366th Operations Group
The 366th Operations Group is the flying component of the 366th Fighter Wing, assigned to the United States Air Force Air Combat Command. The group is stationed at Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho.
Mission
The group is responsible for planning, operations, intelligence, weapons training, and airfield services for six squadrons assigned to the 366th Fighter Wing. It develops flying airspace and range schedules for more than 20,000 flying hours and 13,000 sorties annually. It also maintains combat readiness for short-notice worldwide Air Expeditionary Force and contingency operations.Assigned Units
The 366th Operations Group comprises six squadrons: the 390th Electronic Combat Squadron, 389th, 391st and 428th Fighter Squadrons, 366th Operations Support Squadron and 266th Range Squadron.- 266th Range Squadron
- 366th Operations Support Squadron
- 389th Fighter Squadron
- 390th Electronic Combat Squadron
- 391st Fighter Squadron
- 428th Fighter Squadron
History
World War II
Group trained in P-47s in preparation for overseas duty. Entered combat from England in March 1944 with fighter sweeps over the Bayeux-Saint-Aubin area of France. Participated in attacks on targets in France, Belgium, and Germany in preparation for the invasion of the Continent. Flew fighter sweeps over Normandy on 6 June 1944; targets included motor vehicle convoys, buildings, and gun emplacements. Moved to the Continent soon after D-Day. Received a DUC for three missions flown in support of ground forces on 11 July 1944: on a mission to destroy pillboxes near St. Lo, Normandy, France, discovered and destroyed portion of an enemy tank column unknown to Allied infantry; after rearming, the group returned to attack the tank column and prevented the enemy from accomplishing their mission. During the third mission, despite heavy rainfall, successfully attacked another Panzer battalion from minimum altitude. Group also supported Allied ground forces during the breakthrough at St. Lo in July 1944. In August 1944 attacked tanks, trucks, and troop concentrations as enemy retreated; provided armed reconnaissance for advancing Allied armored columns. During September 1944, attacked flak positions near Eindhoven during airborne landing in the Netherlands; bombed enemy communications and transportation lines in western Germany. Flew armed reconnaissance missions over Battle of the Bulge during December 1944 – January 1945; group flew 600 sorties from 17–27 December 1944 that resulted in the destruction of 43 enemy aircraft, 37 tanks, 328 trucks, 18 armored vehicles, four gun positions, and 15 half-tracks. Provided cover for VII Corps in January 1945 and during action destroyed over 1,000 enemy vehicles. Flew missions against enemy transportation systems including motor vehicles, bridges, trains, railway bridges, and marshalling yards during February and March 1945. Moved to Germany in April 1945. On group's last mission of the war, attacked harbors at Kiel and Flensbury on 3 May 1945. Served in occupational status in Germany from May 1945 until group inactivated.Cold War
The group was reactivated on 1 January 1953 at Alexandria Air Force Base, Louisiana. It replaced the Federalized Iowa Air National Guard 132d Fighter Bomber Group which was being returned to state control after a twenty-one-month period of activation as a result of the Korean War. The group was composed of the 389th, 390th, and 391st Fighter Squadrons. Initially using the former ANG F-51D Mustangs, the 366th received F-86F Sabres which were returned from Korea in the summer of 1953, then received new swept-wing F-84F Thunderstreaks in early 1954. On 18 March 1954, the KB-29 equipped 420th Air Refueling Squadron was attached to the Wing to provide air refueling for the Thunderstreaks. The B-29s were later replaced with KB-50 aerial tankers.The group's squadrons became first TAC units to perform six-month TDY rotations with NATO at Aviano AB, Italy, with rotations continuing until group inactivated in September 1957 when parent wing adopted Tri-Deputate organization and assigned operational squadrons directly to the wing.
