After Neubiberg's capture, the
United States Army Air Forces designated the base as
Airfield R-85 Camp Rattle and stationed the
225th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Searchlight Battalion there on 16 June 1945.
357th Fighter Group On 21 July 1945, the
357th Fighter Group transferred from its base at
RAF Leiston, England, to Neubiberg to take on
occupation duties. It remained there until it was inactivated on 20 August 1946 and its personnel and equipment were transferred to the
33d Fighter Group. The 357th was supported by the
439th Air Service Group. In November, the
70th Fighter Wing moved to Neubiberg, along with its
328th Signal Company, Wing (later 21st Communications Squadron). The base was restored for operational use by Companies A and B of the
843d Engineer Aviation Battalion, which were stationed at Neubiberg for most of 1945. Operational squadrons of the 357th Fighter Group were: •
362d Fighter Squadron (P-51D) •
363d Fighter Squadron (P-51D) •
364th Fighter Squadron (P-51D) Squadrons of the 439th Air Service Group were: • 639th Air Materiel Squadron • 935th Air Engineering Squadron
33d Fighter Group On 20 August 1946 the
33d Fighter Group, which had been inactivated in December 1945, was reactivated at R-85 (Neubiberg) Air Base to replace the 357th Fighter Group. The 439th Air Service Group continued to provide support for operational units at Neubiberg. The 33d remained at R-85 for a year performing various occupation duties. In 1946 the
1262d Military Police Company, Aviation was also assigned to Neubiberg. Operational squadrons of the 33d Fighter Group were: •
58th Fighter Squadron (P-51D) •
59th Fighter Squadron (P-51D) •
60th Fighter Squadron (P-51D) After serving for a year in Germany, the 33d was transferred to
Bad Kissingen, Germany on 25 August 1947, then returned to the United States, transferring to
Andrews Field, Maryland briefly before moving to
Roswell Army Air Field, New Mexico as part of
Strategic Air Command on 16 September 1947.
86th Fighter-Bomber Wing The
86th Composite Group moved to Neubiberg on 12 June 1947 from Bad Kissingen eventually replacing the 33d Fighter Group. At the same time the
486th Air Service Group replaced the 439th. Operational squadrons of the 86th were: •
525th Fighter Squadron (later 525th Fighter-Bomber Squadron) (F-47D, F-84E (1950) blue stripe) •
526th Fighter Squadron (later 526th Fighter-Bomber Squadron) (F-47D, F-84E (1950) red stripe) •
527th Fighter Squadron (later 527th Fighter-Bomber Squadron) (F-47D, F-84E (1950) white/yellow stripe) •
45th Reconnaissance Squadron (not stationed at Neubiberg) Squadrons of the 486th Air Service Group were: • 728th Air Materiel Squadron • 904th Air Engineering Squadron/ The 86th Composite Group had been activated at Bad Kissingen on 20 August 1946 and assigned to
United States Air Forces in Europe (USAFE). The group's fighter squadrons were initially equipped with low-hour
P/F-47D "Thunderbolts" removed from storage at various depots in Germany. Initially, the group performed mostly occupation duty, however, it flew escort missions for its
Consolidated B-24 Liberator reconnaissance aircraft along the borders of Czechoslovakia and the
Soviet Zone of Germany, occasionally engaging with Soviet aircraft as they harassed the reconnaissance flights. In January 1948 the 45th Reconnaissance Squadron was reassigned and the 86th Composite Group became the 86th Fighter Group. The mission of the 86th changed with the start of the
Berlin Airlift, to escort the cargo flights within the narrow air corridors between the American Zone and
Tempelhof Airport in
West Berlin. When the airlift began the 86th was the only tactical fighter group in USAFE. On 1 July 1948 USAFE adopted the
wing-base organization. The 86th Fighter-Bomber Group was assigned to the new
86th Fighter-Bomber Wing, while the wing's
86th Air Base Group,
86th Maintenance & Supply Group and
86th Station Medical Group replaced the 486th Air Service Group and the 1262d Military Police Company. In October 1950 the
27th Fighter-Escort Wing ferried ninety-one
Republic F-84E Thunderjets to Neubiberg from
Bergstrom Air Force Base Texas. The 86th's F-47s were distributed to other
North Atlantic Treaty Organization units and the Thunderjets were assigned to the 86th. In January 1953 the 86th wing was transferred west of the
Rhine River to the newly completed
Landstuhl Air Base.
