| 96th Bomb Squadron | |
|---|---|
96th Bomb Squadron members withB-52H Stratofortress[note 1] | |
| Active | 1917–1946; 1947–1963; 1993–present |
| Country | United States |
| Branch | |
| Type | Squadron |
| Role | Bombardment |
| Part of | Global Strike Command |
| Garrison/HQ | Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana |
| Nickname | Red Devils |
| Colors | Red and Black[citation needed] |
| Mascot | Red Devil |
| Tail Code | "LA" |
| Engagements |
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| Decorations |
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| Insignia | |
| 96th Bomb Squadron emblem(Air Force Historical Research Agency version)[1] | |
| 96th Bomb Sq emblem(The Institute of Heraldry version)[note 2] | |
| 96th Bombardment Squadron emblem(approved 4 March 1924)[2] | |
The96th Bomb Squadron is a unit of theUnited States Air Force2d Operations Group located atBarksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana. The 96th is equipped with theBoeing B-52H Stratofortress.
Formed in August 1917, the 96 BS saw combat on theWorld War IWestern Front, in France. It took part in theSt. Mihiel offensive andMeuse-Argonne offensive. Later, it served with theArmy Air Service andArmy Air Corps in the Inter-War period it participated in Brig. Gen.Billy Mitchell's 1921 off-shore bombing tests and duringWorld War II fought in theNorth African andItalian campaigns. It was a part ofStrategic Air Command during theCold War. Since 1993, the 96th Bomb Squadron has flown the B-52H Stratofortress long-range heavy bomber, which can perform a variety of missions. Today the squadron is engaged in the globalwar on terrorism.[citation needed]
On 12 June 1918 the 96th Aero Squadron were the first Americans to bomb in combat at Dommary-Baroncourt Railyard, France. It was formed atKelly Field, Texas. Originally consisting of 80 men, largely college graduates or college dropouts, volunteers all, and something of an elite group, since their aeronautical qualifications were the highest in the U.S. Army Air Service. Just before embarking upon its first aerial warfare, the squadron decided upon its insignia, a black triangle outlined by a white strip enclosing the profile of a red devil thumbing his nose at the ground with his left hand. In his right, he held a white bomb. This distinctive emblem was designed by the squadron's talented graphic artist, Harry O. Lawson.[3]
The 96th saw combat as part of the1st Day Bombardment Group, supporting the French Eighth and U.S. First Army from, 12 June 1918 – 4 November 1918. It operated French-madeBreguet 14 planes and was involved in an embarrassing fiasco when the entire squadron landed aroundKoblenz, Germany by accident, providing all of their planes intact to the Germans. Nonetheless, it was the most heavily engaged and most successful USAS bomber squadron.[3]
Returned to the United States from France in May, 1919, was re-organized atEllington Field, Houston, Texas and equipped withMartin MB-2 day bombers. Reassigned to several airfields in the southwest, its primary mission was reconnaissance along the Mexican border.[3]
In May 1920 was temporarily assigned toLangley Field, Virginia and became part of the First Provisional Air Brigade under GeneralBilly Mitchell. Trained with theHandley Page O/400 and Martin MB-2 bombers. Its mission would be to attack captured German ships along the Atlantic coast off Virginia in a service demonstration to determine whether a battleship could be sunk by bombing. The targets were an aged and surplus US battleship and four former German Navy vessels, including the battleshipSMS Ostfriesland, obtained in the peace settlement after World War I and scheduled for scuttling.[4]


On 13 July the Army airmen made their first appearance. The Martin bombers (limited to 300-pound bombs by the rules of the service test by the Navy) sank the former German destroyer G-102 in 19 minutes. On 18 July Navy and Army airplanes took turns attacking the former German light cruiserSMS Frankfurt. No bomb heavier than 600 pounds was allowed. There were frequent intermissions as inspectors dragged out their on-board inspections. The Air Service was finally allowed to strike and sank the vessel with 600-pound bombs. The Navy, which had figured on using gunfire from ships to finish offFrankfurt, was surprised.[4]
On 21 July a flight of six Martins and two Handley Pages, each carrying a 2,000-pound bomb. As the pilots stood by waiting to take off, Johnson called with a change in rules. The bombers could bring no more than three of their biggest bombs to the target area. The written agreement had been that the Air Service would be allowed two direct hits with their biggest bombs. One of the Handley Pages had to drop out of the formation, but the other seven airplanes went on to the target. They had no intention of making two direct hits and stopping the test. Their orders were to aim for near misses to create water hammer shock waves against the hull. The first bomb fell at 12:18 p.m. It was a near miss, as planned. The other airplanes swept in at spaced intervals and delivered their ordnance. "We could see her rise eight or 10 feet between the terrific blows from under water," Mitchell said. The sixth bomb, at 12:31, sealedOstfriesland's doom. Twenty-two minutes after the first bomb fell, the old battleship sank at 12:40. The seventh airplane, a Handley Page, dropped its unneeded bomb as a final salute at the point where the battleship had gone down.[4]
With the completion of the demonstration, the 96th returned to Texas in October. The unit transferred to Langley Field on a permanent basis in June 1922 and engaged in routine training; tested and experimented with equipment and tactics; participated in maneuvers; flew mercy missions to aid victims of a flood in Pennsylvania in 1936 and victims of an earthquake in Chile in 1939; and made goodwill flights to South America in the late 1930s.[3]
Received newBoeing B-17B Flying Fortress in the summer of 1939, being one of the first three squadrons to receive the new bomber. In November 1939, seven Fortresses flew from Langley Field toRio de Janeiro, Brazil on a good-will mission. All planes returned safely with no major incidents, once again demonstrating the safety and reliability of the B-17 design.[5]

