Air Force Reserve Command

Air Force Reserve Command

Headquarters, Air Force Reserve Command, Robins Air Force Base, Georgia
Active 1 August 1968 – 17 February 1997 (as: Air Force Reserve)
17 February 1997–present (as: Air Force Reserve Command)
Country  United States
Branch  United States Air Force
Type Major Command
Role Air Reserve Component (ARC)
Size Nearly 70,000 personnel
Garrison/HQ Robins Air Force Base, Georgia
Nickname AFRC
Commanders
Current
commander
Lt Gen James F. Jackson
Insignia
Air Force Reserve Command Emblem
Aircraft flown
Attack A-10 Thunderbolt II
F-15E Strike Eagle
MQ-1 Predator (UAS)
Bomber B-52H Stratofortress
Electronic
warfare
E-3 Sentry
Fighter F-22 Raptor
F-16 Fighting Falcon
F-15E Strike Eagle
Multirole helicopter HH-60G Pave Hawk
Reconnaissance U-28
RQ-4 Global Hawk (UAS)
Trainer T-1 Jayhawk
T-6 Texan II
T-38 Talon
Transport C-5 Galaxy
C-17 Globemaster III
C-40 Clipper
HC-130P Combat King
C-130 Hercules
WC-130 Hurricane Hunter
C-145 Skytruck
Tanker KC-10 Extender
KC-135 Stratotanker

The Air Force Reserve Command (AFRC) is a Major Command (MAJCOM) of the United States Air Force, with its headquarters stationed at Robins Air Force Base, Georgia. It is the federally controlled Air Reserve Component (ARC) of the U.S. Air Force, consisting of duly appointed commissioned officers and enlisted airmen.

AFRC supports the Air Force mission to defend the United States through the control and exploitation of air and space by supporting Global Engagement. AFRC also plays an integral role in the day-to-day Air Force mission and is not strictly a force held in reserve for possible war or contingency operations.

Overview

The federal reserve component of the United States Air Force, AFRC has approximately 450 aircraft assigned for which it has sole control, as well as access to several hundred additional active duty USAF aircraft via AFRC "Associate" wings that are collocated with active duty Air Force wings, sharing access to those aircraft. The inventory includes the latest, most capable models of aircraft that are also assigned to the active-duty U.S. Air Force. On any given day, 99 percent of AFRC's aircraft are mission-ready and able to deploy within 72 hours.[1] In addition to flying units, AFRC has numerous ground organizations ranging from medical units to civil engineers, intelligence and space operations, and security forces, just to name a few.

The purpose of the Air Force Reserve as derived from Title 10 United States Code is to:

Provide combat-ready units and individuals for active duty whenever there are not enough trained units and people in the Regular component of the Air Force to perform any national security mission.

Unlike the Air National Guard, the Air Force Reserve is strictly a "federal" reserve component under Title 10 of the United States Code (Title 10 USC) and operates as an independent Major Command (MAJCOM), e.g., Air Force Reserve Command (AFRC). In combination with the Air National Guard, the Air Force Reserve comprises the other half of what is known as the Air Reserve Component (ARC) of the United States Air Force. AFRC forces are under the administrative control (ADCON) of the Commander, Air Force Reserve Command (AFRC/CC). When activated or mobilized (e.g., under 10 U.S.C. §§ 12301(a), 12302, 12304, 12304a, or 12304b), combatant command authority (COCOM) transfers to the combatant commander to which the forces are assigned/attached and operational control (OPCON) transfers to the operational chain of command established by that commander. In addition, AFRC forces are also assigned to deployable Air Expeditionary Forces (AEFs) and are subject to deployment tasking orders along with their active duty Regular Air Force and part-time Air National Guard counterparts in their assigned deployment cycle window.

Air Force Reservists are on duty across the nation and around the world, either at their home base or deployed as part of the Air Expeditionary Forces. In addition to its role as a proven and respected combat force, the Air Force Reserve is also involved in international humanitarian relief missions, from repairing roads and schools to airlifting supplies. At the request of local, state or federal agencies, the Air Force Reserve also conducts aerial spray missions as well as, in combination with the Air National Guard, forest fire and wildfire suppression missions using specially equipped C-130 Hercules [1] aircraft using the Modular Airborne FireFighting System (MAFFS).

