World War II Activated on 15 November 1942 at
Hamilton Field, California, initially equipped with
Bell P-39 Airacobras and assigned to
IV Fighter Command for training. Moved to several bases in California and Nevada then to
Portland Army Air Base, Oregon in June 1943 and re-equipped with new
North American P-51B Mustangs. Transitioned to the Mustang throughout the summer of 1943 the deployed to the
European Theater of Operations, being assigned to
IX Fighter Command in England. In late 1943, the strategic bombardment campaign over
Occupied Europe and
Nazi Germany being conducted by
VIII Bomber Command was taking heavy losses in aircraft and flight crews as the
VIII Fighter Command's
Lockheed P-38 Lightnings and
Republic P-47 Thunderbolts lacked the range to escort the heavy
Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress and
Consolidated B-24 Liberator bombers deep into Germany to attack industrial and military targets. The P-51 had the range to perform the escort duties and the unit's operational control was transferred to
Eighth Air Force to perform escort missions. From its base at
RAF Boxted, the unit flew long-range strategic escort missions with
VIII Bomber Command groups, escorting the heavy bombers to targets such as
Frankfurt,
Leipzig,
Augsburg, and
Schweinfurt, engaging
Luftwaffe day
interceptors frequently, with the P-51s outperforming the German
Messerschmitt Bf 109 and
Focke-Wulf Fw 190 interceptors, causing heavy losses to the Luftwaffe. Remained under operational control of Eighth Air Force until April 1944, when sufficient numbers of P-51D Mustangs and arrived from the United States and were assigned to VIII Fighter Command units for escort duty. Was relieved from escort duty and was re-equipped with
Republic P-47D Thunderbolts, and moved to
RAF Lashenden on the southern coast of England. Mission was redefined to provide tactical air support for the forthcoming invasion of France, to support the Third, and later Ninth United States Armies. Flew fighter sweeps over
Normandy and along the
English Channel coast of France and the Low Countries, April–June 1944, then engaged in heavy tactical bombing of enemy military targets as well as roads, railroads and bridges in the Normandy area to support ground forces in the immediate aftermath of
D-Day. Moved to
Advanced Landing Grounds in France beginning at the end of June 1944, moving eastwards to combat airfields and liberated French airports supporting Allied Ground forces as the advanced across Northern France. Later, in 1944, the squadron became involved in dive-bombing and strafing missions, striking railroad yards, bridges, troop concentrations, and airfields. Participated in attacks on German forces in Belgium in the aftermath of the
Battle of the Bulge, then moved eastward as part of the
Western Allied invasion of Germany. The squadron flew its last mission of the war on 7 May 1945 from the captured
Ansbach Airfield. Remained in Occupied Germany as part of the
United States Air Forces in Europe XII Tactical Air Command occupying force after the German Capitulation, being stationed at
AAF Station Herzogenaurach. Was inactivated on 31 March 1946.
Cold War Reactivated by Tactical Air Command, United States Air Force on 19 November 1956, being assigned to the reactivated 354th Fighter-Day Group at the new Myrtle Beach Air Force Base, South Carolina. Equipped with North American F-100 Super Sabre fighters, the squadron participated in exercises, operations, tests, and firepower demonstrations conducted by the
Tactical Air Command within the US and abroad. The unit frequently deployed to
Aviano Air Base, Italy and
Wheelus Air Base, Libya. Was deployed to Europe during the
1958 Lebanon crisis and was moved to
McCoy Air Force Base, Florida in 1962 during the
Cuban Missile Crisis. During the
Dominican Civil War, the squadron deployed eighteen of its F-100s to
Ramey Air Force Base, Puerto Rico to guard against Cuban intervention in the war.
United States Air Forces in Europe In 1966 the 353rd Tactical Fighter Squadron was reassigned to the
401st Tactical Fighter Wing,
Torrejon AB, Spain when
Strategic Air Command ended
B-47 Stratojet deployments to the base and it was reassigned to the United States Air Forces in Europe. The host 401st TFW was itself reassigned to Torrejon from England AFB, Louisiana, with its operational fighter squadrons being deployed to Pacific Air Forces in South Vietnam for combat missions during the Vietnam War. The 353rd, along with the 307th TFS from Homestead and 613th from England to provide the 401st a full complement of aircraft. At Torrejon, the squadron continued to fly the F-100D "Super Sabre." Major operations consisted of maintaining combat readiness; rotating units to other bases in Europe or the Middle East and participating in various United States Air Force, North Atlantic TreatyOrganization and Spanish Air Defense exercises. In 1970 the squadron had its aging F-100 fleet replaced, being re-equipped with
F-4D Phantom II aircraft, its personnel being drawn from existing USAFE squadrons or new assignments from the United States. The 353rd's F-4's were tail-coded
TK, and from Torrejon, the squadron made periodic partial deployments to Wheelus AB, Libya and Incirlik AB, Turkey, for weapons training. Beginning in June 1970, the 401st TFW was re-equipped with
F-4E's.
Vietnam War In 1971, the 612th and 613th Tactical Fighter Squadrons were reassigned back to the 401st TFW from their deployment in South Vietnam as part of the drawdown of USAF forces in Southeast Asia. As a result, on 15 July, the 353 TFS was inactivated and reassigned without equipment or personnel to the 354 TFW at Myrtle Beach AFB. At Myrtle Beach, the squadron assumed the personnel and
A-7D Corsair IIs of the inactivating
511th Tactical Fighter Squadron, and begin training flights from Myrtle Beach with the new equipment. On 12 October 1972, the 353rd (commanded by Lt. Col Brown G. Howard III) deployed to
Korat Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand as part of the 354th Tactical Fighter Wing (Forward), and engaged in combat operations in the
Vietnam War. The squadron used A-7 aircraft for close air support and in search and rescue operations. In January 1973, with the Vietnam War ceasefire in place, the squadron reassigned its deployed aircraft to the newly activated
3rd Tactical Fighter Squadron,
388th Tactical Fighter Wing at Korat, and its personnel returned to Myrtle Beach AFB without equipment. The squadron received new A-7D Corsair IIs upon its return to Myrtle Beach AFB, and the unit resumed training. It again deployed to Korat 31 March 1973, where it flew bombing missions until the bombing halt on 15 August 1973. The 353rd claims the distinction of dropping the last bomb and making the last strafing run of the war.
Post Vietnam era On 18 October 1973 the squadron returned to Myrtle Beach AFB and resumed normal training activities. In 1978 the squadron obtained A-10 aircraft and flew training missions with the A-10s for over a decade, being deployed frequently to NATO bases in Germany for annual training exercises. The unit deployed to
King Fahd International Airport, Saudi Arabia 15 August 1990. During
Desert Storm, the squadron engaged in combat operations, January–February 1991, inflicting heavy damage to enemy armor and artillery emplacements, cut off enemy supply lines, and engaged in search and rescue operations. Returned to the United States in March 1991, and returned to peacetime training operations. Immediately began phasing down with the designated
BRAC 1990 closure of Myrtle Beach AFB and the pending inactivation of its host Wing. The squadron's aircraft were dispersed, being reassigned to Air National Guard and other active Air Force Fighter Squadrons throughout the balance of 1991 and early 1992. The squadron was inactivated on 15 December 1992.
The 1990s In August 1993, the unit activated at Eielson AFB, Alaska. It appears to have taken over the personnel and equipment of the
3rd Fighter Training Squadron. It became responsible for coordination of COPE THUNDER and later, Red Flag-Alaska exercises and controlled the local training ranges. ==Lineage==