In 2007 the squadron was converted to provisional status as the 871st Air Expeditionary Squadron and assigned to United States Air Forces Europe to activate or inactivate as needed. It was activated in 2008 at Accra, Ghana.
In April 1944, the air and ground echelons united at Pratt Army Air Field. Here the 871st finally received newly manufactured Boeing B-29 Superfortresses the following month, although it continued to fly B-17s as well due to continuing engine problems with the B-29s. In May the United States Army Air Forces reorganized its very heavy bombardment units. The 872d Bombardment Squadron and support units of the 497th group were inactivated and their personnel absorbed into the 871st and the remaining squadrons of the group.[4]
Combat in the Pacific
The 871st deployed to the Pacific Theater of Operations, with the ground echelon sailing 30 July on the SS Fairisle, passing through Honolulu and Eniwetok before arriving at Saipan on 20 September.[5] Upon arrival the squadron's personnel were engaged in construction. By mid-October most personnel were able to move into Quonset huts from the tents which they were assigned on arrival. The aircrews began departing Kansas on 6 October, ferrying their aircraft to Saipan via a 6500 nautical mile route, with the last B-29 arriving on 30 October. At Saipan the unit became part of the XXI Bomber Command[1] at Isely Field.
The squadron began operations on 28 October 1944 with a night attack against the submarine pens at Truk Islands and attacks against Iwo Jima in early November.[6] The squadron took part in the first attack on Japan by AAF planes based in the Marianas.[7] On 24 November 1944 110 aircraft of the 73rd Bombardment Wing bombed Tokyo on this mission. The 871st flew missions against strategic objectives in Japan, originally in daylight and from high altitude.[7] It was also tasked with "Weather Strike" missions which were single ship flights flown nightly to obtain weather information for target areas in Japan while also making incendiary attacks on various targets.[8]
The squadron received a Distinguished Unit Citation (DUC) for a mission on 27 January 1945. Although weather conditions prevented the group from bombing its primary objective, the unescorted B-29's withstood severe enemy attacks to strike an alternate target, the industrial area of Hamamatsu. It was awarded a second DUC for attacking strategic centers in Japan during July and August 1945. The squadron assisted the assault on Okinawa in April 1945 by bombing enemy airfields to cut down air attacks against the invasion force. Beginning on 19 March and continuing until the end of the war the squadron made incendiary raids against Japan, flying at night and at low altitude to bomb area targets.[7] The unit released propaganda leaflets over the Japanese home islands,[9] continuing strategic bombing raids and incendiary attacks until the Japanese surrender in August 1945.[7]
Return to the United States and inactivation
After V-J Day, the 871st dropped supplies to Allied prisoners.[10] In November 1945 the unit returned to the United States[1] where it became part of Continental Air Forces at March Field, California. In January 1945, the 871st moved to MacDill Field, Florida. In March 1946 CAF became Strategic Air Command (SAC), and the squadron was one of SAC's first bombardment squadrons. Demobilization, however, was in full swing and the squadron turned in its aircraft and was inactivated on 31 March.[1]
Expeditionary operations
In 2007 the squadron was converted to provisional status as the 871st Air Expeditionary Squadron and assigned to United States Air Forces Europe to activate or inactivate as needed. It was activated in 2008 at Accra, Ghana.[11]
The squadron was again activated in April 2015 at Keflavik International Airport for the Icelandic Air Surveillance and Policing mission. Iceland does not maintain its own military force, so the United States and other NATO allies periodically rotate through Keflavik to maintain the integrity and security of Iceland's airspace. the 2015 deployment included four McDonnell Douglas F-15C Eagle fighters from RAF Lakenheath, a Boeing KC-135 Stratotanker from RAF Mildenhall and approximately 200 airmen.[12]
Lineage
Constituted as the 871st Bombardment Squadron, Very Heavy on 19 November 1943
^Approved 5 August 1944. Description: Over and through a light pastel green disc, wide border orange, an ancient warrior of giant stature, standing affronte, feet apart, left hand resting on hip, attired in battle dress of gold mail, and wearing a winged gold helmet and metallic gloves, having a broad sword of metal, proper, strapped about the waist by a green sword belt, holding a white fire bomb in the right mailed hand; all in front of three lavender and purple mountain peaks in base and casting a dark green line shadow on background.
Stewart, Harry A.; Power, John E. (1947). Goforth, Pat E. (ed.). The Long Haul: The Story of the 497th Bomb Group (VH). Bangor Public Library World War Regimental Histories. San Angelo, TX: Newsfoto Publishing Co. Retrieved 18 August 2013.