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| 122nd Fighter Squadron | |
|---|---|
122d Fighter SquadronF-15C Eagle[a] | |
| Active | 1941–1945; 1946–1952; 1953–present |
| Country | United States |
| Allegiance | |
| Branch | |
| Type | Squadron |
| Role | Air Defense |
| Part of | Louisiana Air National Guard |
| Garrison/HQ | Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans, Louisiana |
| Nickname | Bayou Militia[1] |
| Decorations | Distinguished Unit Citation[2] Air Force Outstanding Unit Award[3] |
| Insignia | |
| 122d Fighter Squadron emblem | |
| 122d Fighter-Interceptor Squadron emblem | |
| Tail stripe and code | Purple/Yellow/Green tail stripe "Louisiana" "Bayou Militia."JZ |
The122d Fighter Squadron is a unit of theLouisiana Air National Guard159th Fighter Wing located atNaval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans, Louisiana. The 122d is equipped with theMcDonnell Douglas F-15 Eagle.
The squadron was first established on 30 July 1940 as the122d Observation Squadron. It is one of the29 National Guard observation squadrons of theUnited States Army National Guard formed beforeWorld War II.
The 122nd Observation Squadron, was formed in December 1940 at theNew Orleans Municipal Airport, (currently known as Lakefront Airport). Two months later, with an assortment of 0-38s,Douglas O-46s,North American O-47s,Stinson O-49 Vigilants andNorth American BC-1As to fly, the unit was called to active service at Esler Field in Alexandria, LA, in response to a general military call-up following the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
With the United States' entry into World War II, the 122nd returned to New Orleans in December 1941 to conduct anti-submarine patrol over the Gulf of Mexico. Four missions were flown each day, the aircraft flying in pairs, as far as 100 miles out into the Gulf.
In February 1942, the Squadron was re-equipped withDouglas A-20 Havoc Attack Bombers and was deployed first to England as part ofEighth Air Force, then toNorth Africa as part ofOperation Torch invasion forces in November 1943, assigned toTwelfth Air Force. The 122nd first landed at Fedala, French Morocco and participated in the capture of Casablanca. There, the squadron became part of the 68th Reconnaissance Group.
Several months later the A-20s were replaced byLockheed P-38 Lightnings,Bell P-39 Airacobras andCurtiss P-40 Warhawks, and the unit was reorganized as a branch of the North African Fighter Training Command. In the summer of 1943, the unit was moved to Bertaux, Algeria, where members trained French and American pilots in navigation and general fighting tactics.
The 122nd was reassigned to HQFifteenth Air Force in May 1944 and was re-designated as the 885th Bombardment Squadron (heavy). Equipped with highly modifiedBoeing B-17 Flying Fortresses andConsolidated B-24 Liberators, the unit transported supplies to partisans and engaged in nighttime special operations missions, flying into Occupied France, Fascist Italy, Yugoslavia and other parts ofOccupied Europe supporting partisans and parachuting Allied Agents into enemy territory. Was inactivated in Italy in October 1945.

The wartime885th Bombardment Squadron was redesignated the122nd Bombardment Squadron and was allotted to theLouisiana National Guard on 24 May 1946. It was organized atNew Orleans Municipal Airport, Louisiana and was extended federal recognition on 5 December 1946.
The squadron was equipped withDouglas B-26 Invader light bombers and was allocated to theTenth Air Force,Continental Air Command. The squadron was equipped with 25 aircraft, mostly Douglas B-26C Invaders, but a few "B" models as well, most of the aircraft assigned were newly manufactured at the Douglas plant in Tulsa, Oklahoma at the end of World War II and were never assigned to any wartime units.
During the postwar years, theAir National Guard was almost like a flying country club and a pilot could often show up at the field, check out an aircraft and go flying. However, these units also had regular military exercises that kept up proficiency and in gunnery and bombing contests they would often score better than full-time USAF units. The pilots practiced formation bombing with the B-26s as well as low-level intrusion and strafing. Parts were no problem and many of the maintenance personnel were World War II veterans so readiness was quite high and the planes were often much better maintained than their USAF counterparts.
With the surprise invasion of South Korea on 25 June 1950, and the regular military's complete lack of readiness, the ANG was mobilized into federal active duty. The 122nd Bombardment Squadron was federalized and ordered to active duty on 1 April 1951. By then most of the squadron's aircraft and many of its pilots had already been transferred to active-duty units and sent to Japan as replacement and reinforcing aircraft for B-26 units engaged in combat.
The squadron was transferred toLangley Air Force Base, Virginia as part ofNinth Air Force,Tactical Air Command (TAC). The 122d became part of the 4400th Combat Crew Training Group, a temporary organization formed by TAC with the mission of training pilots in the B-26 for subsequent deployment to the war zone. The 122d was joined by thePennsylvania Air National Guard's117th Bombardment Squadron. On 1 November 1952 the training unit at Langley was inactivated and returned to Louisiana State Control on 1 January 1953.
Following the end of theKorean War, the B-26s began to be withdrawn from active service and replaced by jet-powered equipment such as theMartin B-57 Canberra and theDouglas B-66 Destroyer. The 122nd was re-equipped with former active-duty B-26s and continued training with the versatile light bomber under theTexas Air National Guard's136th Fighter-Bomber Wing, being operationally gained by TAC.

