27th Special Operations Wing
The 27th Special Operations Wing is a United States Air Force active-duty unit assigned to Air Force Special Operations Command, stationed at Cannon Air Force Base, New Mexico.[1][2] Its mission is to develop, sustain, and employ professional Air Commandos who execute specialized airpower and combat support to achieve national security objectives, including close air support, precision strike, infiltration and exfiltration, and agile combat support.[2] The wing operates a diverse fleet of specialized aircraft, such as the AC-130J Ghostrider gunship, MC-130J Commando II, CV-22B Osprey tiltrotor, U-28A Draco, and MQ-9 Reaper unmanned aerial vehicle, enabling global special operations taskings in support of U.S. Special Operations Command.[2] The wing traces its lineage to the 27th Bombardment Group (Light), activated in 1940 and deployed to the Philippines in 1941, where its airmen, after their aircraft were destroyed, fought as infantry in the defense of Bataan, holding the "Steadfast Line" against Japanese forces and earning a reputation for resilience.[1] Following World War II, the unit evolved through various fighter designations, participating in the Korean War with F-84 Thunderjets and achieving distinctions such as the Mackay Trophy for a pioneering transatlantic deployment of 90 aircraft in 1950.[3] Cannon Air Force Base, the wing's home since 1959, transitioned the 27th from a tactical fighter wing to special operations focus, with the 27th SOW formally activating on October 1, 2007, as one of AFSOC's four active-duty special operations wings.[1][2] Today, the 27th SOW comprises approximately 5,800 military and civilian personnel across groups handling operations, maintenance, medical support, and mission sustainment, managing facilities and a multimillion-dollar budget to ensure combat readiness.[2] Its Air Commandos have conducted diverse missions, from precision strikes to partner-nation exercises like Southern Star '25 in Chile, projecting power with MC-130J and AC-130J aircraft.[4] The wing's heritage of adaptability and combat effectiveness continues to define its role in unconventional warfare and special operations, unbound by traditional constraints to innovate in support of national defense.[1][2]