The Air Force Reserve also contains other specialized capabilities not found in regular active duty Air Force units. For example, in addition to aerial spraying and MAFFS, the Air Force Reserve maintains the Air Force's sole remaining aerial weather reconnaissance capability, to include hurricane penetration by its own WC-130J aircraft, augmenting the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) WP-8D fleet. Like their Air National Guard counterparts, the Air Force Reserve also supports counter-narcotics detection and interdiction efforts in coordination with the U.S. Coast Guard.[1][2]

Reserve categories

There are several categories of service in the Air Force Reserve. Most Air Force Reservists are part-time "Traditional Reservists" (TR) who serve in the Unit Program, in which they are required to report for duty with their parent Air Force Reserve Command unit, typically a wing, group or squadron, at least one weekend a month and an additional two weeks a year. However, many Air Force Reservists, especially those in an active flying status, serve well in excess of this minimum duty requirement, often in excess of 120 man-days a year.[3]

A smaller but equally important category of TR is the "Individual Mobilization Augmentee" (IMA). IMAs are part-time Air Force Reservists who are assigned to active duty Air Force units and organizations, combat support agencies, Unified Combatant Commands and the Joint Staff to do jobs that are essential in wartime and/or during contingency operations, but do not require full-time manning during times of peace. They report for duty a minimum of two days a month and twelve additional days a year, but like their Unit Program counterparts, many IMAs serve well in excess of the minimum military duty requirement.[3]

A small number of Reservists serve limited tours of active duty, usually at headquarters staff level, in the joint combatant commands, or in other special assignments. Their job is to bring Air Force Reserve expertise to the planning and decision-making processes at senior levels within the Air Force, other services and Unified Combatant Commands.[3]

Like the Air National Guard, the Air Force Reserve Command also requires two categories of full-time personnel to perform functions that require full-time manning. These full-time positions are filled via the same two programs as employed by the Air National Guard: the Active Guard and Reserve (AGR) and Air Reserve Technician (ART) programs.[3]

Air Force Reservists who become members of the "Active Guard and Reserve" (AGR) receive full active duty pay and benefits just like active duty members of any branch of the armed forces. The majority of AGRs are former TRs and they serve four-year controlled tours of special duty that can be renewed. Many AGRs serve with operational AFRC flying and non-flying wings and groups; at active and reserve numbered air forces; on the staffs of other USAF Major Commands (MAJCOMs), Field Operating Agencies (FOAs) and Direct Reporting Units (DRUs); on the Air Staff at Headquarters, U.S. Air Force (HAF); on the staffs of Unified Combatant Commands; on the Joint Staff and in the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD). AFRC Recruiting is another fields that employs AGR personnel. AGRs also have the option with good performance to serve 20 or more years on active duty and receive a retirement after 20 or more years, just like active members of the Regular Air Force.[3]

Another category of Air Force Reservists serving full-time are those in the "Air Reserve Technician Program" (ART). ARTs are accessed from either the active duty Regular Air Force, the AGR program, Traditional Guardsmen (TG) in the Air National Guard, or TRs in the Air Force Reserve. ARTs carry a dual status, working for the Air Force as both full-time civil service employees and as uniformed military members in the same AFRC units where they work as Department of the Air Force Civilians (DAFC), performing the same job duties. Although "technically" civil servants part of the time, all ART officers must maintain a reserve commission on the Reserve Active Status List as a TR and all ART enlisted personnel must maintain a current reserve enlistment as a TR as a precondition for both hiring and continued career employment as an ART. In addition, all ART officers and ART enlisted personnel wear their uniforms and utilize their rank titles at all times when on duty, regardless if they are in a DAFC status or in a drilling or active duty military status. Most ART personnel are assigned to operational AFRC flying wings, groups and squadrons in various operational flying, aircraft maintenance and other support positions and functions, up to and including wing commander. Because ARTs are not eligible for DAFC retirement until reaching age 60, and because a condition of their employment as an ART is contingent upon their maintaining an active reserve military status until reaching age 60, ARTs are not subject to the same maximum years of service limitations by pay grade that impact non-ART personnel. As such, ART personnel are permitted to remain in uniform until age 60, typically past a point that would otherwise require their retirement from military service based on rank, pay grade and years of service.[3]