In 1957, the 136th Fighter-Bomber Wing was transferred from TAC toAir Defense Command (ADC), being re-designated as an Air Defense Wing. The B-26s were sent to storage atDavis-Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona (many would be later used in theVietnam War as counter-insurgency aircraft), and the 122nd was redesignated as a Fighter-Interceptor Squadron on 1 June 1957. With the transfer to ADC, the 122nd was initially equipped with some obsoleteLockheed F-80 Shooting Stars|(F-80As modified to F-80C standards) Shooting Stars as an interim aircraft, receivingNorth American F-86D Sabres in late 1957 and lastly the upgraded F-86L Sabre at the end of the year with uprated afterburning engines and new electronics.
With the F-86L, the squadron was selected by ADC to man a runway alert program on full 24-hour basis – with armed jet fighters ready to "scramble" at a moment's notice. This event brought the squadron into the daily combat operational program of the USAF, placing it on "the end of the runway" alongside regular USAF-Air Defense Fighter Squadrons.
In 1958, the 122nd was authorized to expand to a group level, and the159th Fighter Interceptor Group was established on 1 April 1958. The 122nd becoming the group's flying squadron. Other support squadrons assigned into the group were the 159th Materiel Squadron, 159th Air Base Squadron, and the 159th USAF Dispensary.
In July 1960, the 159th converted to theConvair F-102 Delta Daggers. In 1962, the 122nd Fighter-Interceptor Squadron was assigned to theGulfport Combat Readiness Training Center, Mississippi, for six weeks of intensive flying training. Involved were 150 officers and airmen, including support elements from the 159th Consolidated Aircraft Maintenance Squadron, 159th Supply Squadron and 159th Air Base Squadron.

In December 1970 the 159th was transferred from ADC to TAC. ADC was phasing down its manned interceptor force as the chances of a Soviet Bomber attack on the United States seemed remote. The unit was redesignated the122nd Tactical Fighter Squadron and re-equipped withNorth American F-100 Super Sabres. In 1970, the F-100 was still considered a first-line aircraft, and most of the F-100s in the inventory were serving in South Vietnam flying combat missions. The Super Sabres received by the 122d came from the20th Tactical Fighter Wing, which was transitioning to theGeneral Dynamics F-111F. With the conversion to the F-100s, the ADC 24-hour alert status ended and retraining in tactical fighter missions began.
The 122nd flew the F-100s for almost a decade, retiring the aircraft beginning in April 1979 when the 122nd began receivingMcDonnell F-4C Phantom II aircraft from active-duty units. In 1979 ADC was inactivated, with TAC taking over the Continental US Air Defense Mission. The 159th Group was assigned toAir Defense, Tactical Air Command (ADTAC), a named unit at theNumbered Air Force level under TAC. Under ADTAC, the 122nd began to flyair defense missions again with the Phantom II, although the squadron continued to fly tactical fighter training missions with the Phantom.

The Phantoms were ending their service life in the mid-1980s, and in 1986, the F-4Cs were replaced byMcDonnell F-15A Eagles. As the F-15s had no tactical bombing capability at the time, the 122d continued the air defense mission under TAC.
In March 1992 the 159th Tactical Fighter Group became the 159th Fighter Group when the unit adopted the USAF Objective Organization, and the 122nd Fighter Squadron was assigned to the new 159th Operations Group. Later in June, TAC stood down and most of its units transferred to byAir Combat Command. No change in mission was made and the 159th continued in the air defense role.
In the early 1990s, squadron aircraft and personnel were deployed toAviano Air Base, Italy, flying combat missions over the former Yugoslavia during theKosovo War as part ofOperation Allied Force. On 11 October 1995, in accordance with the "one base-one wing" policy, the 159th Fighter Group was redesignated as the 159th Fighter Wing.
In mid-1996, the Air Force, in response to budget cuts, and changing world situations, began experimenting with Air Expeditionary organizations. The Air Expeditionary Force (AEF) concept was developed that would mix Active-Duty, Reserve and Air National Guard elements into a combined force. Instead of entire permanent units deploying as "Provisional" as in the 1991 Gulf War, Expeditionary units are composed of "aviation packages" from several wings, including active-duty Air Force, the Air Force Reserve Command and the Air National Guard, would be married together to carry out the assigned deployment rotation.
In the late 1990s, the122nd Expeditionary Fighter Squadron was activated on several occasions, sending packages of personnel and aircraft toIncirlik Air Base, Turkey, to fly Combat Air Patrol missions over Iraq as part ofOperation Northern Watch. Also the 122nd EFS was activated with a deployment toPrince Sultan Air Base, Saudi Arabia, flying CAP missions over Southern Iraq as part ofOperation Southern Watch.
In response to the 9/11 attacks in 2001, the 122nd Fighter Squadron engaged in Combat Air Patrols over major United States Cities as part ofOperation Noble Eagle (ONE). ONE patrols continued into 2002 before being scaled down.
In 2006, the F-15A models were retired and the 122nd was upgraded to the more capable F-15C Eagle. As part of the globalwar on terrorism, the 122nd EFS has been deployed to supportOperation Iraqi Freedom (OIF);Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) in Afghanistan,Operation New Horizons in Central and South America andOperation New Dawn in Afghanistan.[citation needed]
The most recent deployment of the 122nd Expeditionary Fighter Squadron was completed in October 2012 when the squadron deployed to atAl Dhafra Air Base, United Arab Emirates, and as part of the380th Expeditionary Operations Group, the 122nd EFS flew missions in support of the joint air defense of thePersian Gulf and Operation Enduring Freedom. The mission included providing air superiority in support of national military objectives and flying fighter integration sorties withF-22 Raptors andMcDonnell Douglas F-15E Strike Eagles.
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This article incorporatespublic domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency