432d Fighter-Interceptor Squadron

432d Fighter-Interceptor Squadron

North American F-86D-40-NA Sabres 520th Air Defense Group, Truax Field, Wisconsin, Nov 1953 Identified Aircraft: 52-3622, 52-3717
Active 1943–1958
Country  United States
Branch  United States Air Force
Type Fighter-Interceptor
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Captain (later Colonel) John S. Loisel
Insignia
Emblem of the 432d Fighter-Interceptor Squadron

The 432d Fighter-Interceptor Squadron is an inactive United States Air Force unit. Its last assignment was with the Air Defense Command 475th Fighter Group stationed at Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport, Minnesota. It was inactivated on 2 January 1958.

History

Combat in Southwest Pacific and Western Pacific, 12 August 1943 – 21 July 1945. Occupation duty (Korea and Japan), 1945–1949. Air Defense of Upper Midwest, 1952–1958.

Lineage

432d Fighter-Interceptor Squadron Northrop F-89H-5-NO Scorpion 54-409 Stationed at Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport, Minnesota. At Indian Springs Auxiliary Airfield, Nevada, armed with a "Genie" nuclear missile. Aircraft fired the nuclear weapon as the "John Shot" of Operation Plumb Bob, 19 July 1959
Inactivated on 1 April 1949
Activated on December 1952
Inactivated on 2 January 1958.

Assignments

475th Fighter Group, 14 May 1943 – 1 April 1949
31st Air Division, 1 December 1952
520th Air Defense Group, 16 February 1953
475th Fighter Group, 18 August 1955 – 2 January 1958.

Stations

Operated from Port Moresby Airfield Complex, New Guinea, 12 August – 1 September 1943
Detachment operated from San Jose, Mindoro, 5 February – 2 March 1945

Aircraft

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency website http://www.afhra.af.mil/.

    • A Handbook of Aerospace Defense Organization 1946 - 1980, by Lloyd H. Cornett and Mildred W. Johnson, Office of History, Aerospace Defense Center, Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado
    • Maurer, Maurer. Combat Squadrons of the Air Force: World War II. Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: Office of Air Force History, 1982.
    • USAF Aerospace Defense Command publication, The Interceptor, January 1979 (Volume 21, Number 1).

    External links

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