21st Tactical Air Support Squadron

21st Tactical Air Support Squadron

Emblem of the 21st Tactical Air Support Squadron
Active 1965–1973
Country United States
Branch United States Air Force
Role Forward Air Control
Decorations PUC
AFOUA w/V Device
RVGC w/ Palm

The 21st Tactical Air Support Squadron is an inactive United States Air Force unit of the 2nd Air Division during the Vietnam War; and was organized on 8 May 1965.

History

Assignments and stations

The 21st Tactical Air Support Squadron (21st TASS) was a U.S. Air Force forward air control squadron. It was organized on 8 May 1965 under the initial command of Lieutenant Colonel Jack Martin, and was assigned to the 2nd Air Division and attached to the 6250th Tactical Air Support Group (Provisional) at Pleiku Air Base, but it did not become operational until 1 August 1965. On 8 November 1965, the squadron was reassigned to the 505th Tactical Control Group, which was headquartered at Tan Son Nhut Airport near Saigon. The 505th provided administrative and logistical support to the 21st. In September 1966 the 21st was relocated to Nha Trang Air Base where it was attached to the 14th Air Commando Wing. On 8 December 1966, the 21st was reassigned the 504th Tactical Air Support Group. The headquarters for the squadron remained at Nha Trang until October 1969 when it was moved to Cam Ranh Bay Air Base. Its final move was back to the 377th Air Base Wing at Tan Son Nhut on 15 March 1972.[1][2][3]

0–1 Bird Dog of the 21st Tactical Air Support Squadron at Pleiku Air Base, South Vietnam, 1968/69 (USAF photo).

The 21 TASS was inactivated on 23 February 1973 at Tan Son Nhut, SVN. Aircraft losses while engaged in combat were 18 O-1E, 14 O-1F, 9 O-1G, 16 O-2A, and 1 OV-10A.[2] Air crew casualties over the course of the war totaled at least 29 KIA, one captured and held POW, and one injured in a flying accident.[4]

Vietnam War

The mission of the 21st TASS was to provide visual reconnaissance and airborne forward air control support of tactical offensive operations. The area of operations assigned to the 21st was II Corps, a large and geographically mixed section of Vietnam, and at various times detachments of the squadron operated from a number of different sites within II Corps.

The squadron suffered its first combat loss, O-1F #56-6218, even before it became operational, when Captain Francis Geiger and his VNAF observer, Lieutenant Hiep, were shot down by small arms fire and killed in action on 22 July 1965. Within the next 30 days, two additional O-1’s were lost due to enemy action. Over the course of the war, the 21st played a key role in a number of major engagements, and countless small actions. It was an important factor in the effort to save the Special Forces Camp at Duc Co, from 3 to 17 August 1965 only a few months after its activation. Other major engagements include the lifting of the siege of Plei Me in October 1965 (the largest engagement with the Viet Cong up to that point in the war). These actions occurred throughout the II Corps area. Time and again ground commanders praised the FACs for directing strikes so accurately that the ground forces were saved from being overrun.[5]

Hilliard A. Wilbanks' Medal of Honor

0-2A Skymaster of the 21st Tactical Air Support Squadron – Pleiku Air Base, South Vietnam 1968/69 (USAF photo).

Capt. Hilliard A. Wilbanks, a 21st TASS pilot, was awarded the Medal of Honor for actions near Dalat, RVN on 24 February 1967. By that time he had already flown 487 combat missions, and had earned the Distinguished Flying Cross and 17 Air Medals. He was within two months of returning home to his wife and four small children when he was killed in action.[6]

A 21st TASS OV-10A firing phosphorus rockets, in 1989.

Unit awards

Unit awards earned while in Vietnam were: Five Presidential Unit Citations for the periods 1 August 65 -1 February 66; 2 February 66 -28 February 67; 1 August 68 to 31 August 69; 1 January 70 -31 December 70; and 30 January 71-31 December 71; the Air Force Outstanding Unit Award with ‘V’ device for valor, 15 March 72-21 February 73; and the Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm, 1 April 66 – 28 January 73.[2]

References

Endnotes

  1. "A Dangerous Business: Forward Air Control in Southeast Asia". National Museum of the US Air Force. 18 May 2015. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 FAC0Assoc.org: 21st TASS
  3. "377th Air Base Wing Lineage". Kirtland Air Force Base. 13 November 2006. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
  4. Hobson 2001, pp. 51, 60, 73, 81, 87, 89, 93, 97, 117, 128, 133, 141, 149, 152, 167, 191, 205, 208, 212, 218, 225, 230, 237.
  5. Kimbrough, Kenneth L. "505th Tactical Control Group". squawk–flash.org. Archived from the original on 12 May 2014. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
  6. "Capt. Hilliard A. Wilbanks". United States Air Force. Archived from the original on 16 October 2012. Retrieved 1 October 2016.

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