This article is about the organization named the Nevada Test and Training Range. For the Nevada Test and Training Range as a geographic area, see
Nevada Test and Training Range
.
Military unit
The
Nevada Test and Training Range
(
NTTR
) is a
United States Air Force
unit assigned to the
United States Air Force Warfare Center
of
Air Combat Command
. The unit is stationed at
Nellis Air Force Base
, Nevada as a tenant unit.
[2]
The NTTR controls and operates the
Nevada Test and Training Range
(NTTR). The commander coordinates, prioritizes and is the approval authority for activities involving other governmental agencies, departments and commercial activities on the NTTR. The NTTR integrates and provides support for test and training programs that have a direct effect on the war-fighting capabilities of the combat air forces.
The history of the NTTR can be traced to its predecessor, the
98th Bombardment Group
, a
B-24 Liberator
heavy
bomber
group that fought in North Africa and Italy during
World War II
. The group was last assigned to the range as the
98th Operations Group
in 2011 and its history and honors have been temporarily been bestowed on the range. Two of the group's members,
Colonel John R. (Killer) Kane
and
First Lieutenant Donald Pucket
were awarded the
Medal of Honor
for their actions in combat.
[3]
The group flew a total of 417 missions and earning a total of 15 battle streamers as well as two
Distinguished Unit Citations
.
During the early years of the
Cold War
, the
98th Bombardment Wing
(BW), Very Heavy was formed in 1947 and assigned to
Strategic Air Command
. Further redesignations followed as the wing mission changed, including the
98th Strategic Aerospace Wing
when it added
intercontinental ballistic missiles
to its
bomber
force in 1964, and later the
98th Strategic Wing
when it moved to Spain to control deployed
Strategic Air Command
(SAC) assets in 1966. The 98th Strategic Wing was inactivated on 31 December 1976 with the phaseout of SAC operations at
Torrejon AB
, Spain and its functions transferred to the
306th Strategic Wing
at
Ramstein AB
, West Germany.
As of July 2022
[update]
, the NTTR is commanded by Colonel Michael G. Rider.
[1]
Organization
[
edit
]
- Operations Directorate
The directorate provides day-to-day control of the geographical NTTR. It has two divisions, Current Operations and Weapons. It supports Air Force, joint and multi-national test and training activities, and operates the geographic NTTR and Leach Lake Tactics Range near Barstow, Calif. It prioritizes and schedules all range activities for all range users, provides ground control intercept operations, flight-following safety deconfliction, simulated threat command and control operations, communications, data link operations, and range access control. It also assists test customers by coordinating support activities, and coordinates airspace issues with military and federal agencies.
[4]
- Mission Support Directorate
The directorate provides base operating support on the 3-million-acre (12,000 km
2
) Nevada Test and Training Range with contingents at three geographically separated operations and maintenance compounds, including Tonopah Electronic Combat Range, Point Bravo Electronic Combat Combat Range and Tolicha Peak Electronic Combat Range. It provides limited operational support at
Creech AFB
and the
Tonopah Test Range
. It supports training operations of the
99th Ground Combat Training Squadron
,
12th Combat Training Squadron
, and
549th Combat Training Squadron
.
[4]
- Financial Management Directorate
The directorate manages and executes the NTTR budget. It monitors and collects reimbursements for major range and test facility base activities from customers.
[4]
- Safety Directorate
The directorate is responsible for managing the commander's safety and mishap reporting programs. It is organized into functional areas including ground safety, weapons safety and range safety.
[4]
- Program Management Directorate
The directorate is acquires and manages contract support of range operations, maintenance, instrumentation, communications, and computer systems services. It directs contract changes and evaluates contractor performance.
[4]
- Plans and Programs Directorate
The directorate focuses on range requirements and long-term strategic planning. It is responsible for interaction of new systems being developed and implemented into the NTTR. In addition, the directorate oversees environmental management, agreements, land use, and range environmental contractors on the NTTR and Leach Lake Training Range, and is the liaison to the Bureau of Land Management, the Department of the Interior, and other state and federal agencies.
[4]
- Range Support Directorate
The directorate provided day-to-day communications, electronic combat and instrumentation of the geographical NTTR and LTTR. It has three divisions: communications/computer services, operations and maintenance, and engineering. It provides technical support of Air Force, joint and multi-national aircrew training missions on the NTTR. The directorate supports all electronic combat activities while providing ground control intercept operations, simulated threat command and control operations, and the range's simulated Integrated Air Defense System.