Modern era
Upon activation in 1992, assumed control of 366th Wing's operational units. Deployed assets to Southwest Asia throughout the 1990s support to Operation SOUTHERN WATCH; elements participated in Operations PROVIDE COMFORT I and PROVIDE COMFORT II in Turkey. The group's squadrons directly participated in Operations Enduring Freedom and Noble Eagle following the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks.After the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the consolidation of the Air Force's KC-135 and B-1 force led to the reallocation of the unit's bombers and tankers to McConnell AFB, Kansas, and Ellsworth AFB, S.D. The group was also home to F-16CJ Fighter Falcon aircraft from 1992 to March 2007. The F-16CJs left the base in another effort to consolidate from multiple airframes to one at Air Force installations across the country. In 2007, the group became responsible for planning, operations, intelligence, weapons training and airfield services for squadrons assigned to the 366th Wing.
Lineage
- Established as 366th Fighter Group on 24 May 1943
- Redesignated 366th Fighter-Bomber Group on 15 November 1952
- Redesignated 366th Operations Group, and activated, on 1 March 1992
Assignments
- First Air Force, 24 May 1943
- I Fighter Command, 1 June 1943
- Ninth Air Force, 8 January 1944
- IX Air Support Command, 15 February 1944
- IX Tactical Air Command, 5 May 1944
- XXIX Tactical Air Command, 1 October 1944
- IX Tactical Air Command, 22 October 1944
- IX Fighter Command, 28 January 1945
- XIX Tactical Air Command, 28 June 1945
- XII Tactical Air Command, 4 July 1945 – 20 August 1946
- 366th Fighter-Bomber Wing, 1 January 1953 – 25 September 1957
- 366th Wing, 1 March 1992–present
Components
- 22d Air Refueling Squadron: 1 October 1992 – 30 August 2002
- 34th Bomb Squadron: 1 July 1992 – 19 September 2002
- 388th Electronic Combat Squadron: 15 December 2004 – 27 September 2010
- 389th Fighter Squadron : 1 June 1943 – 20 August 1946; 1 January 1953 – 25 September 1957; 11 March 1992–present
- 390th Fighter Squadron : 1 June 1943 – 20 August 1946; 1 January 1953 – 25 September 1957; 1 March 1992–present
- 391st Fighter Squadron : 1 June 1943 – 20 August 1946; 1 January 1953 – 25 September 1957; 11 March 1992–present
- 429th Electronic Combat Squadron: 11 September 1992 – 22 June 1993
- 726th Air Control Squadron: 21 June 1996 – 30 May 2008.
Stations
- Richmond Army Air Base, Virginia, 1 June 1943
- Bluethenthal Field, North Carolina, 9 August 1943
- Richmond Army Air Base, Virginia, 6 December 1943
- Camp Myles Standish, Massachusetts, 17–28 December 1943
- RAF Membury, England, 10 January 1944
- RAF Thruxton, England, 1 March 1944
- Saint-Pierre-du-Mont Airfield, France, 17 June 1944
- Dreux/Vernouillet Airfield, France, 24 August 1944
- Laon/Couvron Airfield, France, 8 September 1944
- Asch Airfield, Belgium, 19 November 1944
- Münster-Handorf Airfield, Germany, 11 April 1945
- AAF Station Bayreuth/Bindlach, Germany, 25 June 1945
- AAF Station Fritzlar, Germany, 14 September 1945 – 20 August 1946
- Alexandria AFB, Louisiana, 1 January 1953 – 25 September 1957
- Mountain Home AFB, Idaho, 1 March 1992–present
Aircraft assigned
- P-47 Thunderbolt, 1943–1946
- F-51 Mustang, 1953
- F-86 Sabre, 1953–1955
- F-84 Thunderjet, 1954–1957
- F-15 Eagle, 1992–present
- F-16 Falcon, 1992 – 2007
- EF-111 Raven, 1992–1993
- KC-135, 1992–2002
- B-52 Stratofortress, 1992–1994
- B-1 Lancer, 1994–2002
- EA-6 Prowler, 2004–2014
- EA-18 Growler, 2014–present
Citations