160th/38th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron The
160th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron deployed to Neubiberg from
Toul-Rosieres Air Base France. The 160th was part of the
Alabama Air National Guard 117th Tactical Reconnaissance Wing which had been activated during the
Korean War. In 1952, Toul Air Base was unfinished and not yet ready for jet aircraft. This meant only the wing
headquarters was in France, and its two RF-80A squadrons were moved to Germany. At the time of their arrival, the 160th's aircraft were silver with only "Buzz Numbers" on their noses. Later, blue lightning bolts were painted on their vertical stabilizers, and yellow lightning flashes were painted on the center fuselage and wing tip tanks. On 10 July 1952, the 10th Tactical Reconnaissance Wing was activated at Toul Air Base and absorbed the personnel and equipment of the 117th. The 160th at Neubiberg was returned to the Alabama Air National Guard and replaced by the
38th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron, which took over its personnel and RF-80As. The 38th remained at Neubiberg until 9 May 1953 when it moved to the newly opened
Spangdahlem Air Base.
317th Troop Carrier Wing The 317th TCW was moved to Neubiberg from
Rhein-Main Air Base in 1953 to address an overcrowded condition. Flying
C-119 Flying Boxcars, the Wing remained for almost four years before transferring to
Evreux-Fauville Air Base France. • 14 July 1952 – 17 April 1957:
317th Troop Carrier Wing • 317th Air Base Group • 317th Maintenance & Supply Group • 317th Medical Group (later 317th Tactical Hospital) • 7307th USAF Infirmary (later 7307th USAF Dispensary), (organized 1 March 1954) • 5th Aerial Port Squadron, December 1954 - January 1956 •
39th Troop Carrier Squadron (C-119) •
40th Troop Carrier Squadron (C-119) •
41st Troop Carrier Squadron (C-119) •
782d Troop Carrier Squadron (C-119), 24 September 1953 – 15 April 1954 (assigned to
465th Troop Carrier Group) In November 1953, the 782d Troop Carrier Squadron was sent to Neubiberg when the 465th Troop Carrier Wing was deployed from
Donaldson Air Force Base South Carolina. Construction at Toul forced the deployment of the squadron to Neubiberg. The 782d flew missions with the 317th TCW until at Toul AB allowed the squadron to use the facilities.
7101st Support Group The 7101st Support Group was organized to manage Neubiberg until it was transferred to the German Air Force. • 17 April 1957 - c. 1 April 1958 •
782d Troop Carrier Squadron (C-119), 5 December 1957 – 20 December 1957 (assigned to 317th Troop Carrier Group)
5th Tow Target Squadron • 16 July 1954 - c. 1 April 1958 (B-26 [A-26], B-29, C-47) The 5th Tow Target Squadron moved to Neubiberg from
Fürstenfeldbruck Air Base on 16 July 1954. Its mission was towing aerial targets for NATO Air Forces and Army Anti-Aircraft gunnery, and had detachments at
RAF Sculthorpe, England (Det. A(1)), Bremen Germany, and North Africa. Aircraft flown by the 5th were
Douglas TB-26B/C Invaders in Europe and a number of
L-5 Sentinels. In North Africa, B-29s were used. Squadron markings consisted of Red and White horizontal stripes on the vertical and horizontal stabilizer and red wingtips. The unit was inactivated when Neubiberg was turned over to the
German Air Force. ==German Air Force use==