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341st Missile Wing
File:341st Missile Wing.jpeg
341st Missile Wing emblem
Active 1961 – present
Country United States
Branch United States Air Force
Part of Air Force Global Strike Command
Garrison/HQ Malmstrom Air Force Base
Motto(s) PAX ORBIS PER ARMA AERIA – World Peace Through Air Strength
Engagements Burma Campaign 1944-1945
Decorations Presidential Unit Citation ribbon DUC
Outstanding Unit ribbon AFOUA

Coordinates: 47°30′17″N 111°11′14″W / 47.50472°N 111.18722°W / 47.50472; -111.18722 (Malmstrom AFB)

The United States Air Force's 341st Missile Wing (341 MW) is an intercontinental ballistic missile unit headquartered at Malmstrom AFB, Montana. Until 1 July 2008, it was designated as the 341st Space Wing.

Established as a World War II Tenth Air Force B-25 Mitchell bomb group in India, the unit served as part of Strategic Air Command during the early part of the Cold War as a B-47 Stratojet wing, before becoming an Intercontinental ballistic missile unit in 1962. Today, the 341st is one of three remaining United States Air Force wings that maintain and operate the Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile.

Mission[]

The 341st Missile Wing reports directly to Twentieth Air Force, F.E. Warren Air Force Base, Wyoming., and is part of Air Force Global Strike Command, headquartered at Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana.

The mission of the 341st Missile Wing is to defend America with safe, secure, effective nuclear forces and combat-ready airmen.

Subordinate units[]

History[]

World War II[]

341st-bombgroup-WWII-emblem

Emblem of the USAAF 341st Bomb Group

North American B-25C-15 Mitchell 42-32425 341BG 491 BS

B-25J Mitchell, 341st #435, 491st Bomb Squadron, 1944

The 341st Missile Wing has its origins in the China-Burma-India Theater of World War II, being activated in India on 15 September 1942. The unit was one of the first bomber units in the CBI; being equipped with B-25 Mitchell medium bombers which were shipped from the United States to Karachi. The aircraft were readied for flight operations by Air Technical Service Command at Karachi Air Depot and dispatched to Chakulia Airfield, now in Bangladesh in December. The group was formed with two bomb squadrons (11th, 22d) which had been attached to the 7th Bombardment Group since May 1942, and two newly activated squadrons (490th and 491st). The 11th Bomb Squadron was already in China, having flown combat missions with China Air Task Force since 1 July 1942. Planes and crews of the 22nd had been flying recon and tactical missions over north and central Burma, also since July.

The group entered combat early in 1943 and operated chiefly against enemy transportation in central Burma until 1944. Bombed bridges, locomotives, railroad yards, and other targets to delay movement of supplies to the Japanese troops fighting in northern Burma.

The 341st Bomb Group usually functioned as if it were two groups and for a time as three. Soon after its activation in September 1942, 341st Bomb Group Headquarters and three of its squadrons, the 22nd, 490th and 491st, were stationed and operating in India under direction of the Tenth Air Force, while the 11th squadron was stationed and operating in China under direction of the "China Air Task Force", which was later reorganized and reinforced to become the Fourteenth Air Force.

Fourteen months later the Group Headquarters along with 22nd and the 491st squadrons joined the 11th squadron under the command of 69th Composite Wing, Fourteenth Air Force. 341st Group HQ was Kunming and the 22nd and 491st were at Yangkai, while the 11th continued to be based at Kweilin, attached to the 68th Composite Wing. However, the 490th "Burma Bridge Busters" remained in India, under the command of Major-General Howard Davidson's Tenth Air Force. Still later the 11th Squadron and a detachment of the 491st operated for a time under the East China Task Force.[1][2]

From several airfields in China the group engaged primarily in attacking enemy concentrations and storage areas and in conducting sea sweeps and attacks against inland shipping. They also bombed and strafed such targets as trains, harbors, and railroads in French Indochina and the Canton-Hong Kong area of China. Received a DUC for developing and using a special (glip) bombing technique against enemy bridges in French Indochina.

It was inactivated on 2 November 1945, the day after Group and Squadron personnel debarked at Newark, New Jersey.

