621st Contingency Response Wing

The 621st Contingency Response Wing (621 CRW) United States Air Force rapid response expeditionary wing, based out of Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, New Jersey.

621st Contingency Response Wing
ActiveMarch 2005 – Present
CountryUnited States
BranchAir Force
TypeRapid Mobility, Contingency Response, Initial Airbase Holding
Size1500 military and civilian personnel
Part ofAir Mobility Command
Garrison/HQJoint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst
Nickname(s)"The Devil Raiders"
EngagementsWar on Terror Operation Unified Response
Commanders
Current
commander
Colonel Douglas D. Jackson

Mission

The 621st CRW is highly specialized in training and rapidly deploying personnel to quickly open airfields and establish, expand, sustain, and coordinate air mobility operations. From wartime taskings to disaster relief, the 621st extends Air Mobility Command's (AMC) reach in deploying people and equipment around the globe.[1]

Most of the operations can be classified by three types, Joint Task Force - Port Opening (JTF-PO), where USAF and US Army units create distribution chains, Expeditionary Air Mobility Support, (EAMS) where CRW personnel augment existing forces for the mission, and Initial Airbase Opening (IAO). Other operations include: Air Advisory with partner nations, augmenting or stand alone Command and Control (C2), and Air Advisory of airlift assets for U.S. Army and Marine Units.

History

The 621st was established on 24 June 1994 as the 621st Air Mobility Operations Group before being activated on 22 July of that year at McGuire Air Force Base (part of Joint Base McGuire–Dix–Lakehurst since 2009). It was expanded into the 621st Contingency Response Wing on 1 March 2005.[2] The 621st included four groups, eight squadrons and ten geographically separated operating locations aligned with major US Army and Marine Corps combat units. The wing maintains a ready corps of light, lean and agile mobility support forces able to respond as directed by the 18th Air Force at Scott Air Force Base, Ill., in order to meet Combatant Command wartime and humanitarian requirements.

Following the 2010 Haiti earthquake of 12 January, the 817th Contingency Response Group deployed to Toussaint L'Ouverture International Airport, Port-au-Prince, Haiti in support of Operation Unified Response.[3] Before the earthquake, Toussaint L'Ouverture handled an average of 20 flights a day. Immediately following the earthquake this number jumped dramatically. At its peak on 19 January, more than 160 aircraft landed and were safely unloaded by the CRW—an 800 percent increase in air traffic from pre-disaster levels.[4]

In early 2010, Airmen from the 571st Contingency Response Group and 819th Global Support Squadron deployed to Camp Marmal, Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan to provide aerial cargo handling support for the Operation Enduring Freedom logistics surge.[5] The 816th Contingency Response Group was inactivated on 11 June 2010.[6] In August 2010, 30 Airmen from the 818th Contingency Response Group deployed as a Contingency Response Element, or CRE, to Chaklala Airbase, Pakistan.[7] Once deployed, they provided additional aerial port capabilities to increase aircraft loading efficiency for the Pakistan Air Force's Central Flood Relief Cell.[8]

Airmen from the 621st Contingency Response Group deployed thrice in support of Operation Inherent Resolve, in 2015, they deployed to Iraq where it established an airstrip at al-Taqaddum to support coalition forces in the Battle for Ramadi. In 2016, the group established the Kobani airfield in Syria and also set up an airfield at Qayarrah West in Iraq to support coalition forces in the Battle of Mosul. In November 2016 Airman from the group with a contingent of civil engineers, intelligence personnel and security forces were temporarily deployed to expand and modify the airstrip that the Airmen had established at an air base where they deployed to near Kobani, so it can be used effectively to assist in the offensive to retake Raqqa from ISIS. The airbase gives the US an additional location for its aircraft to support U.S. and other anti-ISIS forces, but it had been used by US forces limitedly due to the condition of the runway which restricted what types of aircraft could land there. General Carlton Everhart II, commander of US Air Mobility Command, said that the base enables aircraft to deliver critical supplies, equipment and help position forces, he added that airmen from the 621st group have supported anti-ISIS coalition forces on the ground in Syria.[9]

Operations for NASA

With a separation of over 1,000 miles, teams from the 621st remained ready to launch at a moment's notice in support of the Space Shuttle launches during the years of the program (1981-2011).

Designed to provide a quick response mobility force, the 621st CRW's shuttle support mission was only to be executed in the event of a post launch emergency that forced the shuttle to land at an alternate location. CRW Airmen sat on-call during the schedule launch to facilitate the response in case the shuttle mission was aborted.[10]

Lineage

  • Constituted as the 621st Air Mobility Operations Group on 24 June 1994
Activated on 22 July 1994
  • Redesignated the 621st Contingency Response Wing on 1 March 2005

Assignments

Components

621st Air Mobility Advisory Group (621 AMAG)

  • 321st Air Mobility Operations Squadron (321 AMOS)
  • 621st Air Mobility Operations Squadron (621 AMOS)
  • 571st Mobility Support Advisory Squadron (571 MSAS)
  • 621st Mobility Support Operations Squadron (621 MSOS)
  • 818th Mobility Support Advisory Squadron (818 MSAS) - "By order of the Secretary of the Air Force, the 818th Mobility Support Advisory Squadron will provide air mobility advisory and training assistance in support of the Air Force goals of building partner capacity (April 19, 2011)."[12]

621st Contingency Response Group (621 CRG)

  • 321st Contingency Response Squadron (321 CRS)
  • 621st Contingency Response Squadron (621 CRS)
  • 621st Contingency Response Support Squadron (621 CRSS)

821st Contingency Response Group (821 CRG)

  • 821st Contingency Response Squadron (821 CRS)
  • 821st Contingency Response Support Squadron (821 CRSS)
  • 921st Contingency Response Squadron (921 CRS)

Stations

References

  1. "621st Contingency Response Wing". 621st Contingency Response Wing Public Affairs. 13 September 2016. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  2. Musser, James M. (12 June 2018). "Factsheet 621 Contingency Response Wing (AMC)". Air Force Historical Research Agency.
  3. Contingency Response Airmen return home after Haiti relief operations, 621st Contingency Response Wing Public Affairs
  4. FEATURE: CRW captain sees Haiti scene unfold from under brim of many hats, 621st Contingency Response Wing Public Affairs
  5. Contingency response team prides itself on 'worldwide mobility, overnight delivery', 621st Contingency Response Wing Public Affairs
  6. 816th Contingency Response Group inactivation ceremony takes parent wing into new era, 621st Contingency Response Wing Public Affairs
  7. Contingency Response Element providing critical airlift support in Pakistan, U.S. Air Forces Central Public Affairs
  8. Mobility Airmen continue to aid in international response, Air Mobility Command Public Affairs
  9. Copp, Tara (3 April 2017). "US expands air base in northern Syria for use in battle for Raqqa". Stars and Stripes.
  10. Doyle, Dustin (12 March 2009). "621st CRW on-call to provide space shuttle support". 621st Contingency Response Wing Public Affairs. Archived from the original on 18 February 2012. Retrieved 23 July 2009.
  11. Air Mobility Command Programming Plan 12-01
  12. "New Mobility Support Advisory Sq. adds outreach, education to mission of CRW". Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst. Retrieved 5 September 2020.
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