Traditional Reservists (TR) are categorized by several criteria in either the Ready Reserve, Standby Reserve, Inactive Ready Reserve or Retired Reserve:[3]

The Ready Reserve is made up of approximately 74,000 trained Reservists who may be recalled to active duty to augment active forces in time of war, contingency operations, or other national emergency. This category also includes all full-time ART personnel. These Air Force Reservists, predominantly assigned to the Unit Program or as IMAs, are combat ready and can deploy to anywhere in the world in seventy-two hours.[3]
The Standby Reserve includes Reservists whose civilian jobs are considered key to national defense or who have temporary disability or personal hardship. Most Standby Reservists do not train, are not assigned to units and are typically not eligible for promotion/advancement.[3]
These Reservists no longer train with combat ready Reserve units, but are qualified in their fields and eligible to be recalled in the event of a national emergency.[3]
There is a small group of these IRR Air Force Reservists labeled as PIRR, or Participating IRR. Personnel in the PIRR receive points toward military retirement, but not drill pay or Annual Training with pay and are under what the Air Force Reserve (and Air National Guard) designates as Category E (CAT E) status. Some PIRR members will continue to participate with existing Air Force Reserve units in a non-pay status or with active duty Air Force organizations or Unified Combatant Commands where they may be eligible to perform Active Duty for Training (ADT), Active Duty for Operational Support (ADOS), Active Duty Special Work (ADSW) ... also known as "mandays" ... or voluntary Mobilization to Active Duty (MOB) with full pay and allowances. CAT E Air Force Reservists also include over 1,000 USAF Academy Liaison Officers (ALOs) and Civil Air Patrol Reserve Liaison Officers (RLOs), as well as some Air Force chaplains and a few other positions that require military duty, but not a fixed schedule. These CAT E personnel can also earn active duty mandays with pay just like CAT A and B reservists, but on a more limited basis.[3]
The Retired Reserve is made up of retired officers and retired enlisted personnel who receive pay after retiring from active duty or from the Reserve Component, or are Reservists awaiting retirement pay at age 60, although exceptions are made for certain reservists mobilized to active duty since 11 Sep 2001 who may receive retirement pay earlier on a sliding scale between ages 58 and 60. The TRICARE Retiree Dental Care Program (TRDP) is also authorized for all Retired Reserve members and their fmilies, however, medical care under TRICARE is still delayed for the retiree and eligible family members until the retiree reaches age 60.[3]

Associate Program

A USAF Associate Unit is a unit where active duty, Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard members combine forces and missions using "Total Force" concept integration.[4] The Air Force Reserve Command Associate Program provides trained crews and maintenance personnel for active-duty owned aircraft and space operations. This unique program pairs a Reserve unit with an active-duty unit to share a single set of aircraft and rests on the idea that there are more operational requirements than there are manpower to fulfill them. The Associate Reserve program is based on providing manpower to complement the Total Force.

Previously, an associate unit was one where the active duty (typically a wing level organization) owned the aircraft and the Air Force Reserve or Air National Guard wing or group co-located with the active duty unit, providing only manpower. To take advantage of the synergies and aircraft, active duty units are now being stood up at what were previously Air Force Reserve Command or Air National Guard locations, where the Air Reserve Component organization technically "owns" the aircraft, but share them with an active duty squadron, group or wing that provides additional manning. This enables the Air Force to be more productive in meeting the global demands for primarily the Mobility Air Forces (MAF), the Air Force's cargo and aerial refueling aircraft, although the concept is now being extended to the Combat Air Forces (CAF), the Air Force's fighter, bomber, reconnaissance, rescue and special operations aircraft, as well.[4] The result is a more cost-effective way to meet increasing mission requirements.

Associate unit reservists fly the largest Air Mobility Command (AMC) airlifters, the C-5 Galaxy, and the newest AMC global airlifter, the C-17 Globemaster III, with Air Force Reserve associate crews accounting for nearly 50 percent of the Air Force's C-5 and C-17 air crew capability. AFRC also provides aerial refueling capability with aircrews operating AMC KC-10 Extenders in associate units and KC-135 Stratotankers in both associate and Air Reserve Component air mobility wings, air refueling wings and air refueling groups. Associate KC-10 units provide 50 percent of the KC-10 crews and contribute 50 percent to the maintenance force. Reservists also contribute about 13 percent of the KC-135 aerial refueling requirements.[3] In another alignment with AMC, more than 9,100 Air Force Reservists train in the C-130 Hercules airlift mission in a variety of aircrew, aircraft maintenance and support skills as both stand alone AFRC units and . In wartime, AFRC provides 23 percent of Air Force's C-130 theater airlift force, with nearly half of the Air Force Reserve's airlift units flying their own unit assigned C-130 Hercules aircraft, several of which have now integrated Active Associate units from the Regular Air Force. The C-130's speed, range, load-carrying characteristics and capability to operate under difficult terrain conditions make it an invaluable and versatile aircraft, strong enough to deliver its cargo on unimproved landing strips. Other AMC-aligned AFRC missions involve aeromedical evacuation and special air support operations.[3] The Air Force Reserve also operates the WC-130 Hurricane Hunter in the weather reconnaissance mission.

Air Combat Command (ACC) F-22A Raptor air dominance fighters, F-16 Fighting Falcon and F-15E Strike Eagle multipurpose fighters, and A-10 Thunderbolt II ground attack aircraft are jointly operated by ACC active duty personnel and AFRC aircrews via Associate units, as well as F-16 and A-10 aircraft in stand-alone AFRC fighter wings. AFRC's HC-130 and HH-60 combat search and rescue (CSAR) are currently assigned to stand-alone flying units that are operationally aligned with ACC, but are being considered for incorporation of Active Associate units into their organizational structure. Several AFRC Air and Space Operations Centers (AOCs) also operate as stand alone units or in associate augmentation to ACC, AMC, Pacific Air Forces (PACAF) and U.S. Air Forces in Europe (USAFE) AOCs operating the AN/USQ-163 Falconer AOC weapons system.

In tandem with Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC), AFRC operated the MC-130E Combat Talon I aircraft until 2013 and currently operates the C-145A Skytruck and U-28, providing Formal Training Unit (FTU) functions for the active duty Air Force and the Air Force Reserve.

In associate programs with the Air Education and Training Command (AETC), AFRC support undergraduate pilot training by providing instructor pilots in the T-6 Texan II, T-38 Talon and T-1 Jayhawk.

AFRC Space Operations and Cyber Operations associate units aligned with Air Force Space Command (AFSPC) also operate Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP), Defense Support Program (DSP) and Global Positioning System (GPS) Satellites as well as various cyber warfare systems.[3]

Units

Nearly 70,000 reservists are assigned to specific Air Force Reserve units.[5] These are the people who are obligated to report for duty for a minimum one weekend each month and two weeks of annual training a year, with most performing many additional days of military duty. Reserve aircrews, for example, average more than 120 military duty days a year, often flying in support of national objectives at home and around the world. Air Reserve Technicians (ARTs), the special group of reservists who work as Air Force civil service employees during the week in the same jobs they hold as reservists on drill weekends and active duty periods, provide a degree of continuity that serves to make the Air Force Reserve a relevant combat force. ARTs are the full-time backbone of the unit training program, providing day-to-day leadership, administrative and logistical support, and operational continuity for their units. More than 9,500 reservists, over 15 percent of the force, serve full-time as ARTs.[5]

Air Force Reserve Command consists of three Numbered Air Forces:[6]

Fourth Air Force
March Air Reserve Base, California
Units are operationally gained by Air Mobility Command[6][7]

Associate unit with 437th Airlift Wing
Joint Base Charleston, South Carolina
Associate unit with 60th Air Mobility Wing
Travis Air Force Base, California
Lackland AFB / Kelly Field Annex, Joint Base San Antonio, Texas
Includes C-5 Formal Training Unit (FTU) mission under AETC
Grissom Air Reserve Base, Indiana
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio
Associate unit with 62d Airlift Wing
McChord Field, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington
March Air Reserve Base, California
1 of 2 air refueling sqdns is an Active Associate unit with the 92d Air Refueling Wing
Fairchild Air Force Base, Washington.
Westover Air Reserve Base, Massachusetts
Joint Base Andrews, Maryland

Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma
Associate unit with 436th Airlift Wing
Dover Air Force Base, Delaware
Associate unit with 305th Air Mobility Wing
Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, New Jersey
Hickam Field, Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii
Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, North Carolina
Associate unit with 6th Air Mobility Wing
MacDill Air Force Base, Florida
Associate unit with 22d Air Refueling Wing
McConnell Air Force Base, Kansas
Associate unit with 375th Air Mobility Wing
Scott Air Force Base, Illinois

Tenth Air Force
Naval Air Station Fort Worth Joint Reserve Base, Texas
Unless otherwise noted, units are operationally gained by Air Combat Command[6][8]

Associate Unit with the 325th Fighter Wing
Tyndall Air Force Base, Florida
GSU of the 301st Fighter Wing, NAS JRB Fort Worth, Texas
Carswell Field, Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Fort Worth, Texas
Associate unit with 2d Bomb Wing
(Operationally gained by Air Force Global Strike Command)
Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana
Associate unit with 50th Space Wing
(Operationally gained by Air Force Space Command)
Schriever Air Force Base, Colorado
Associate unit with 12th Flying Training Wing
(Operationally gained by Air Education and Training Command)
Randolph Field, Joint Base San Antonio, Texas
Associate unit with 4th Fighter Wing
Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, North Carolina
Associate unit with 388th Fighter Wing
Hill Air Force Base, Utah
  • 442d Fighter Wing, (A-10A)
Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri
Associate unit with 23d Wing
Moody Air Force Base, Georgia
Associate unit with 3d Wing
(Operationally gained by Pacific Air Forces)
Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska
  • 482d Fighter Wing, (F-16C/D)
Homestead Air Reserve Base, Florida

Associate unit with 552d Air Control Wing
Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma
(Operationally gained by Air Force Special Operations Command)
Associate unit with 1st Special Operations Wing
Duke Field, Florida
Patrick Air Force Base, Florida
  • 926th Group, (F-22A, F-15B/C, F-16C/D, A-10A, MQ-1, MQ-9)
Associate unit with 57th Wing (706th Fighter Squadron)
Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada
Associate unit with the 432d Wing (78th Attack Squadron)
Creech Air Force Base, Nevada
Associate unit with the 53d Wing (84th Test and Evaluation Squadron)
Eglin Air Force Base, Florida
Associate unit with the 527th Space Aggressor Squadron (26th Space Aggressor Squadron) (AFSPC)
(Operationally gained by Air Force Space Command)
Schriever Air Force Base, Colorado
Associate unit with 9th Reconnaissance Wing
Beale Air Force Base, California
GSU of the 920th Rescue Wing, Patrick AFB, FL
Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona
Associate unit with 56th Fighter Wing
(Operationally gained by Air Education and Training Command)
Luke Air Force Base, Arizona
GSU of the 944th Fighter Wing
Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona
  • 610th Regional Support Group
Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Fort Worth, Texas[9]

Twenty-Second Air Force
Dobbins Air Reserve Base, Georgia
Units are operationally gained by Air Mobility Command[6][10]

Dobbins Air Reserve Base, Georgia
Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado
Keesler Air Force Base, Mississippi
Pope Field, North Carolina

Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama
Youngstown-Warren Air Reserve Station, Ohio
Pittsburgh IAP Air Reserve Station, Pennsylvania
Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station, New York
Minneapolis-St Paul Joint Air Reserve Station, Minnesota

History

Total Force concept

The Air Force Reserve (AFRES) was created as a separate operating agency (SOA) and replaced a major command – Continental Air Command – which inactivated in August 1968. Upon activation, AFRES assumed command of all personnel, equipment and aircraft previously assigned to ConAC.[6]

As the 1970s unfolded, the challenge then was to find the right mix of forces for mission effectiveness. Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird adopted the Total Force concept in August 1970 with Secretary of Defense James Schlesinger declaring it policy in 1973.[11]