[4]
- Security Directorate
The directorate manages all facets of information, personnel, industrial, and resource protection security programs. Additionally, the Program Security Office ensures all visitors to the NTTR meet security requirements, and provides security oversight for classified and special access requirements on the NTTR.
[4]
History
[
edit
]
- See
98th Operations Group
for additional history prior to 1947
Emblem of the 98th Bombardment Wing (Medium)
Organization and Korean War
[
edit
]
During the early years of the
Cold War
, the
98th Bombardment Wing
, Very Heavy (BW) was formed 24 October 1947 as part of the Air Force's experimental wing base (
Hobson Plan
) reorganization and assigned to
Strategic Air Command
.
[5]
The 98th BW was discontinued on 12 July 1948, and replaced by the 98th BW, Medium the same day when the test was deemed successful and the organization made permanent.
[6]
From November 1947 to July 1948 and July 1948 to July 1954, the
wing
headquarters was often manned as a "paper" unit with most of its components attached to other establishments for long periods. The wing's tactical
group
was operational, but under control of other organizations from November 1947 to April 1950 and again from August 1950 through March 1951.
[7]
98th Bomb Wing B-29 over Korea
On 1 April 1951, wing headquarters deployed to Japan to assume control over combat operations of the group's three tactical squadrons,
[8]
while the rest of the wing remained behind in Washington.
[7]
In 1952, the combat
squadrons
were joined by three maintenance squadrons. Wing
combat
missions in Korea included interdiction of enemy communications and support of United Nations ground forces. Its last combat mission flown 25 July 1953 and it dropped propaganda leaflets on the day of truce two days later.
[7]
During the Korean War, the squadrons of the 98th flew more than 5,000 sorties and dropped more than 40,000 tons of bombs (actual total unavailable).
[
citation needed
]
They earned a
Distinguished Unit Citation
, a
Korean Presidential Unit Citation
and 10 battle streamers.
[7]
The 98th was credited with the destruction of 5 MiG 15 Jet Fighters and one propeller driven fighter. The 98th recorded 19
Boeing B-29 Superfortress
losses from August 1950 to July 1954.
[
citation needed
]
Cold War
[
edit
]
B-47s on the Ramp at Lincoln AFB
The wing remained at
Yokota Air Base
, Japan in
combat-ready
status for another year. Meanwhile, wing components not deployed in Japan moved to newly reopened
Lincoln AFB
, Nebraska to supervise construction in preparation for movement there of the deployed wing components. The wing disposed of its B-29s at the "boneyard" at
Davis-Monthan AFB
, Arizona. In July 1954, wing components concentrated at the wing's new base,
[9]
but in October, the 98th gave up its host responsibilities at Lincoln to the
818th Air Division
.
[10]
Air refueling
operations were already underway by then. The wing's squadrons began receiving new
Boeing B-47E Stratojet
swept-wing medium bombers
[7]
in January 1955, capable of flying at high subsonic speeds and primarily designed for penetrating the airspace of the
Soviet Union
.
[
citation needed
]
At this point the wing began an intensive training program to convert to combat ready status as soon as possible. This was achieved in April 1955.
[10]
During next decade, the wing participated in Strategic Air Command's worldwide bombardment training and air refueling commitments. The wing deployed to
RAF Lakenheath
, England from 11 November 1955 to 29 January 1956. Starting in 1960, the wing maintained B-47s on ground alert 24 hours a day.
[10]
From January 1964 to April 1965, the wing also controlled an
SM-65 Atlas
intercontinental ballistic missile
(ICBM) squadron and was redesignated as the
98th Strategic Aerospace Wing
.
[7]
In the early 1960s, the B-47 was considered to be reaching obsolescence, and was being phased out of SAC's strategic arsenal. Beginning in 1964, the wing began sending its aircraft to Davis-Monthan AFB. Lincoln AFB was closed and the wing inactivated in 1966.
European Mission
[
edit
]
KC-135 on takeoff
Emblem of the 98th Strategic Wing
The wing was inactivated on 25 June 1966 at Lincoln AFB, but activated the same day at
Torrejon Air Base
, Spain replacing the
3970th Strategic Wing
(SW). The 3970th SW had been established on 1 July 1957 at Torrejon as the
3970th Air Base Group
[11]
to support B-47 and KC-135 elements from SAC CONUS-based units deployed to Europe as part of REFLEX deployments and provide a refueling mission to
USAFE
tactical fighters.
[
citation needed
]
Until 1 April 1966, when SAC transferred Torrejon to USAFE, the 3970th also acted as the host base organization for all USAF units at Torrejon. The group was assigned seven support squadrons and a hospital to carry out its mission. It was redesignated the
3970th Combat Support Group
on 1 June 1959 and upgraded to wing status on 1 February 1964.
[11]
In 1966, SAC received authority from Headquarters USAF to discontinue the 3970th SW (a MAJCON wing) and activate an AFCON wing which could continue the lineage and history of a combat wing. On 5 June 1966, the 3970th SW was replaced by the
98th Strategic Wing
, which assumed the personnel, equipment, and mission of the
3970th Strategic Wing
,
[7]
For the next decade, the 98th had no tactical aircraft components assigned to it, but rather used attached
Boeing KC-135 Stratotankers
and crews furnished by other SAC wings to provide air refueling support for the operational, alert exercise commitment of SAC,
Tactical Air Command
,
United States Air Forces Europe
and
NATO
. These aircraft were deployed on temporary duty as the
Spanish Tanker Task Force
. The wing's operational area included the Eastern Atlantic Ocean, most of Europe, North Africa and the Middle East.
[7]
The Wing maintained a detachment at
RAF Upper Heyford
(relocated to
RAF Mildenhall
in April 1970) supporting RC-135 Reconnaissance Aircraft, and supporting KC-135 Tankers deployed from the Spanish Tanker Task Force. In October 1976, the
306th Strategic Wing
, based at
Ramstein AB
, West Germany assumed this support task and the 98th phased down at Torrejon and was inactivated 31 December 1976.
[7]
Post Cold War
[
edit
]
98th Range Wing Emblem
In October 2001, the wing was redesignated the
98th Range Wing
and began operating the range facilities of the Air Warfare Center from Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada.
[2]
It replaced the
99th Range Group
and 99th Range Squadron of the host unit at Nellis, the
99th Air Base Wing
. Its mission is to provide a flexible and realistic "battle space" to support training, testing, and tactics development, for which it controls the airspace over 12,000 square nautical miles, 7,000 of which are shared with civilian aircraft.
[4]
The NTTR supports
Department of Defense
(DOD) advanced composite force training, tactics development, and electronic combat testing as well as DOD and
Department of Energy
testing, research, and development. It acts as the single point of contact for range customers.
[4]
In June 2011, the wing was redesignated
Nevada Test and Training Range
and its operational groups were replaced by directorates.
[2]
[4]
Then on 1 April 2013, the
25th Space Range Squadron
(SRS) was moved under the NTTR from
Air Force Space Command
. The 25 SRS operates and maintains the
Space Test and Training Range
. On 24 July 2020 the 25th Space Range Squadron was transferred to the United States Space Force.
[12]
Lineage
[
edit
]
- Designated as
98th Bombardment Wing
, Very Heavy on 24 October 1947.
- Organized on 10 November 1947.
- Discontinued on 12 July 1948.
- Consolidated (1 October 1984) with the
98th Bombardment Wing
, Medium
[13]
Constituted as
98th Bombardment Wing
, Medium on 28 May 1948
- Activated on 12 July 1948.
- Redesignated
98th Strategic Aerospace Wing
on 1 February 1964.
- Discontinued and inactivated, on 25 June 1966.
- Redesignated
98th Strategic Wing
, activated, and organized, on 25 June 1966
- Inactivated on 31 December 1976.
- Redesignated
98th Range Wing
on 21 September 2001
- Activated on 29 October 2001
- Redesignated
Nevada Test and Training Range
on 21 June 2011
[2]
Assignments
[
edit
]
- Fifteenth Air Force
, 10 November 1947 (attached to:
92d Bombardment Wing
, 17 November 1947 ? 15 April 1950
- Second Air Force
, 16 May 1950 (attached to:
92d Bombardment Wing
from 16 May 1950)
- Fifteenth Air Force, 28 July 1950 (remained attached to: 92d Bombardment Wing through 31 March 1951, attached to: FEAF Bomber Command, Provisional from 1 April 1951 and rear echelon attached to 92d Air Base Group)
- 57th Air Division
, 16 April 1951 (remained attached to FEAF Bomber Command, Provisional. Rear echelon attached to 92 Air Base Group to 25 July 1952)
|
- Fifteenth Air Force, 25 November 1953 (remained attached to FEAF Bomber Command, Provisional, through 17 June 1954,
Twentieth Air Force
, 18 June-25 July 1954
- 818th Air Division (later, 818 Strategic Aerospace) Division
, 11 October 1954 )attached to
7th Air Division
