Prior to and during
World War II, Erding was a
Luftwaffe pilot training airfield. It was seized by the
United States Army in April 1945 and used by the
United States Air Force during the early years of the
Cold War. Erding was used as an Air Depot, Air Base and an Air Station. USAF units stationed at Erding were: • 85th Air Depot Wing, 1 Jun 1945 : Redesignated: European Air Depot, 1 Sep 1945 : Redesignated: Erding Air Depot, 5 Nov 1946 : Redesignated: 7200th Air Force Depot Wing, 1 Jul 1948 : Redesignated: 85th Air Depot Wing, 25 Jul 1949 85 ADW was transferred to
Twelfth Air Force on 21 January 1951. On 10 July 1952, 85 ADW and its supporting units were reassigned from Twelfth Air Force to HEADQUARTERS,
USAFE. : Redesignated: 7485th Air Depot Wing, 1 Dec 1953 : Redesignated: 7485th Support Wing (Training), 1 Apr 1956 – 15 May 1958 •
440th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron, 17 Feb 1956 – 1 Jan 1960 •
52d Tactical Fighter Group, 1 Apr 1971 – 31 Jul 1972 Originally developed as an Air Depot in the early postwar years, the mission of Erding Air Base (later Station) was to provide depot-level maintenance of USAFE and NATO fighters. With the opening of
Châteauroux-Déols Air Base,
France in 1953, Erding became a satellite depot. The mission of Erding Air Base was changed in 1956 to training personnel for the newly reconstituted
German Air Force (GAF). The base was turned over to the GAF on 1 April 1957. On 14 December 1957, control of Erding Air Base was returned to the GAF as a front line facility where it hosted various
F-104 Starfighter,
Panavia Tornado and other fighter squadrons. With the creation of
NATO in response to
Cold War tensions in Europe, USAFE wanted its major air bases in
West Germany moved west of the
Rhine River to provide greater air defense warning time. The establishment of the new bases in the
Rhineland-Palatinate diminished the USAF use of Erding. It became an air defense facility in 1956 with the assignment of the
F-86D equipped
440th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron, a detachment of the
86th Fighter-Interceptor Wing at
Landstuhl Air Base until the arrival of the
Convair F-102 Delta Dagger in Europe and budget cutbacks in 1960 forced its closure. In 1966 with France withdrawing from NATO it left a gap in the air defense network of Europe.
Operation Creek Ale filled that gap by rotating
F-102 interceptors from various squadrons of the
86th Air Division based at
Ramstein Air Base. Squadrons from
Soesterberg Air Base,
Zaragoza Air Base,
Hahn Air Base,
Bitburg Air Base and
Ramstein Air Base rotated to Erding for air defense alert. With the inactivation of the
86th Air Division in 1970, the
52d Tactical Fighter Group was formed at Erding in 1971 with some of the F-102s on a permanent basis. In 1972 the F-102s were withdrawn from Europe and the 52d TFG was inactivated. Relegated to Air Station status, Erding hosted temporary duty units of North America-based USAF aircraft though the 1980s for short-term deployments as part of the annual
Exercise Reforger. From 2002 to 2013, the base was home to the GAF's . It is now the location of Weapon System Support Center 1. ==Erding Air Base Circuit==