With the implementation of the Total Force Policy, the Air Force Reserve became a multi-mission force, flying the same modern aircraft as the active Air Force. Mobilization planning and operational evaluation were integrated with the corresponding active duty functions. With the same equipment and budget authority, the Air Force Reserve was held to the same readiness standards and inspections as regular Air Force units. Special operations, air refueling, weather reconnaissance, and, once again, fighter missions were added to the airlift, rescue, and mission support roles performed by the Air Force Reserve. The associate concept soon expanded to include the C-5 Galaxy.[11]

Cold War era

Air Force Reserve participation in Air Force exercises and deployments perfected its mobility capabilities as demonstrated throughout the seventies, most notably during the Israeli Airlift of 1973, some 630 crewmembers volunteered for Middle East missions to include flying into Ben Gurion Airport, Tel Aviv while another 1,590 Reservists performed missions worldwide, freeing up more active crews for airlift.[11]

The 1980s saw the modernization and expansion of the Air Force Reserve program. KC-10 Extenders joined the associate force in 1981, expanding its air refueling capability. Fighter units obtained the more modern A-10 Thunderbolt II ground support aircraft and F-4 Phantom IIs, and in 1984, the Air Force Reserve received its first F-16A Fighting Falcon. Operationally, the Air Force Reserve participated in Operation Urgent Fury, the return of American students from Grenada in 1983, performed air refuelings of F-111 bombers during the El Dorado Canyon raid on Libyan-sponsored terrorists in 1986, and acted as a full partner in Operation Just Cause which ousted Panama's General Manuel Noriega in 1989–1990. Air Force Reservists also supported humanitarian and disaster relief efforts, including resupply and evacuation missions in the aftermath of 1989's Hurricane Hugo. The Reserve's continual volunteering allayed the concerns of those who believed the Air Force Reserve would not be available when really needed.[11]

Middle East and Yugoslavian operations

Air Force Reserve airlift and tanker crews were flying within days of Saddam Hussein's Invasion of Kuwait in August 1990. When ground operations commenced as part of Operation Desert Storm, Air Force Reserve A-10s from the New Orleans 926th Tactical Fighter Group operated close to the front lines along with Air Force Reserve special operations and rescue forces. A Reservist scored the first-ever A-10 air-to-air kill. When Operations Desert Shield/Storm ended, the air Force Reserve counted 23,500 Reservists mobilized with another 15,000 serving in a volunteer capacity.[12]

The Air Force Reserve had become indistinguishable from the active force in capability; there was no difference between an Air Force Reserve pilot and an active duty pilot, or a boom operator, or loadmaster.[12]

In the aftermath of Desert Storm, Air Force Reservists continued to serve and were heavily involved in both Operation Northern Watch and Operation Southern Watch during the 1990s, enforcing the United Nations-mandated no-fly zones over northern and southern Iraq as well as in humanitarian relief missions during Operation Provide Comfort to assist uprooted Iraqi Kurds. For over six years, Air Force Reserve C-130s performed these Provide Comfort missions on a rotational basis while F-16s and rescue HH-60 Pave Hawks deployed to Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, for the no-fly operations. In 1993, when tensions mounted in Bosnia, Air Force Reserve tanker and fighter units participated in enforcing the Operation Deny Flight no-fly zone while airlift units ensured logistical resupply.[12]

Following Operation DESERT STORM in 1991, the Air Force increasingly relied on its Air Reserve Component, both AFRC and ANG, for a "steady state" of daily assistance, whether it was flying airlift channel; providing fighter, tanker and theater airlift support of "no fly" zone enforcement operations in Southwest Asia; aerial fire fighting; aerial spray; hurricane hunter missions; military air/sea rescue support of NASA Space Shuttle operations; or providing highly skilled medical and aeromedical personnel. As a result, Congress sought to clarify the organizational placement of the Air Force Reserve (AFRES) in the larger active duty Air Force organizational structure. Accordingly, in February 1997, the Air Force Reserve (AFRES) officially became the Air Force Reserve Command (AFRC), the Air Force's ninth major command.[12]