Bombardment Wing[]

341st-strategicmissilewing-patch

341st Bombardment Wing emblem

Reactivated in September 1955 at Abeline AFB (later Dyess AFB), Texas as a Strategic Air Command B-47E Stratojet unit which were designed to carry nuclear weapons and to penetrate Soviet air defenses with its high operational ceiling and near supersonic speed. The 341st flew the B-47 in training missions and participated in various SAC exercises and deployments with the Stratojet to bases in Morocco and England designed for forward deployments. Also controlled a KC-97 Stratotanker squadron to provide air refueling for B-47 operations.

In 1958 after the loss of some aircraft in clandestine Cold War operations; it was believed that Soviet air defenses had caught up to the ability of the B-47 to successfully penetrate Soviet airspace if called to combat duty. The Stratojet began to be phased out of the inventory and the 341st Bomb Wing began sending its aircraft to storage at Davis-Monthan AFB in 1961. The unit was inactivated on 25 June.

Strategic Missile Wing[]

On 15 July 1961 the 341st was reactivated as the 341st Strategic Missile Wing (SMW). A year later, in late July 1962, the first LGM-30A Minuteman I ICBM arrived at Malmstrom and was placed at Alpha-9 launch facility. The 10th Strategic Missile Squadron (SMS) accepted its final missile on 28 February 1963. Two months later, the 12th SMS became 100 percent combat ready. In July, the 490th SMS became fully operational, giving the 341st SMW responsibility for 150 silos.

In August 1964, the Air Force announced plans to build an additional 50 silos assigned to the 341st to house LGM-30F Minuteman II missiles. As construction of these new silos proceeded through 1966, the 564th SMS stood up on 1 April 1966. Just over a year later America's 1,000th Minuteman missile would be in place and on alert at Malmstrom. This milestone marked the completion of Minuteman deployment by the United States.

While new Minuteman IIs deployed with the 564th, upgrading of the Minuteman I models had been ongoing with the wing starting a transition from "A" to "B" models in August 1964. By June 1969, all Minuteman Is, both "A" and "B" models, were replaced by Minuteman II models. In 1975, the 564th SMS switched from the Minuteman II to the LGM-30G Minuteman III model.

In November 1975, the wing began an integrated improvement program that included a command data buffer and an improved launch control system. In 1985, the 341st SMW became the lead unit in the Minuteman Integrated Life Extension program (Rivet Mile).

While serving as a deterrent force, the 341st SMW won numerous honors. The unit won its first Blanchard Trophy in SAC's annual Olympic Arena missile competition in 1976 and again captured this most coveted prize in 1986, 1990, and 1991. The unit has won additional accolades over the years.

On 28 September 1991, President Bush ordered all Minuteman IIs off alert status. This order affected three-quarters of the 200 ICBMs assigned to the 341st SMW. On 1 September 1991 the 341st SMW was redesignated simply a Missile Wing, part of Strategic Air Command's Twentieth Air Force. As such it apparently became the only formation designated a 'Missile Wing' ever assigned to SAC. The 341st Missile Wing was reassigned from SAC to the Eighth Air Force of Air Combat Command on 31 May 1992.

In accordance with the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START), on 28 September 1991, the 341st Missile Wing began taking its Minuteman IIs off alert and began deactivation of the missiles. The Air Force removed 150 Minuteman II missiles from their silos. Fifty of the vacated silos received Minuteman III missiles, joining the 50 Minuteman III missiles already on alert status. This conversion was completed by 1994.

In March 1995, the Base Realignment and Closure (BRA0 Commission selected the 321st Strategic Missile Wing at Grand Forks AFB, North Dakota for deactivation. The 321st Missile Group transferred control of its Minuteman III silos and alert responsibilities to the 341st Missile Wing on 30 September 1998.

As a result of the 2005 Quadrennial Defense Review, the 341st Missile Wing deactivated the Minuteman III WS-133B missile system and subsequent inactivation of the 564th Missile Squadron on 19 August 2008

On 1 December 2009 it was reassigned to the new Air Force Global Strike Command where it remains on duty 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, every day of the year.

Notable incidents[]

In November 2008, the wing failed its nuclear surety inspection, given by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency.[3] The wing again failed the inspection on 9 February 2010.[4]

A July 2009 inspection conducted by the Air Force Audit Agency found that 48 percent of the 711 unused nuclear weapons-related materials handled by the wing were incorrectly tracked or recorded. The inspectors primarily faulted the Material Command, not the wing, for most of the discrepancies. In response to the findings, the wing moved all unused nuclear-related items to a secure storage area and performed a follow-up inventory which accounted for 100 percent of the items.[5]

The 341st failed inspection again in August 2013. The wing received an "unsatisfactory" rating due to "tactical level errors" made during one of the many exercises during its inspection.[6][7]

Lineage[]

  • Constituted as 341st Bombardment Group (Medium) on 14 August 1942.
Activated in India on 15 September 1942
Inactivated on 2 November 1945.
  • Redesignated 341st Bombardment Group (Light). Allotted to the reserve.
Activated on 27 December 1946
Inactivated 27 June 1949
  • Reactivated and redesignated as 341st Bombardment Wing (Medium) on 23 March 1953
Activated on 1 September 1955
Discontinued and inactivated, 25 June 1961
  • Redesignated 341st Strategic Missile Wing (ICBM-Minuteman) and activated 1 July 1961
Redesignated 341st Missile Wing 1 September 1991
Redesignated 341st Space Wing 1 October 1997
Redesignated 341st Missile Wing 1 July 2008

Assignments[]

Attached to: Tenth Air Force, 25 October-14 December 1943
69th Composite Wing, 26 December 1943
Continued attachment to Strategic Air Force until c. 7 January 1944
  • XIV Air Force Tactical Air Command (Provisional), 21 June 1945
Attached to 69th Composite Wing
Attached to 3d Air Division, 9 January-4 April 1958

Components[]

Group

  • 341 Operations Group: 1 September 1991 – present

Missile Squadrons (Assigned to 341st Operations Group after 1 September 1991)

Historical Squadrons

  • 11th Air Refueling Squadron: 1 December 1955 – 1 June 1960 (detached 19 December 1956 – 10 April 1957, 9 January-c. 4 April 1958, and 10 July-26 September 1958)
  • 11 Bombardment Squadron: 15 September 1942 – 10 March 1943 (detached 15 September 1942 – 10 March 1943); 25 October 1943 – 2 November 1945 (detached 25 October 1943-c. 6 January 1944, 13 March- c. December 1944, and 16 March-1 August 1945)
  • 22d Bombardment Squadron: 15 September 1942 – 2 November 1945
  • 491st Bombardment Squadron: 15 September 1942 – 2 November 1945; 5 June 1947 – 27 June 1949; 1 November 1958 – 25 June 1961

Stations[]

  • Karachi Airport, Karachi, India 15 September – 30 December 1942
  • Chakulia Airfield, India, 30 December 1942 – June 1943
  • Kurmitola Airfield, India, June 1943 – 7 January 1944
  • Kunming Airport, Kunming, China, 7 January 1944 – 13 December 1944
  • Yangkai Airfield, China, 13 December 1944 – October 1945

Aircraft and missiles[]

341st Missile Wing - MAF

341 MW LGM-30G Minuteman III Missile Alert Facilities (MAF)
10 MS (Black)
12 MS (Green)
490 MS (Blue)
564 MS (Purple)

LGM-30G Minuteman III Missile Alert Facilities (MAF) (each controlling 10 missiles) are located as follows:

A-01 7.5 mi SE of Armington MT, 47°16′54″N 110°48′03″W / 47.28167°N 110.80083°W / 47.28167; -110.80083 (A-01)
B-01 6.5 mi ExNE of Geyser MT, 47°17′07″N 110°21′36″W / 47.28528°N 110.36°W / 47.28528; -110.36 (B-01)
C-01 1.6 mi NW of Windham MT, 47°05′44″N 110°09′47″W / 47.09556°N 110.16306°W / 47.09556; -110.16306 (C-01)
D-01 7.3 mi ExNE of Denton MT, 47°22′34″N 109°48′52″W / 47.37611°N 109.81444°W / 47.37611; -109.81444 (D-01)
E-01 7.5 mi SxSW of Winifred MT, 47°27′13″N 109°25′03″W / 47.45361°N 109.4175°W / 47.45361; -109.4175 (E-01)
F-01 8.6 mi NxNE of Augusta MT, 47°36′17″N 112°18′38″W / 47.60472°N 112.31056°W / 47.60472; -112.31056 (F-01)
G-01 13.8 mi SW of Simms MT, 47°19′32″N 112°05′39″W / 47.32556°N 112.09417°W / 47.32556; -112.09417 (G-01)
H-01 5.9 mi NxNE of Fairfield MT,47°41′48″N 111°56′33″W / 47.69667°N 111.9425°W / 47.69667; -111.9425 (H-01)
I-01 11.0 mi ExNE of Cascade MT, 47°18′45″N 111°28′25″W / 47.3125°N 111.47361°W / 47.3125; -111.47361 (I-01)
J-01 7.0 mi ExNE of Power MT, 47°45′06″N 111°32′46″W / 47.75167°N 111.54611°W / 47.75167; -111.54611 (J-01)
K-01 1.7 mi ExNE of Harlowton MT, 46°26′43″N 109°48′05″W / 46.44528°N 109.80139°W / 46.44528; -109.80139 (K-01)
L-01 1.3 mi NxNE of Judith Gap MT 46°41′40″N 109°44′27″W / 46.69444°N 109.74083°W / 46.69444; -109.74083 (L-01)
M-01 4.1 mi NE of Moore MT, 47°00′49″N 109°37′51″W / 47.01361°N 109.63083°W / 47.01361; -109.63083 (M-01)
N-01 11.0 mi WxNW of Grassrange MT, 47°03′33″N 109°01′54″W / 47.05917°N 109.03167°W / 47.05917; -109.03167 (N-01)
O-01 1.5 mi E of Roy MT, 47°19′43″N 108°55′37″W / 47.32861°N 108.92694°W / 47.32861; -108.92694 (O-01)
P-00 2.9 mi NE of Conrad MT, 48°12′18″N 111°54′31″W / 48.205°N 111.90861°W / 48.205; -111.90861 (P-00)
Q-00 9.0 mi E of Ledger MT, 48°15′37″N 111°37′33″W / 48.26028°N 111.62583°W / 48.26028; -111.62583 (Q-00)
R-00 12.8 mi ExNE of Brady MT, 48°05′42″N 111°34′36″W / 48.095°N 111.57667°W / 48.095; -111.57667 (R-00)
S-00 2.2 mi E of Brady MT, 48°02′14″N 111°47′30″W / 48.03722°N 111.79167°W / 48.03722; -111.79167 (S-00)
T-00 4.0 mi SxSW of Valier MT, 48°15′09″N 112°16′32″W / 48.2525°N 112.27556°W / 48.2525; -112.27556 (T-00)

See also[]

References[]

PD-icon This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency website http://www.afhra.af.mil/.

Notes[]

  1. Group Records and Squadron History Reports, AFHRA, Maxwell AFB, AL
  2. Web Home of the 341st Bomb Group: Forward
  3. Shane, Leo III, "Report: Wyo. Unit Fails Nuke Security Inspection", Stars and Stripes, 17 December 2008; Gertz, Bill, "Air Force Fails New Nuclear Reviews", Washington Times, 4 February 2009.
  4. Hoffman, Michael, "2 Malmstrom units fail nuke inspections", Military Times, 24 February 2010.
  5. Rolfsen, Bruce, "Nuke audits uncover shortfalls at 5 bases", Military Times, 1 March 2010.
  6. http://www.cnn.com/2013/08/13/politics/nuclear-air-force-fail
  7. http://www.airforcetimes.com/article/20130813/NEWS/308130023/Malmstrom-nuclear-missile-wing-fails-inspection

Bibliography[]

  • Claire, Thomas H. Looking' Eastward: A GI to Salaam to India. New York: 1945.
  • Hayward, David K. Eagles, Bulldogs & Tigers: History of the 22nd Bomb Squadron in China-Burma-India. Huntington Beach, California: 22nd Bomb Squadron Association, 1997. ISBN 0-9656437-0-0.
  • Maurer, Maurer. Air Force Combat Units Of World War II. Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: Office of Air Force History, 1983. ISBN 0-89201-092-4.
  • Ravenstein, Charles A. Air Force Combat Wings Lineage and Honors Histories, 1947–1977. Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: Office of Air Force History, 1984. ISBN 0-912799-12-9.
  • Rogers, Brian. United States Air Force Unit Designations Since 1978. Hinkley, England: Midland Publications, 2005. ISBN 1-85780-197-0.
  • Malmstrom AFB Minuteman Missile Site Coordinates

External links[]



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