The
group was first organized in July 1964 as the
5th Mobile Communications Group, a component of
Air Force Communications Service (later Air Force Communications Command). It has had its current name since 1976, except for the period from 1984 to 1986 when Air Force Communications Command units were designated as "Information Systems" units. Group
air traffic controllers and air traffic control maintenance personnel were included in the force deployed for
Operation Eagle Claw, the failed 1980 attempt to rescue the hostages held by the government of Iran in the
Tehran embassy. Their mission was to establish and operate air navigation systems at "Desert One", the base of operations within Iran. When civilian government air traffic controllers
walked off their jobs the following year, practically the entire air traffic control division of the 5th, along with controllers from the other combat control groups of the
Air Force, deployed to civilian airports to maintain the flow of traffic within the United States. The controllers remained deployed until new civilian controllers were trained to replace those who had been dismissed. During the 1980s until the end of the
Iran–Iraq War, the Air Force maintained a deployed
Airborne Warning and Control System maintaining surveillance of the
Persian Gulf. The deployment was referred to as "ELF One." 5th Mob personnel rotated to ELF One during this period to provide communications support for the operation. In September 1988, the group reorganized, transferring its people into three combat communications squadrons. Each squadron is assigned approximately 180 persons. The 51st Combat Communications Squadron provides communications and air traffic control support to an Air Force Headquarters. The 52d and 53d Squadrons provide communications and air traffic control support for deployed bases. In 1990, when Air Force Communications Service was disestablished as a major command, the 5th Group became part of
Tactical Air Command, which was replaced by
Air Combat Command in 1992. In 2009, combat communications units, including the group, were made part of
Air Force Space Command. The 5th also lent its communications expertise to the
Operation Bright Star in Egypt in 1995. More than 120 members of the 52d Combat Communications Squadron, along with augmentees from the group's other squadrons, participated in the largest multinational exercise of its kind. During
Operation Desert Storm, the 5th deployed more than 600 people to a dozen locations. It was the first communications unit in theater. The group's squadrons provided
air traffic control and communications support to six deployed wings and Central Command Air Forces headquarters. Group personnel remained deployed to Southwest Asia for an additional three years to support the Cease Fire and maintaining United Nations resolutions. In 1993, the group added the 5th Combat Communications Support Squadron to train and assist the combat communications squadrons for deployment. Later that year, the group added the 54th Combat Communications Squadron, whose mission mirrored that of the 52d and 53d Squadrons. Members of the unit deployed to the Southwest Asia area of responsibility in March 1996 to support an Air Expeditionary Force. The communicators helped Air Force and multinational forces already in Saudi Arabia and other nearby countries patrol the no-fly zone over southern Iraq. When terrorists attacked
Khobar Towers that year, the group was called upon again to deploy to the Persian Gulf. More than 140 members of the 5th, along with 250 tons of equipment, left Robins for
Prince Sultan Air Base, where they established a complete communications network beside a bare airfield. The 5th again received orders to deploy in early February 2003 to the Central Command theater of operations. They were part of a larger action by the United States to reposition some of its military forces to support the global
war on terrorism and to prepare for future contingencies. The deployment marked the first time the Air Force's first total force wing, composed of both
National Guard and active duty, Air Force and
Army, would deploy. == Lineage ==