when deployed11 November 1955 ? 29 January 1956)
- 810th Strategic Aerospace Division
, 25 March 1965 ? 25 June 1966
- Strategic Air Command, 25 June 1966 ? 31 December 1976
- Air Warfare Center, 29 October 2001 ? present
[2]
|
Stations
[
edit
]
- Spokane AAF
(later, Spokane AFB; Fairchild AFB), Washington, 10 November 1947 ? 15 August 1953
- Yokota AB, Japan, 15 August 1953 ? 25 July 1954
- Lincoln AFB, Nebraska, 25 July 1954 ? 25 June 1966
- Torrejon AB, Spain, 25 June 1966 ? 31 December 1976
- Nellis AFB, Nevada, 29 October 2001 ? present
[2]
Components
[
edit
]
Groups
- 98th Airdrome Group (later 98th Air Base Group, 98th Mission Support Group), 10 November 1947 ? 18 October 1954, 5 November 2001 ? 21 June 2011 (detached 1 April 1951 ? 25 November 1953)
[14]
- 98th Bombardment (later, 98th Air Refueling Group, 98th Operations Group)
: 10 November 1947 ? 16 June 1952 (detached 10 November 1947 ? 15 April 1950 and 2 August 1950 ? 31 March 1951; not operational, 1 April 1951 ? 16 June 1952); 29 October 2001 ? 21 June 2011
[2]
- 98th Maintenance & Supply Group, 10 November 1947 ? 16 February 1951, 14 February 1952 ? 16 June 1952 (not operational)
[14]
- 98th Station Medical Group (later 98th Medical Group, 98th Medical Squadron, 98th Medical Group, 98th Tactical Hospital), 10 November 1947 ? 1 September 1958 (detached 1 April 1951 ? 25 November 1953)
[14]
Operational Squadrons
- 98th Air Refueling Squadron
: 16 June 1952 ? 1 July 1953 (detached); 18 February 1954 ? 15 April 1963 (detached 18 February-31 July 1954, 7 January-21 February 1955, 27 December 1956 ? 14 March 1957, 28 December 1957 ? 25 March 1958, 1 April-c. 8 July 1959, 2 October 1962 ? 7 January 1963)
- 307th Air Refueling Squadron
: attached 8 November 1954 ? 1 February 1955
- 343d Bombardment Squadron
: attached 1 April 1951 ? 15 June 1952, assigned 16 June 1952 ? 25 June 1966 (not operational, 8 December 1965 ? 25 June 1966)
[15]
- 344th Bombardment Squadron
: attached 1 April 1951 ? 15 June 1952, assigned 16 June 1952 ? 25 June 1966 (not operational, 8 December 1965 ? 25 June 1966)
[16]
- 345th Bombardment Squadron
: attached 1 April 1951 ? 15 June 1952, assigned 16 June 1952 ? 25 June 1966 (not operational, 8 December 1965 ? 25 June 1966)
[17]
- 380th Air Refueling Squadron
: attached 1 August-8 November 1954
- 415th Bombardment Squadron
: 1 September 1958 ? 1 January 1962
[18]
- 551st Strategic Missile Squadron
: 1 January 1964 ? 25 June 1965.
[19]
Support Squadrons
- 98th Armament & Electronics Maintenance Squadron, 16 June 1952 ? 25 June 1966
- 98th Maintenance Squadron (later 98th Field Maintenance Squadron), 16 February 1951 ? 10 February 1952 (detached), 16 June 1952 ? 25 June 1966
- 98th Northern Range Support Squadron, 1 August 2005 ? 21 June 2011
- 98th Periodic Maintenance Squadron (later 98th Organizational Maintenance Squadron), 16 June 1952 ? 25 June 1966
- 98th Range Squadron, 5 November 2001 ? 21 June 2011
- 98th Range Support Squadron, 5 November 2001 ? 1 August 2005
- 98th Southern Range Support Squadron, 1 August 2005 ? 21 June 2011
Detachments
- Detachment 1, 98th Strategic Wing 25 June 1966 ? 31 March 1970
- RAF Upper Heyford, United Kingdom
- Detachment 1, 98th Strategic Wing 1 April 1970 ? 31 December 1976
- RAF Mildenhall, United Kingdom
Aircraft and missiles
[
edit
]
Awards
[
edit
]
- Korea, 1 December 1952 ? 30 April 1953
- North Africa and Sicily, August 1942 ? 17 August 1943
[20]
- Ploesti, Rumania, 1 August 1943
[20]
- 1 July 1964 ? 1 June 1965
- 1 January 1970 ? 31 March 1971
- 1 July 1974 ? 30 June 1976
- 1 April 1951 ? 27 July 1953
- First UN Counteroffensive
- CCF Spring Offensive
- UN Summer-Fall Offensive
- Second Korean Winter
|
- Korea Summer-Fall 1952
- Third Korean Winger
- Korea Summer-Fall 1953
|
- Egypt-Libya
- Tunisia
- Sicily
- Naples-Foggia
- Anzio
|
- Rome-Arno
- Southern France
- North Apennines
- Po Valley
- Air Offensive, Europe
|
- Normandy
- Northern France
- Rhineland
- Central Europe
- Air Combat, EAME Theater
|
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
Notes
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
"Colonel Michael G. Rider"
.
Nellis Air Force Base
. July 2022
. Retrieved
19 October
2022
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
AFHRA Factsheet, Nevada Test and Training Range
Archived
20 February 2013 at the
Wayback Machine
10/3/2011 (retrieved 12 Jan 2012)
- ^
Maurer, Maurer, ed. (1983) [1961].
Air Force Combat Units of World War II
(PDF)
(reprint ed.). Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. pp. 168?170.
ISBN
0-912799-02-1
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
Nellis AFB Factsheet, Nevada Test & Training Wing
Archived
17 February 2013 at the
Wayback Machine
7/12/2012 (retrieved 13 Jan 2013)
- ^
Goss, William A (1955). "The Organization and its Responsibilities, Chapter 2 The AAF". In Craven, Wesley F; Cate, James L (eds.).
The Army Air Forces in World War II
. Vol. VI, Men & Planes. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. p. 59.
LCCN
48-3657
.
- ^
Ravenstein, Charles A. (1984).
Air Force Combat Wings, Lineage & Honors Histories 1947?1977
. Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. p.
10
.
ISBN
0-912799-12-9
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
Ravenstein,
Combat Wings
, pp. 138?141
- ^
Ironically, at this time it was the group that became a paper unit
- ^
This was the first time since 1947 that all wing components were under the wing's control at the same base
- ^
a
b
c
The Lincoln AFB Online Museum - History
(retrieved 14 Jan 2013)
- ^
a
b
Fletcher, Harry R (1993).
Air Force Bases , Vol. II, Air Bases Outside the United States of America
(PDF)
. Washington, DC: Center for Air Force History. pp. 187?190.
ISBN
0-912799-53-6
.
- ^
"US Space Force stands up STAR Delta Provisional"
.
- ^
The wing remained equipped with B-29s, but with the advent of the
Convair B-36 Peacemaker
, the B-29 was reclassified from a
Very Heavy
bomber to a
Medium
bomber
- ^
a
b
c
See
Mueller, Robert (1989).
Air Force Bases, Vol. I, Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982
(PDF)
. Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. pp. 171?177.
ISBN
0-912799-53-6
.
- ^
Maurer, Maurer, ed. (1982) [1969].
Combat Squadrons of the Air Force, World War II
(PDF)
(reprint ed.). Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. pp. 425?426.
ISBN
0-405-12194-6
.
- ^
Maurer,
Combat Squadrons
, pp. 426-427
- ^
Maurer,
Combat Squadrons
, pp. 428?429
- ^
Maurer,
Combat Squadrons
, pp. 507?508
- ^
Maurer,
Combat Squadrons
, p. 655
- ^
a
b
c
Earned by 98th Bombardment Group. Temporarily bestowed on Nevada Test and Training Range
Bibliography
[
edit
]
This article incorporates
public domain material
from the
Air Force Historical Research Agency
- Goss, William A (1955). "The Organization and its Responsibilities, Chapter 2 The AAF". In Craven, Wesley F; Cate, James L (eds.).
The Army Air Forces in World War II
. Vol. VI, Men & Planes. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
LCCN
48-3657
.
- Fletcher, Harry R (1993).
Air Force Bases , Vol. II, Air Bases Outside the United States of America
(PDF)
. Washington, DC: Center for Air Force History.
ISBN
0-912799-53-6
.
- Maurer, Maurer, ed. (1983) [1961].
Air Force Combat Units of World War II
(PDF)
(reprint ed.). Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History.
ISBN
0-912799-02-1
.
- Maurer, Maurer, ed. (1982) [1969].
Combat Squadrons of the Air Force, World War II
(PDF)
(reprint ed.). Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History.
ISBN
0-405-12194-6
.
- Mueller, Robert (1989).
Air Force Bases, Vol. I, Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982
(PDF)
. Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History.
ISBN
0-912799-53-6
.
- Ravenstein, Charles A. (1984).
Air Force Combat Wings, Lineage & Honors Histories 1947-1977
. Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History.
ISBN
0-912799-12-9
.
Additional Reading
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
External links
[
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]
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