688th Cyberspace Wing

688th Cyberspace Wing
Active 1953–present
Country  United States
Branch  United States Air Force
Role Cyberspace Research and Development
Size 1388 military and civilians[1]
Part of Twenty Fourth Air Force
Garrison/HQ Joint Base San Antonio, Texas
Decorations Air Force Outstanding Unit Award
Commanders
Current
commander
Colonel Michelle Hayworth
Insignia
688th Cyberspace Wing emblem (approved 14 June 1994[2]

The United States Air Force's 688th Cyberspace Wing is an information operations unit located at Joint Base San Antonio (Lackland), Texas.[3]

Mission

The wing delivers information operations and engineering infrastructure for air, space, and cyberspace military operations. It supports national, joint and Air Force operations. The wing is assigned two groups.[1]

Subordinate units

The 318th Cyberspace Operations Group, located at Lackland, explores new cyberspace technologies to engineer next-generation weapons capabilities for operational commands. It has a test squadron for operational test and evaluation, a tactics squadron to optimize information operation tactics, techniques and procedures for weapon systems and a formal training unit to arm the Air Force's cyber units.[1]

The 38th Cyberspace Engineering Installation Group, located at Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma, is the Air Force's engineering and installation group for cyberspace. Its engineering squadron provides cyberspace systems engineers to every numbered air force, major command, and air force base worldwide and forms special mission teams for operational engineering problems. The group also has another engineering and installation squadron with specialized engineering flight for unique communications services, a specialized cyber contracting squadron and a cyberspace readiness squadron for long-haul communication, Scope Edge teams and maintenance of Air Force communications.[1]

History

In July 1953, United States Air Force Security Service organized the 6901st and 6902d Special Communications Centers at Brooks Air Force Base, Texas.[4][5] One month later, these two organizations were replaced by the Air Force Special Communications Center, located on the other side of San Antonio, Texas at Kelly Air Force Base. The center became the Air Force Electronic Warfare Center in July 1975.[1]

Air Force successes in exploiting enemy information systems during Operation Desert Storm led to the realization that the strategies and tactics of command and control warfare could be expanded to the entire information spectrum and be implemented as information warfare. In response, the cemter was redesignated the Air Force Information Operations Cemter on 10 September 1993,[1] combining technical skill sets from the existing center with the Air Force Cryptologic Support Center's Securities Directorate and intelligence capabilities from the former Air Force Intelligence Command.

In May 2007, after 54 years of being aligned with United States Air Force Security Service and its successors, the center became part of Air Combat Command and was reassigned to Eighth Air Force. This assignment did not last long, for in August 2009 the center was redesignated the 688th Information Operations Wing and was assigned to Twenty-Fourth Air Force of Air Force Space Command.[1]

The Air Force Information Operations Center became the 688th Information Operations Wing on 18 August 2009 as planned by the initial Air Force Cyber Command plan of 2007 and 2008.[6]

Today the wing has a staff of nearly 1,400 civil and military personnel,[1] and based in the same location as United States Strategic Command's Joint Information Operations Warfare Center. It is currently commanded by Colonel Michelle Hayworth and is subordinate to Twenty-Fourth Air Force.[6]

Lineage

Organized on 1 August 1953

Assignments

Components

Stations

Awards

Award streamer Award Dates Notes
Air Force Outstanding Unit Award1 November 1965 – 1 November 1967Air Force Special Communications Center[2]
Air Force Outstanding Unit Award18 August 2009 – 1 October 2010688th Information Operations Wing[1]
Air Force Outstanding Unit Award1 October 2013 – 30 September 2014688th Cyberspace Wing[1]
Air Force Organizational Excellence Award1 January 1974 – 1 January 1976Air Force Special Communications Center (later Air Force Electronic Warfare Center)[1]
Air Force Organizational Excellence Award(2) Jan 1976 – 1 Jan 1979Air Force Electronic Warfare Center[1]
Air Force Organizational Excellence Award2 January 1979 – 31 December 1981Air Force Electronic Warfare Center[1]
Air Force Organizational Excellence Award1 January 1988 – 31 December 1989Air Force Electronic Warfare Center[1]
Air Force Organizational Excellence Award1 January 1990 – 31 December 1991Air Force Electronic Warfare Center[1]
Air Force Organizational Excellence Award1 May 1993 – 31 May 1994Air Force Electronic Warfare Center (later Air Force Information Warfare Center)[1]
Air Force Organizational Excellence Award1 June 1994 – 31 May 1996Air Force Information Warfare Center[1]
Air Force Organizational Excellence Award1 June 1996 – 31 May 1997Air Force Information Warfare Center[1]
Air Force Organizational Excellence Award1 June 1997 – 31 May 1998Air Force Information Warfare Center[1]
Air Force Organizational Excellence Award1 June 2002 – 31 May 2003Air Force Information Warfare Center[1]
Air Force Organizational Excellence Award1 June 2003 – 31 May 2004Air Force Information Warfare Center[1]
Air Force Organizational Excellence Award1 June 2004 – 31 May 2006Air Force Information Warfare Center[1]


References

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 "Factsheet, 688th Cyberspace Wing". Twenty-Fourth Air Force Public Affairs. December 17, 2013. Retrieved November 4, 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Lacomia, John M. (August 14, 2015). "Factsheet 688 Cyberspace Wing (USAFE)". Air Force Historical Research Agency. Retrieved November 4, 2015.
  3. Air Force News: "Official detail scope, units of AFCYBER command"
  4. Mukeller, p. 55
  5. United States Air Force, Air Force Information Operations Center Factsheet, accessed December 2008
  6. 1 2 Intelligence Online. , accessed January 2009

Bibliography

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Air Force Historical Research Agency.

External links

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