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[[Image:F-84-522dfes-27fes-korea.jpg|right|thumb|F-84Es of the 522d Fighter-Escort Squadron (27th FEW)]]
[[Image:F-84-522dfes-27fes-korea.jpg|right|thumb|F-84Es of the 522d Fighter-Escort Squadron (27th FEW)]]
[[Image:3bw-b26bs.jpg|right|thumb|B-26Bs of the 3d Bomb Wing]]
[[Image:3bw-b26bs.jpg|right|thumb|B-26Bs of the 3d Bomb Wing]]
[[Image:F-84-9thfbs-korea.jpg|thumb|F-84G-25-RE Thunderjet serial 52-3249 of the 9th Fighter-Bomber Squadron being refuled over Korea, 1953]]
==== Origns ====
==== Origns ====
The history of Kunsan Air Base dates back to 1938, when [[Japan]]ese forces occupying Korea built a base near Kunsan for fighter-interceptor aircraft.
The history of Kunsan Air Base dates back to 1938, when [[Japan]]ese forces occupying Korea built a base near Kunsan for fighter-interceptor aircraft.
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Until the late 1960's, though, Kunsan remained relatively dormant, hosting temporary deployments of flying units and serving as a safe haven base for aircraft evacuated from Okinawa and Guam during typhoons. In 1965, the [[Republic of Korea Air Force]] assigned a squadron of F-86 fighters to the base. This ROKAF unit was the only permanently assigned flying contingent at Kunsan until after the [[USS Pueblo (AGER-2)|Pueblo incident]] in 1968.
Until the late 1960's, though, Kunsan remained relatively dormant, hosting temporary deployments of flying units and serving as a safe haven base for aircraft evacuated from Okinawa and Guam during typhoons. In 1965, the [[Republic of Korea Air Force]] assigned a squadron of F-86 fighters to the base. This ROKAF unit was the only permanently assigned flying contingent at Kunsan until after the [[USS Pueblo (AGER-2)|Pueblo incident]] in 1968.
[[Image:F-4E-67-0231-16tfs-02APR70.jpg|300px|thumb|McDonnell Douglas F-4E-34-MC Phantom Serial 67-0231 of the 16th Tactical Fighter Squadron on TDY from [[Eglin AFB]] Florida - Attached to 354th TFW at Kusan AB South Korea - [[1 April]] [[1970]]. In 1980, this aircraft was sold to the Egyptian Air Force.]]

The '''[[354th Fighter Wing|354th Tactical Fighter Wing]]''', flying the F-100 Super Sabre, arrived at Kunsan in July 1968, as part of the buildup of forces in Korea in the wake of the February 1968 seizure of the USS Pueblo by the North Koreans. In 1969 the wing began a transition from the F-100 to the F-4 Phantom. The 354th remained until June 1970, when the base again returned to hosting temporary deployments, such as the four-month deployment of the '''54th Tactical Fighter Wing''' from June through October 1970.
The '''[[354th Fighter Wing|354th Tactical Fighter Wing]]''', flying the F-100 Super Sabre, arrived at Kunsan in July 1968, as part of the buildup of forces in Korea in the wake of the February 1968 seizure of the USS Pueblo by the North Koreans. In 1969 the wing began a transition from the F-100 to the F-4 Phantom. The 354th remained until June 1970, when the base again returned to hosting temporary deployments, such as the four-month deployment of the '''54th Tactical Fighter Wing''' from June through October 1970.



Revision as of 02:44, 24 July 2007

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Template:Airport end frame Kunsan Air Base (IATA: KUV, ICAO: RKJK), is a United States Air Force base located on the western side of the South Korean peninsula bordered by the Yellow Sea. It is at the town of Kunsan (also romanized as Gunsan) approximately 150 miles (240 km) south of Seoul.

Kunsan Air Base is the home of the 8th Fighter Wing, assigned to the Pacific Air Forces Seventh Air Force. It is one of two major Air Force installations operated by the United States in Korea, the other being Osan Air Base.