Between March and September 1999, Air Force Reservists volunteered and were also mobilized for Operation Allied Force operations over Serbia and Kosovo. The involuntary recall marked the ninth time the Air Force had requested a mobilization of Air Force Reserve units and personnel since 1950. In summary, Reservists provided 150,000 mandays of support that spanned the spectrum of Air Force missions. The Air Force Reserve once again proved itself as an adaptable and capable force, ready to perform the full range of Air Force operations on an integrated and daily basis in sync with the new Air and Space Expeditionary Task Force (AEF) concepts.[12]

Global War on Terrorism

When terrorists attacked the United States on 11 September 2001, Air Force Reservists responded in full measure. Air Force Reserve F-16 Fighting Falcon fighters flew Combat air patrols (CAPs) protecting America's cities while AFRC KC-135 Stratotankers and E-3 Sentry AWACs aircraft supported with air refuelings and security. In October 2001, the United States initiated the Global War on Terrorism as military forces entered Afghanistan to combat the Taliban in Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF). Air Force Reserve special operations MC-130 Combat Talon aircraft became the first fixed-wing aircraft to penetrate Afghan airspace while Air Force Reserve F-16 crews, already deployed in theater for Operation Southern Watch, performed the first combat missions.[13]

Air Force Reservists made significant contributions by flying close air support, combat delivery, rescue, strategic airlift, and air refueling missions supporting operations in Afghanistan. They also provided B-52 Stratofortress, special operations, aeromedical, security forces, and civil engineering support. Air Force Reserve A-10s, HH-60s and C-130 Hercules continue to perform rotational tours in Afghanistan, and Air Force Reservists have been instrumental in building the Afghan National Army Air Corps.[13]

When Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF), the war against Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq began in March 2003, Air Force Reserve combat-ready A-10, B-52, and F-16 aircrews flew numerous strike operations during the first hours of engagement and performed special operations and rescue missions. Air Reserve rescue personnel were among the first into Tallil Air Base as Reserve A-10s provided close air support. Part of the lead tanker force, Reserve tankers offloaded more than 21 million pounds of fuel to more than 1,000 aircraft. In late March 2003, fifteen C-17 Globemaster III Reserve associate crews supported the C-17 airdrop, which opened up the Northern Front in Iraq.[13]

Additionally, Reservists supported Air Force Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) missions and space-based operations in Southwest Asia, providing essential data to battlefield commanders. During the combat phase (19 March-1 May) of OIF, Air Force Reserve aircraft and crews flew nearly 162,000 hours and deployed 70 unit-equipped aircraft in theater while aeromedical personnel provided 45 percent of the Air Force's aeromedical crews that performed 3,108 patient movements.[13]

The Air Force Reserve continues to expand its associate construct across the mission spectrum. Specific examples are the Air Force Reserve 477th Fighter Group associating at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, flying the F-22 Raptor jointly with the PACAF 3d Wing and the active duty associating with the C-40 Clipper-equipped 932d Airlift Wing with the 375th Air Mobility Wing at Scott AFB, Illinois, and the 433d Airlift Wing C-5 Galaxy at Joint Base San Antonio, Texas. On the horizon, associate units will include future weapon systems such as the F-35 Lightning II and the Next-Generation Bomber in the 2020s.[13]

Lineage

Organized on 1 August 1968, assuming reserve assets of Continental Air Command (Inactivated)
Status changed from SOA to an Air Force Direct Reporting Unit (DRU) on 1 July 1978
Status changed from DRU and returned to SOA status on 1 May 1983
Status changed from SOA to an Air Force Field Operating Agency (FOA) on 5 February 1991
Re-designated as Air Force Reserve Command (AFRC) and status changed from a FOA to a Major Command (MAJCOM) of the United States Air Force on 17 February 1997

Assignments

Components

Air Forces

Air Force Reserve’s entire intermediate management structure was realigned effective 8 October 1976. The Reserve Regions were inactivated and succeeded by the reactivated Fourth, Tenth and Fourteenth Air Forces

Regions
(Ellington AFB, TX) Became Responsible for the Fourth and Fifth Region areas
(Dobbins AFB, GA) Became responsible for the First and Third Region areas
(Hamilton AFB, CA) Re-designation of the Sixth Air Force Reserve Region
Support components

Stations

See also

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Air Force Historical Research Agency.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Air Force Reserve Command.