Here with Wikipedia background on the USAF in Germany
United States Air Force in Germany
Map Of USAF bases in Occupied Germany - 1947
Map Of USAF bases in West Germany during the Cold War - 1975
F-47D's of the 86th Fighter Wing, Neubiberg Air Base, 1949
F-15C Serial 80-082, 53d Fighter Squadron, Spangdahlem Air Base,
1994
Since 7 May
1945 The United
States has maintained air bases in Germany
initially beginning as postwar occupation forces. During the Cold
War, the number of bases was expanded to support NATO.
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History
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Postwar Era
At the end of World
War II United
States Army Air Force bases in the U.S. Zone of Occupation in Germany
were selected when there were absolutely no requirements for tactical
defensive planning. Army Air Force planners simply selected usable former Luftwaffe
bases in the American Zone which were repaired and used for transport and
occupation duties.
The initial USAF bases and units in the American Occupation Zone in
1947 were:
With the exception of Frankfurt/Main Airport and Tempelhof Central
Airport, these bases were all in Southern
Bavaria.
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Cold War
With the advent of the Berlin
Blockade and the chilling of relations with the Soviet
Union by 1948 it became obvious to USAF planners that these bases were
tactically untenable because of their proximity to the East
German and Czechoslovakian
borders.
With the creation of NATO
in response to Cold
War tensions in Europe,
USAFE wanted its vulnerable fighter units in West Germany moved west of
the Rhein River
to provide greater air defense warning time. France
quickly agreed to provide air base sites within their zone of occupation
in the Rheinland-Palatinate
as part of the NATO
expansion program. These new sites would all be fifty miles or more west
of the Rhein River and most were located on rolling hilltops in rural
settings.
Land acquisition in the Rheinland-Palatinate was rapid, and during
1951 construction began on six new air bases. These bases were not funded
by NATO, but by USAF money partially offset by German war reparation
payments, and construction was performed by West German contractors.
Completion was on time and the quality was high. Bases at Pferdsfeld and
Zweibrücken were built with USAF funds, but were assigned to the Royal
Canadian Air Force (RCAF) in 1952.
In 1968 the RCAF moved its forces south to Lahr
and Söllingen
in Baden-Württemberg.
Pferdsfeld AB was turned over to the West German Air Force, and Zweibrücken
AB to USAFE.
Major USAFE Air Bases and units in West
Germany during the Cold
War were:
Note: HQ USAFE was at Wiesbaden Air Base until 1973, then moved
to Ramstein Air Base. Wiesbaden Air Base was turned over to the Army in
1975 in exchange for Army facilities in the Ramstein-Kaiserslautern
area. The USAF, however, remained at Lindsey Air Station in Wiesbaden
until 1993.
These bases served the USAF well for over 40 years, keeping the peace
in Western Europe.
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After the Cold War
With the fall of the Berlin
Wall and the end of the Cold War, there was a drawdown of United
States tactical aircraft and personnel in Germany. In accordance with the Treaty
on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany (also known as the Two
Plus Four Agreement (German: Zwei-plus-Vier-Vertrag)) of 1990, no foreign
armed forces and nuclear weapons or their carriers would be stationed in
former German
Democratic Republic (East Germany) or deployed there, making it a
Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone.
This treaty paved the way for German
reunification on 3
October that year, and the many changes in Europe during the 1990s.
The air bases at Hahn, Bitburg, Wiesbaden and Zweibrücken were closed
by USAFE and turned over to the German government by 1993. In July 1994,
with President Clinton in attendance, the British, French, and American
air and land forces in Berlin were deactivated in a ceremony on the Four
Ring Parade field at Tempelhof
Central Airport. With this ceremony the last vestige of World
War II in Germany officially ended. Rhein-Main was closed at the end
of 2005, its logistics missions being transferred to Ramstein and
Spangdahlem.
Sembach
Air Base is still active as a support facility for Ramstein Air Base
called "Sembach Annex". The runway and operational facilities at
Sembach were turned over to the German government. Only the base support
facility is still in use by USAFE, and is in the process of being closed.
Today, only Ramstein
Air Base and Spangdahlem
Air Base remain as fully active U.S. air bases in Germany, supporting
ongoing operations in the Middle
East and Balkans.
About $600 million is now being spent to improve their facilities to
extend their usefulness for twenty years or more.
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See also
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References
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Endicott, Judy G., USAF Active Flying, Space, and Missile
Squadrons as of 1 October 1995. Office of Air Force History
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Fletcher, Harry R., Air Force Bases Volume II, Active Air Force
Bases outside the United States of America on 17 September 1982,
Office of Air Force History, 1989
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Maurer Maurer, Air Force Combat Units Of World War II, Office of
Air Force History, 1983
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Ravenstein, Charles A., Air Force Combat Wings Lineage and Honors
Histories 1947-1977, Office of Air Force History, 1984
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United States Air Force in
Germany
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Bases
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Organizations
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Non-USAFE
bases and organizations shown in italics
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