Units

The following major units are stationed at Kunsan Air Base:

History

Major Commands

Base Operating Units

  • 27th Fighter-Escort Wing, (April - May 1951)
  • 931st Engineering Aviation Group (May - August 1951)
  • 3d Bombardment Wing (August 1951 - September 1954)
  • 6170th Air Base Group (September 1954 - April 1956)
  • 6170th Air Base Squadron (April 1956 - March 1959)
  • 6175th Air Base Group (March 1959 - August 1968)
  • 354th Tactical Fighter Wing (August 1968 - June 1970)
  • 6175th Air Base Group (June 1970 - March 1971)
  • 3d Tactical Fighter Wing (March 1971 - September 1974)
  • 8th Tactical Fighter Wing (September 1974 -Present)

Major USAF Units Assigned

Kunsan has provided support for F-84G Thunderjet, B-26 Invader, F-86 Sabre, F-100 Super Sabre , F-4 Phantom II, and F-16 Flying Falcon operations.

Operational History

7th Air Force Bases
F-84Es of the 522d Fighter-Escort Squadron (27th FEW)
B-26Bs of the 3d Bomb Wing
F-84G-25-RE Thunderjet serial 52-3249 of the 9th Fighter-Bomber Squadron being refuled over Korea, 1953

Origns

The history of Kunsan Air Base dates back to 1938, when Japanese forces occupying Korea built a base near Kunsan for fighter-interceptor aircraft.

The United States first used the base in 1945, but on a very small scale. From 1945 to 1950, the Army and later the Air Force intermittently operated small detachments from Kunsan, with these detachments maintaining liaison aircraft. At most these detachments contained a handful of people. When the United States pulled its combat units out of the Republic of Korea in 1949, it left only a Military Assistance Advisory Group in the country, and the periodic detachments at Kunsan became even more infrequent.

Korean War

When the Korean War broke out on 25 June 1950, Kunsan Air Base had no United States flying units assigned. In their rapid advance, the invading North Koreans captured Kunsan Air Base on 13 July 1950.

The 24th Infantry Division retook Kunsan in October 1950, and the Chinese Communist Forces (CCF) Intervention Campaign that winter failed to push far enough south to put Kunsan in jeopardy. United States forces first operated in significant numbers from the base in 1951.

The first Air Force unit to be assigned to the base was the 27th Fighter-Escort Wing, which arrived on 1 April 1951. The 27th Fighter Escort Wing was one of the first F-84 units to see combat action in Korea and earned numerous honors and awards for their combat record during the Korean War.

Improvements to the base were neeed, however, to accomodate jet fighers. The 27th FEW was reassigned at the end April and The Army's 808th Engineer Aviation Battalion built a 5,000-foot runway to replace the sod runway constructed by Japanese. This runway is now known as Taxiway Charlie (06/24). By August, construction had progressed to the point that heavier units could be based at Kusan and the Air Force assigned the 3rd Bombardment Wing to Kunsan.

The 3rd Bomb Wing flew the Doublas B-26 Invader bomber during the war, remaining at Kunsan from August 1951 until October 1954. A Marine aviation squadron, VMF(N)-513, arrived in April 1952, and a few months later the base added the 474th Fighter-Bomber Group, which included three squadrons of F-84 fighters, bringing the total size of the operation to one wing, one group, and a Marine fighter squadron. The 474th bombed and strafed such targets as bunkers, troops, artillery positions, bridges, vehicles, airfields, and power plants, and sometimes escorted bombers that attacked munitions factories and other objectives.

In April 1953, the 474th Fighter-Bomber Group returned to the United States and was replaced by the 49th Fighter-Bomber Wing, also flying the F-84.

During the Korean War, the large number of locations used for bases and the similarity of some geographical names prompted the Air Force to use alphanumeric identifiers for bases in addition to their proper designations. Under this system, each base in Korea received a "K number," simplifying positive identification when referring to the various bases. Kunsan received the number K-8, while Osan Air Base was also known as K-55.

