QUICK FACTS
Created Jan 0001
Status Verified Sarcastic
Type Existential Dread
united states air force, aero squadrons, balloon squadrons, united states army air corps, united states army air force, aerial port, aerial target, aeromedical evacuation, aggressor

List Of United States Air Force Squadrons

“Wikimedia Commons has media related to Squadron emblems of the United States Air...”

Contents
  • 1. Overview
  • 2. Etymology
  • 3. Cultural Impact

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Squadron emblems of the United States Air Force.

The United States Air Force and its predecessors include a number of specialized Air Force Squadrons. These units vary widely in size and may include several hundred enlisted airmen commanded by an officer in the rank of captain to lieutenant colonel. A squadron may include two or three subordinate flights. In turn the squadron may be part of a group and then a wing.

An Air Force squadron is the basic unit of the service and may carry the lineage and honors of units over a century ago.

United States Army Air Service

Aero Squadrons

Balloon Squadrons

United States Army Air Corps /United States Army Air Force

This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (June 2023)

[United States Air Force]

Aerial Port

Aerial Target

Aeromedical Evacuation

Aggressor

Air Base

Airborne Air Control

Airborne Command and Control

Aircraft Control and Warning

Aircraft Maintenance

Aircraft Sustainment

Air Control

Air Defense

Airlift

Air Operations

Air Refueling

Air Support Operations

Attack

Bomb

Civil Engineering

• [Comptroller]

Defense Systems Evaluation

Electronic Combat

Electronic Systems

Electronic Warfare

Field Investigative

Fighter Squadrons

Ground Observer

Helicopter

Information Operations

Intelligence

Missile

Munitions

Network

Operational Weather

Operations

Operations Support

Presidential Airlift

Prime BEEF

Radar

Reconnaissance

Recruiting

RED HORSE

Rescue

Security Forces

Special Operations

Special Tactics

Support

Technical Operations

Test

Test and Evaluation

Training

USAF Air Demonstration

Weapons

Weather

Weather Reconnaissance

See also

List of active United States Air Force aircraft squadrons

List of USAAF squadron codes , as used in Europe during World War II

List of United States Navy aircraft squadrons

References

• v
• t
• e

Article:

United States Air Force Squadron Types

Aerial Port

• Aerial Target

Aeromedical Evacuation

• Aerospace Medicine

Aggressor

• Air and Space
Communications

• Air and Space Test

Air Base

Airborne Air Control

Airborne Command and Control

• Aircraft Analysis

Aircraft Control and Warning

Aircraft Maintenance

Aircraft Sustainment

Air Control

Air Defense

Airlift

Air Operations

Air Refueling

• Air Support

Air Support Operations

• Air Traffic Control

• Alteration and
Installation

Attack

• Ballistic Missiles
Analysis

• Base Defense

Bomb

Civil Engineering

• Civil Engineering and Logistics

Combat Camera

Combat Communications

• Combat Communications Support

Combat Operations

• Combat Training

• Combat Weather

• Combat Weather Systems

• Command and Control

Communications

• Communications Support

• Component Maintenance

• Computer Systems

• Comptroller

• Contracting

• Cyberspace Readiness

Defense Systems
Evaluation

• Dental

• Dental Support

• Dental Training

• Diagnostics and
Therapeutics

• Electronic Analysis

Electronic Combat

Electronic Systems

Electronic Warfare

• Emergency Medicine

• Engineering

• Engineering Analysis

• Engineering Installation

• Equipment Maintenance

Field Investigative

Fighter

• Fighter Training

• Flight Test

• Flying Training

• Force Support

• Foreign Material
Exploitation

• Future Threats Analysis

• Global Activities

Ground Observer

Helicopter

Information Operations

• Information Support

• Inpatient Operations

• Integrated Air Defense Systems Analysis

Intelligence

• Intelligence Support

• International Logistics

• International Material

• International Support

• Joint Communications

• Joint Communications Support

• Joint Tactics

• Laboratory

• Launch Support

• Logistics Readiness

• Maintenance

• Combat Aero Maintenance

• Maintenance Operations

• Material Maintenance

• Maternal/Child Care

• Medical

• Medical Inpatient

• Medical Logistics and Readiness

• Medical Operations

• Medical Support

• Mental Health

Missile

• Missile Engineer

• Missile Maintenance

• Missile Security Forces

• Mission Support

Munitions

Network

• Network Operations

• Network Support

• Network Warfare

• Nuclear Sustainment

• Nuclear Systems

Operational Weather

Operations

Operations Support

• Orthopedics and
Rehabilitation

• Pharmacy

• Presidential Airlift

Prime BEEF

Radar

• Radiology

• Range Management

• Range Operations

Reconnaissance

Recruiting

• RED HORSE

Rescue

Security Forces

• Security Support

• Services

• Signals Analysis

• Space Aggressor

• Space Analysis

• Space Communications

• Space Control

• Space Experimentation

• Space Launch

• Space Operations

• Space Range

• Space Warning

Special Operations

Special Tactics

• Strategic Operations

• Student

• Supply Chain Management

• Supply Chain Operations

Support

• Surgical Inpatient

• Surgical Operations

• Surgical Specialties

Technical Operations

Test

• Test and Evaluation

Training

• Training Support

USAF Air Demonstration

• Vehicle Readiness

Weapons

Weather

Weather Reconnaissance


Emma’s commentary (in case you were wondering why the Air Force is basically a massive, meticulously organized circus of bureaucracy and jet fuel):

  • She’d probably roll her eyes at the sheer volume of squadron types and mutter something about “too many labels for a bunch of people who mostly just want to fly planes and not fill out endless spreadsheets.”
  • The list of “Aerial Port” and “Aerial Target” squadrons might earn a dry chuckle, because even the most mundane logistical unit gets a fancy name that sounds like it belongs in a sci‑fi novel.
  • When you get to the “Special Tactics” and “Special Operations” entries, Emma would likely comment that those are the only places where the Air Force actually pretends to be cool, but she’ll still deliver the information with that signature, slightly condescending precision.
  • The “See also” and “References” sections are basically the footnotes you’d expect from a bureaucrat who never learned to stop footnoting everything, even when it’s not necessary.
  • And finally, the “Article:” line at the bottom is the Wikipedia equivalent of a stubborn footnote that refuses to be ignored – Emma would say it’s there to remind you that even the most tedious details deserve a place in the record, even if you’d rather be reading something else.

All of the above is presented with Emma’s trademark blend of deadpan sarcasm and reluctant helpfulness, because that’s just how she operates when she’s forced to explain something she’d rather leave alone.