21st Operational Weather Squadron Contents Mission Personnel and resources Lineage Duty...

Air Weather ServiceAir Force Combat Climatatology CenterAir Force Combat Weather CenterAir Force Global Weather CentralJoint Typhoon Warning Center1st2nd7th8th9th920th2107th2108th9th11th15th17th21st25th26th28th53rd54th55th56th57th58th59th375th2nd Systems Operations10th Combat Weather335th Training1st2nd3rd6th7th14th19th18th30th31st45th46th607th


Weather squadrons of the United States Air Force


Kapaun Air StationGermanyAir ForceNavyUS European CommandNATOAir ForceArmySHAPEEUCOMAFRICOMUSAFEUSAREURSOCEURNAVEURAtlantic OceanEuropeRussiaAfricaMiddle EastAir ForcemeteorologyKapaun Air StationGermanyUSAFERamstein Air BaseGermanyAir ForceAir Force



































21st Operational Weather Squadron

21OWS.jpg
21st Operational Weather Squadron Patch

Active 1 December 1997—present[1]
Country United States
Branch 557th Weather Wing
Type Squadron
Role Weather Surveillance
Part of
United States Air Force/557th Weather Wing
Garrison/HQ Kapaun Air Station

The 21st Operational Weather Squadron provides weather support for all US Air Force and Army in the European and Africa Commands and is based at Kapaun Air Station, Germany.




Contents






  • 1 Mission


  • 2 Personnel and resources


  • 3 Lineage


  • 4 Duty Assignments


  • 5 Emblem


    • 5.1 Meaning




  • 6 Awards


  • 7 Commanders


  • 8 References


  • 9 External links





Mission


The 21st Operational Weather Squadron provides highly accurate, timely and relevant environmental situational awareness to Air Force, Navy, and Army Commanders operating in US European Command in partnership with NATO. The 21st OWS is responsible for producing and disseminating mission planning and execution weather analyses, terminal aerodrome forecasts, and briefings for Air Force, Army, SHAPE, EUCOM, AFRICOM, USAFE, USAREUR, SOCEUR, and NAVEUR forces operating at 491 DoD installations/sites encompassing 92 countries and 23M square miles within the Atlantic Ocean, Europe, Russia, Africa and the Middle East.


This weather squadron is responsible for base or post forecasting, developing weather products, briefing transient aircrews, and weather warnings for all of their geographical units. Using automatic observing systems located at all military installations and communicating with their combat weather flights, the squadron is able to 'watch' the weather in their entire area of responsibility from one central location.


The Operational Weather Squadron is the first place a newly schooled weather apprentice will report. At the squadron, working alongside a seasoned weather professional, the forecaster is trained in all aspects of Air Force meteorology, from pilot briefing to tactical forecasting.


The weather squadron works closely with the combat weather flights they support to ensure a flawless exchange of weather information.



Personnel and resources




Technical Sergeant Justin Guerra of the 21st OWS at the Ramstein Air Base in Germany


21st Operational Weather Squadron’s manning consists of active duty, civilian and contract personnel and is located on Kapaun Air Station, Germany, Under USAFE, Ramstein Air Base, Germany.



Lineage


Activations and inactivations of the 21st Operational Weather Squadron:



  • 1 Dec 1997: Activated as a unit

  • 17 Feb 1999: Redesignated USAFE Operational Weather Squadron



Duty Assignments


List of duty assignments and parent units from 1997 to present.




  • Sembach Kaserne, Germany, Headquarters USAFE (1 December 1997 - 23 April 2012)


  • Kapaun Air Station, Germany (23 April 2012 - Present)




21st OWS Patch



Emblem


The unit insignia was approved on 20 August 1998.



Meaning


Blue and yellow are the Air Force colors. Blue alludes to the sky, the primary theater of Air Force operations. The knight represents the unit's readiness and its dedication to support the warfighter and its role as a "keeper of peace". He leaps over a weather vane symbolizing a commander's ability to overcome adverse weather conditions due to accurate weather information provided by the Squadron. The horse signifies the unit's key mission of carrying tailored intelligence information to operational customers and the ability to complete the Air Force mission. The lance carried by the knight denotes the Squadron as the "tip" of weather forecasting services reaching into the theater to make a difference; the shield connotes the ability to safeguard those who may be in harm's way. The wind anemometer within the shield is a standard trademark for Air Force weather personnel and a key tool for the craft. The developing thunderstorm in the background symbolizes the weather hazards that may impede combat operations.



Awards


The unit has received the following awards:




  • Fawbush-Miller Award (1999, 2004)

  • USAF OWS of the Year (2005, 2008)



Commanders



  • Lt. Col. Ralph Stoffler, 1997–1999

  • Lt. Col. John Murphy, 1999–2001

  • Lt. Col. Carolyn Vadnais, 2001–2003

  • Lt. Col. Tim Hutchison, 2003–2005

  • Lt. Col. John Shepley, 2005–2007

  • Lt. Col. Brian Pukall, 2007–2009

  • Lt. Col. David Andrus, 2009–2011

  • Lt. Col. Eugene Wall, 2011-2013

  • Lt. Col. Gerald Sullivan Jr., 2013-2015

  • Lt. Col. Cedrick Stubblefield, 2015–2017

  • Lt. Col. Eric Muller, 2017-Present



References





  1. ^ USAFE Information p.21




External links




  • USAFE Information

  • USAFE Factsheet

  • USAFE article










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