On June 27, 1980,
Democratic U.S. House Delegate Antonio Won Pat of
Guam introduced H.R. 7694 to the
96th United States Congress which would authorize the establishment of a National Guard unit in Guam. On December 24, 1980, President
Jimmy Carter signed the bill into law as Public Law 96-600. On June 5, 1981, Public Law 16-18 established the Guam Army National Guard and the
Guam Air National Guard. On August 6, 1997, the Guam Army National Guard assisted with the recovery efforts of
Korean Air Flight 801, which crashed on approach to
Antonio Won Pat International Airport. In December 1997, the Guam Army National Guard was activated by Guam
governor Carl Gutierrez to assist with relief and cleanup efforts after
Supertyphoon Paka struck Guam, causing over $100 million in damage. , Afghanistan, May 2013 Lt. Gen. Russell Handy,
11th Air Force commander, tours a
UH-72 Lakota of the Guam Army National Guard housed at
Andersen Air Force Base In 2002, members of the Guam Army National Guard's 1st Battalion, 294th Infantry Regiment and the 105th Troop Command were deployed to Afghanistan as a part of
Operation Enduring Freedom. In October 2012, over 500 GU ARNG personnel formed Task Force Guam and trained at
Camp Roberts, a
California Army National Guard facility near
Paso Robles, California prior to their deployment to
Camp Phoenix near Kabul and other forward operating bases in Afghanistan. In April 2013, Task Force Guam replaced Task Force Centurion Prime, composed of 1st Battalion,
167th Infantry Regiment of the
Alabama Army National Guard. Task Force Guam was the largest deployment in the history of GU ARNG and also included 17 soldiers who resided in the
Northern Mariana Islands. Task Force Guam returned to Barrigada in December 2013 and was replaced in Afghanistan by Task Force Fury, composed of elements of the
508th Infantry Regiment,
82nd Airborne Division. On June 10, 2015, the Guam Army National Guard gained its first aviation assets with the delivery of two
UH-72 Lakota helicopters previously assigned to D Company, 1st Battalion, 224th Aviation Regiment,
District of Columbia Army National Guard. The helicopters were delivered via a
U.S. Air Force C-17 Globemaster II and transferred to the newly activated Detachment 2 within D Company. The aircraft are currently housed at
Andersen Air Force Base and will eventually be based at a new complex to be built at the Guard Readiness Center in Barrigada. As of January 2016, the Guam Army National Guard has about 1,300 members, with about 280 of them authorized as full-time support. == Organization ==