by Staff Sgt. Melanie Holochwost
Air Force Special Operations Command Public Affairs
8/26/2013 - HURLBURT FIELD, Fla. -- The 745th Special Operations Squadron deactivated Aug. 23 during a ceremony here at the Soundside Club.
Lt. Col. Rick Seymour, 745th SOS commander, presided over the ceremony with more than 200 Airmen and guests in attendance.
The squadron originally stood up in 2007 with the mission to organize,
train, equip, and deploy RC-26B aircrew members in direct support of
U.S. Special Operations Command objectives.
"Initially, the 745th SOS was developed to solve a short-term, one-year
capability gap," Seymour said. "However, that temporary mission
eventually turned into a six-year commitment, which is now coming to an
end."
During its history, more than 1,000 outstanding Air National Guard
citizen soldiers nationwide have either volunteered or deployed with
this elite squadron. The accomplishments of these quiet professionals
are unprecedented.
"The 745th SOS is one of the most highly decorated squadrons with more
than 1,500 combat citations awarded," Seymour said. "We were also
awarded the Air Force Outstanding Unit Award on three different
occasions."
With just four aircraft, these guardsmen enabled more than 10,000 combat
sorties totaling approximately 46,000 combat flying hours during
Operations Iraqi Freedom, New Dawn and Enduring Freedom.
The squadron's combat operations were specifically applauded by retired
Army Gen. Stanley McChrystal, who served his last assignment on active
duty as the International Security Assistance Force commander in
Afghanistan.
McChrystal said the 745th SOS is, "...accomplishing extraordinary work, a key component whose impact is immeasurable."
Thursday, September 12, 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment