Air Force District of Washington

The Air Force District of Washington (AFDW) is a Direct Reporting Unit of the United States Air Force. AFDW oversees Air Force operations in the Washington, D.C. region (also known as the "National Capital Region" or "NCR").

Air Force District of Washington
Air Force District of Washington emblem
Active7 July 2005 – present
1 October 1985 – 15 July 1994
(35 years, 4 months)[1]
Country United States
Branch United States Air Force
TypeDirect Reporting Unit
Part ofJoint Force Headquarters National Capital Region
HeadquartersAndrews Air Force Base, Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, U.S.[2]
Motto(s)"Pride... Teamwork... Success"
Anniversaries7 July
Decorations
Air Force Organization Excellence Award[3]
Websitewww.afdw.af.mil
Commanders
CommanderMaj Gen James A. Jacobson
Deputy CommanderCol Robert L. Hanovich Jr.
Command ChiefCCM Christopher M. Yevchak

As a Direct Reporting Unit, AFDW is directly subordinate to the Chief of Staff, Headquarters, United States Air Force, and serves as the Air Force service component to the JFHQ-NCR. AFDW was originally headquartered on Bolling Air Force Base, but changed to Joint Base Andrews-Naval Air Facility Washington (JBA-NAFW).

History

AFDW originates back to the post-World War II era when Bolling Field Command was established on 15 December 1946. Bolling Field Command absorbed functions from various support organizations in the Washington, D.C. vicinity.[4] It was redesignated Headquarters Command, USAF, on 17 March 1958. When Headquarters Command, USAF, inactivated on 1 July 1976, many of its functions passed to Military Airlift Command. The Air Force District of Washington was constituted and activated, on 1 October 1985. it was inactivated on 15 Jul 1994, due to declining defense budgets. AFDW was reactivated on 7 July 2005, to realign the Air Force command structure in the NCR with the other military services, improve Air Force support to Joint Force Headquarters - National Capital Region (JFHQ-NCR).

Mission

AFDW oversees two wings and one group on JBA-NAFW: the 11th Wing, the 79th Medical Wing and the 844th Communication Group. The 79th Medical Wing and 844th Communications Group both have specialized missions and serve as a single Air Force voice in the National Capital Region (NCR) for their respective fields of expertise. The 11th Wing fulfills duties as the host base organization of JBA-NAFW, while also supporting AFDW requirements. AFDW also supports airmen in more than 2,000 Air Force Elements in more than 500 locations in 108 countries.[5]

AFDW serves as the Air Force service component for coordination purposes to JFHQ-NCR and the supporting command to Joint Task Force-National Capital Region/Medical (JTF-CapMed). JFHQ-NCR has an emergency or major event operation 'mobilization' function as Joint Task Force-National Capital Region. When the JFHQ-NCR transitions to the Joint Task Force NCR (JTF-NCR), the 320th Air Expeditionary Wing (320 AEW) activates and becomes the Air Force service component of JTF-NCR. Normally, the Commander of AFDW serves as the Commander, 320 AEW. Air Force Mission Directive 13 delineates missions and assigned duties applicable to AFDW in both its worldwide Air Force service role and its JTF-NCR Air Force service component role.

Facilities overseen

AFDW oversees the following installations:

List of commanders

No. Commander Term
Portrait Name Took office Left office Term length
1
Brigadier General
Edward N. Giddings
1 October 1985November 1988~ 3 years, 31 days
2
Brigadier General
Ralph R. Rohatsch Jr.
November 1988July 1990~ 1 year, 242 days
3
Brigadier General
James L. Vick
July 1990~ September 1992~ 2 years, 62 days
4
Colonel
Stevan B. Richards
~ September 199215 July 1994~ 1 year, 317 days
5
Brigadier General
Duane A. Jones
7 July 200514 April 2006281 days
6
Major General
Robert L. Smolen
14 April 2006~ 29 June 2007~ 1 year, 76 days
7
Major General
Frank Gorenc
~ 29 June 2007August 2008~ 1 year, 33 days
8
Major General
Ralph J. Jodice II
August 200818 November 2009~ 1 year, 109 days
9
Major General
Darrell D. Jones
18 November 20099 December 20101 year, 21 days
10
Major General
Darren W. McDew
9 December 201026 July 20121 year, 230 days
11
Major General
Sharon K.G. Dunbar
26 July 201222 July 20141 year, 361 days
12
Major General
Darryl W. Burke
22 July 201421 June 20172 years, 334 days
13
Major General
James A. Jacobson
21 June 20179 July 20192 years, 18 days
14
Major General
Ricky Rupp
9 July 2019Incumbent1 year, 212 days

See also

References

Attribution:

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