Steven L. Bennett's OV-10 was hit by a surface to air missile. Rather than leave his observer to his fate, Bennett crash landed in the Tonkin Gulf. The observer escaped the sinking plane, but Bennett drowned. He was awarded the Medal of Honor, one of only two awarded to FACs in the war.[9]
On July 11, 1972 Major John Leonard Carroll a 20th TASS pilot on temporary duty with the 56th Special Operations Wing at Nakhon Phanom Royal Thai Air Force Base and flying an O-1G Bird Dog as a Raven FAC, earned the squadron's third Air Force Cross. His aircraft was shot down over the Plaine des Jarres, Xiangkhoang Province Laos, and he was killed on the ground shooting it out with two PAVN companies attempting to capture him.[10]
On 1 October 1973 the 20th TASS activated at Wiesbaden AB, West Germany, to provide forward tactical air control for U.S. Army, Europe, and Seventh Army operations. The squadron had only three 0-2A aircraft available until July 1974, when it began flying OV-10A aircraft. Engaged in close air support training during USAFE, NATO, and U.S. Army exercises, its pilots served as both ground and airborne forward air controllers. During training exercises, the 20th deployed to and flew from bases in Italy, Spain, Denmark, Turkey, England, Belgium, West Germany, and The Netherlands. In January 1976, the squadron moved with the 601st Tactical control Wing to Sembach AB, West Germany. In May 1981, it added search and rescue missions to its tasks. In 1984, it lost all OV-10 aircraft, squadron aircrews ferrying them to George AFB, Calif, June–August 1984. squadron inactivated on 30 September 1984.
Activated again on 1 April 1990 at Shaw AFB, South Carolina, as part of the 507th Tactical Air Control Wing, it was inactivated 31 December 1991.
On 14 Jan 2011 the USAF reactivated the 20th TASS at Creech Air Force Base, Nevada, and redesignated it as the 20th Reconnaissance Squadron, under the command of Lt. Col. Travis "Flare" Burdine. The squadron belongs to the 432d Operations Group, part of the 432d Wing at Creech. although it is based at Whiteman Air Force Base. The new 20th RS flies General Atomics MQ-1 Predator|MQ-1B Predator remotely piloted aircraft on missions that include route reconnaissance, target marking, on-scene commander, intelligence-surveillance-and-reconnaissance, close air support and generally providing eyes, ears, and voice above the battlefield. The reactivation ceremony was attended by Ms. Angela Engele-Bennett, daughter of 20th TASS Medal of Honor recipient Steven Bennett, and her family.
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This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Air Force Historical Research Agency.
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