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| [[Twenty-Second Air Force]] || <center> [[Image:22d Air Force.png|75px]] </center> || [[Dobbins Air Reserve Base]], [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]] || [[Air Force Reserve Command|AFRC]]
| [[Twenty-Second Air Force]] || <center> [[Image:22d Air Force.png|75px]] </center> || [[Dobbins Air Reserve Base]], [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]] || [[Air Force Reserve Command|AFRC]]
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[[Image:Patch 15th USAAF.png|thumb|15th USAAF patch]]

The [[Fifteenth Air Force]] and [[Twenty-First Air Force]] were Numbered Air Forces, but have since been redesignated as [[Expeditionary Mobility Task Force]]s (EMTFs). At the same time, a new NAF, Eighteenth Air Force, was established as the single NAF under AMC. Each EMTF is commanded by a Brigadier General and is responsible for supporting Air Mobility support for one or more geographic regions. In addition, the EMTF commander is pre-designated at the Director of Mobility Forces (DIRMOBFOR) for the Air Force Warfighting Headquarters the EMTF supports.
The [[Fifteenth Air Force]] and [[Twenty-First Air Force]] were Numbered Air Forces, but have since been redesignated as [[Expeditionary Mobility Task Force]]s (EMTFs). At the same time, a new NAF, Eighteenth Air Force, was established as the single NAF under AMC. Each EMTF is commanded by a Brigadier General and is responsible for supporting Air Mobility support for one or more geographic regions. In addition, the EMTF commander is pre-designated at the Director of Mobility Forces (DIRMOBFOR) for the Air Force Warfighting Headquarters the EMTF supports.



Revision as of 16:52, 7 October 2007

Template:USAF This is a list of Numbered Air Forces (NAF) of the United States Air Force

Historically, a NAF is a level of command below a MAJCOM (Major Command), and above one or more Wings or independent Groups. Over time their role has changed. Some NAFs were replaced with MAJCOMs, and some MAJCOMs were replaced with NAFs. In addition, some NAFs had dual-roles as MAJCOMs, as air components of Unified Commands, or as air components of Subunified or Combined Commands. In the U.S. Air Force reorganization of the early 1990s, NAFs were reorganized as tactical echelons providing operational leadership and supervision. In this new role, they were not management headquarters and did not have complete functional staffs. However, several NAFs continued to serve as air components of Subunified or Combined Commands. In these cases the NAF function was separate from the air component function, even though the commander was "dual hatted" as the commander of both organizations. The best example of this arrangement in recent history is Ninth Air Force, which doubles as Central Command Air Forces (CENTAF), the air component of U.S. Central Command.

NAFs are typically commanded by a Major General. NAFs commanded by a Lieutenant General are typically those with a dual-role as air components of Subunified or Combined Commands, where their commander is "dual hatted" as the commander of both organizations.

In 2004 and 2005 the role of the NAF changed again. In this case, the NAF has essentially been eliminated as a tactical echelon. Instead, the distinct air component staff is being organized into a Warfighting Headquarters (WFHQ), and the former command responsibilities of the NAF are being assigned directly to the parent MAJCOM. The Air Force Component Numbered Air Force (C-NAF) Headquarters is the Air Force contribution to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff direction that all combatant commands establish a Standing Joint Force Headquarters (SJFHQ). As a result, several NAFs have been deactivated, and some that remain are a NAF in name only. C-NAFs more correctly are a provisional air component headquarters for potential contingencies. In this role they are responsible for the in-place command and control elements, such as Air Operations Centers (often organized in peacetime as an Air Operations Group), along with other functions which previously belonged to the MAJCOM Operations Directorate.

Air Force Shield Location of Headquarters Major Command
First Air Force
Tyndall Air Force Base, Florida ACC
Second Air Force
Keesler Air Force Base, Mississippi AETC
Third Air Force
Ramstein Air Base, Germany USAFE
Fourth Air Force
March Air Reserve Base, California AFRC
Fifth Air Force
Yokota Air Base, Japan PACAF
Seventh Air Force
Osan Air Base, Korea PACAF
Eighth Air Force
Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana ACC
Ninth Air Force
Shaw Air Force Base, South Carolina ACC
Tenth Air Force
Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base, Fort Worth, Texas AFRC
Eleventh Air Force
Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska PACAF
Twelfth Air Force
Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona ACC
Thirteenth Air Force
Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii PACAF
Fourteenth Air Force
Vandenberg Air Force Base, California AFSPC
Eighteenth Air Force
Scott Air Force Base, Illinois AMC
Nineteenth Air Force
Randolph Air Force Base, Texas AETC
Twentieth Air Force
F.E. Warren Air Force Base, Wyoming AFSPC
Twenty-Second Air Force
Dobbins Air Reserve Base, Georgia AFRC
15th USAAF patch

The Fifteenth Air Force and Twenty-First Air Force were Numbered Air Forces, but have since been redesignated as Expeditionary Mobility Task Forces (EMTFs). At the same time, a new NAF, Eighteenth Air Force, was established as the single NAF under AMC. Each EMTF is commanded by a Brigadier General and is responsible for supporting Air Mobility support for one or more geographic regions. In addition, the EMTF commander is pre-designated at the Director of Mobility Forces (DIRMOBFOR) for the Air Force Warfighting Headquarters the EMTF supports.

Earlier changes in NAF structure include the reactivation of Nineteenth Air Force in 1993, the redesignation of Twenty-Third Air Force as Air Force Special Operations Command, and the redesignation of Alaskan Air Command as Eleventh Air Force in 1990, and the redesignation of Sixth Air Force as United States Air Forces Southern Command in 1946.

As the implementation of the USAF's Warfighting Headquarters concept continues, the future of Number Air Forces is in question. For example, after United States Strategic Command absorbed the roles of United States Space Command, the continued division of Air Force Space Command into the space focused Fourteenth Air Force and the strategic focused Twentieth Air Force makes less sense. This will be further complicated when the USAF stands up a WFHQ supporting United States Strategic Command. Likewise, with PACAF's standup of its Kenney WFHQ, there will be little purpose for Fifth Air Force or Eleventh Air Force. USAFE, with no true NAFs, and with its WFHQ retaining the organizational title of one of its historic NAFs, is likely the model for USAF MAJCOMs in the future.

Numbered Air Forces at one time often included Air Divisions, but this organization has become obsolete and unused. The last Air Divisions were disbanded in 1991. Air Divisions were composed of two or more Wings or independent Groups.