Hurlburt Field unit transfers to Cannon

  • Published
  • By Capt. Mae-Li Allison
  • 27th Special Operations Wing Public Affairs
Officials from the 16th Special Operations Squadron held a squadron flag-transfer ceremony here June 19 to mark the official transfer of the squadron from Hurlburt Field, Fla., to Cannon Air Force Base.

"The mighty (AC-130H) Spectre has arrived," said Lt. Gen. Donald C. Wurster, the Air Force Special Operations Command commander and officiating officer for the event. 

"The 16th Special Operations Squadron, with a proven heritage of courage, precision and valor, has relocated to Cannon AFB as of today, to the high desert of its New Mexico home," General Wurster said. 

The 16th SOS flies the AC-130H gunship and conducts missions such as close-air support to defend friendly forces on the ground, air interdiction against preplanned targets or targets of opportunity, and force protection, such as defending air bases or facilities. The AC-130H is armed with 40 mm and 105 mm cannons.

After saying that the AC-130H is "the most feared weapon system on every battlefield," General Wurster then highlighted the great contributions the squadron is making in combat.

"This squadron has supported more than 2,700 days of continuous combat and is directly responsible for more than 4,500 enemy combatants killed or captured," he said. "Fully a quarter of the squadron is deployed, serving in combat, as we speak." 

Col. Stephen Clark, the 27th Special Operations Wing commander, marveled at the fact that the people of the 16th SOS are still fully supporting overseas contingency operations while conducting the squadron move.

"The men and women of the 16th SOS have worked relentlessly to ensure that for them, the term 'impossible' is synonymous with the term 'normal,'" he said. "They, along with their partners in the 16th Aircraft Maintenance Unit, have executed the move to Cannon while sustaining their presence over the battlefields within the U.S. Central Command [area of responsibility] and being postured to support any short-notice taskings for which they may be called."

Det. 1 of the 16th SOS stood up at Cannon AFB in July 2008, to which a handful of people were assigned in order to prepare the way for the arrival of eight aircraft and nearly 500 people who compose the entire 16th SOS and 16th AMXU.

On May 19, the first two AC-130Hs arrived at Cannon AFB for permanent assignment. More than half of the personnel will be in place at Cannon AFB by the end of June and will continue to move here until Nov. 30, said Lt. Col. Sean Farrell, the 16th SOS commander.

The aircraft transfer should be complete by late summer or early fall.