Cold War

After hostilities ceased, the base began to draw down. The F-84 forces of the 49th Fighter-Bomber Wing left in November 1953, and by October 1954 the host unit of the base, the 3rd Bombardment Wing, also departed. This left the base with a much-reduced mission. From 1953-1954, the 808th and 841st Aviation Engineering Battalions constructed what is today’s main runway. For the next several years Kunsan merely hosted periodic rotations of fighter and light bomber squadrons, with base facilities maintained and operated by an air base group. In 1957 and 1958, the 6170th Air Base Group began to upgrade base facilities, increasing the runway from 5,000 to 9,000 feet and building new dormitories.

Until the late 1960's, though, Kunsan remained relatively dormant, hosting temporary deployments of flying units and serving as a safe haven base for aircraft evacuated from Okinawa and Guam during typhoons. In 1965, the Republic of Korea Air Force assigned a squadron of F-86 fighters to the base. This ROKAF unit was the only permanently assigned flying contingent at Kunsan until after the Pueblo incident in 1968.

McDonnell Douglas F-4E-34-MC Phantom Serial 67-0231 of the 16th Tactical Fighter Squadron on TDY from Eglin AFB Florida - Attached to 354th TFW at Kusan AB South Korea - 1 April 1970. In 1980, this aircraft was sold to the Egyptian Air Force.

The 354th Tactical Fighter Wing, flying the F-100 Super Sabre, arrived at Kunsan in July 1968, as part of the buildup of forces in Korea in the wake of the February 1968 seizure of the USS Pueblo by the North Koreans. In 1969 the wing began a transition from the F-100 to the F-4 Phantom. The 354th remained until June 1970, when the base again returned to hosting temporary deployments, such as the four-month deployment of the 54th Tactical Fighter Wing from June through October 1970.

The 3rd Tactical Fighter Wing, previously known as the 3rd Bombardment Wing, stationed at Kunsan in the early 1950's, arrived in March 1971 to assume control of the base. Like the 354th and 54th, the 3rd Tactical Fighter Wing flew the F-4 Phantom. When it first arrived in May, the wing contained the 35th and 36th Tactical Fighter Squadrons. In September, the 80th Tactical Fighter Squadron replaced the 36th.

In September 1974 the 8th Tactical Fighter Wing, the "Wolf Pack," was transferred from Ubon Air Base, Thailand to replace the 3rd at Kunsan. The move took place in name only, as the 8th moved without personnel or equipment, absorbing all assets of the 3rd Tactical Fighter Wing. This included the two flying squadrons, which continued to operate as the 35th and 80th Tactical Fighter Squadrons, reuniting the wing with two of its original squadrons.

Since then, the 8th has continued to serve as host unit of Kunsan Air Base, continually improving the base’s facilities over the years.

Kunsan Air Base Emblem Gallery

See also

References

Some of the text in this article was taken from pages on the Kunsan Air Base website, which as a work of the U.S. Government is presumed to be a public domain resource. That information was supplemented by:

  • Endicott, Judy G. (1999) Active Air Force wings as of 1 October 1995; USAF active flying, space, and missile squadrons as of 1 October 1995. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. CD-ROM.
  • Fletcher, Harry R. (1989) Air Force Bases Volume II, Active Air Force Bases outside the United States of America on 17 September 1982. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0912799536
  • Maurer, Maurer (1983). Air Force Combat Units Of World War II. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0892010924.
  • Ravenstein, Charles A. (1984). Air Force Combat Wings Lineage and Honors Histories 1947-1977. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0912799129.
  • Rogers, Brian (2005). United States Air Force Unit Designations Since 1978. Hinkley, England: Midland Publications. ISBN 1-85780-197-0.
  • Thompson, Warren (2000). B-26 Invader Units over Korea. Osprey Publishing ISBN 1841760803
  • Thompson, Warren (2001). F-80 Shooting Star Units over Korea. Osprey Publishing ISBN 1841762253

External links

35°55′N 126°37′E / 35.917°N 126.617°E / 35.917; 126.617