After theAttack on Pearl Harbor, served on antisubmarine duty along the mid-Atlantic coastline as part ofI Bomber Command for several months untilAAF Antisubmarine Command was formed and took over that duty.[3]
Re-equipped with more modern B-17F Flying Fortresses and assigned toII Bomber Command in Pacific Northwest for transition and combat training in late 1942 and early 1943. Moved to North Africa in April 1943, carrying out bombing missions in Algeria and Tunisia as part ofTwelfth Air Force during theNorth African campaign. Flew many support and interdictory missions, bombing such targets as marshalling yards, airdromes, troop concentrations, bridges, docks, and shipping. Participated in the defeat of Axis forces inTunisia, Apr-May 1943; the reduction ofPantelleria and the preparations for theAllied Invasion of Sicily, May-Jul 1943; theinvasion of Italy, Sep 1943.[3]
Transferred toFifteenth Air Force in December 1943 and engaged in bombing operations primarily in Italy in support of the Allied drive north towardRome, Jan-Jun 1944; theInvasion of southern France, Aug 1944; and the campaigns against German forces in northern Italy, Jun 1944-May 1945. Engaged primarily in long-range bombardment of strategic targets after Oct 1943, attacking oil refineries, aircraft factories, steel plants, and other objectives in Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Austria, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Romania, and Greece.[3]
En route to bomb a vital aircraft factory atSteyr on 24 Feb 1944, the group was greatly outnumbered by enemy interceptors, but it maintained its formation and bombed the target, receiving aDistinguished Service Cross for the performance. On the following day, while on a mission to attack aircraft factories atRegensburg, it met similar opposition equally well and was awarded a second DUC. Served as part of the occupation force in Italy after V-E Day. Inactivated in Italy on 28 Feb 1946.[3]
Reactivated underStrategic Air Command on 1 July 1947 and equipped withBoeing B-29 Superfortresses. Trained for strategic bombardment missions during the postwar years, being upgraded to the new atomic bomb-capableBoeing B-50 Superfortress in 1948. Replaced the propeller-driven B-50s with newBoeing B-47E Stratojet swept-wing medium bombers in 1954, capable of flying at high subsonic speeds and primarily designed for penetrating the airspace of theSoviet Union. In the late 1950s, the B-47 was considered to be reaching obsolescence, and was being phased out of SAC's strategic arsenal. Began sending aircraft to other B-47 wings as replacements or to storage atDavis-Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona in late 1962 and was inactivated in April 1963.[3]
The squadron was reactivated on 1 October 1993 as part of the 2nd Operations Group, 2nd Bomb Wing at Barksdale AFB, Louisiana using the personnel, facilities and aircraft from the recently inactivated596th Bomb Squadron.
On 1 August 1994 B-52H's 60-0008 "Lucky Lady IV" and 60-0059 "Laissez Le Bon Temps Roulez" set off on a round the world bombing mission, named Exercise Global Power 94-7. The bombers (using the callsigns Storm 1 & Storm 2) flew east and after around 17 hours into the flight they each dropped 27 Mk82 500lb bombs on the Udairi Bomb Range inKuwait from a height of 800 feet.[6] The two bombers continued flying east and landed back atBarksdale AFB 47.2 hours later, setting a new world record.[7]
In September 1996, it deployed and launched attacks against military targets in Iraq in support of Operation Desert Strike. It earned the 1996Mackay Trophy for the 33-hour long mission from Louisiana to Iraq and back as the most meritorious flight of the year. Since 1993 it has conducted combat operations to support worldwideconventional andnuclear taskings and provided long-range, heavy strike, initial response, and sustained firepower in support of all regional and global warfighting commanders. In late 1996, the squadron deployed to support Operation Southern Watch, returning again in 1998. In 1999, crews from the squadron deployed to Royal Air Force Base Fairford in support of Operation Allied Force.[3]
In January 2002, the squadron deployed to fly combat missions in support ofOperation Enduring Freedom over Afghanistan. It supported OEF until early 2007 when it began focusing full-time on the continuous bomber presence mission in the Pacific Theater. The squadron supported deployments in 2004, 2006, 2008, 2009 and again in 2011 to Andersen AFB, Guam.[3]
In 2011, as part of Air Force Global Strike Command's Global Strike Challenge (successor to SAC's Bomb Comp), the 96th Bomb Squadron won three awards:
In 2020, the 96th Bomb Squadron was selected as the best strategic bomber squadron by U.S. Navy Adm. Charles Richard, commander of USSTRATCOM:
In 2023 the 96th Bomb Squadron deployed to the Pacific Theater and performed a flyover at Seoul’s Aerospace and Defense Exhibition, landing a B-52 in the Korean Peninsula for the first time in over 30 years.[9]

Following the Korean exhibition, the squadron deployed toAndersen AFB to supportBomber Task Force missions. On one mission during this deployment, they were unsafely intercepted by a J-11 that came as close as 9.6 feet to a B-52 over the South China Sea.[10] Targeting pod footage from this encounter was declassified and subsequently released.
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This article incorporatespublic domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency