| Air Force Gen. Creech getting honor
BY: STEVE TETREAULT
Las Vegas Review-Journal
06/15/2005
WASHINGTON -- With the military's growing emphasis on the remotely
piloted Predator aircraft, it seemed inevitable that more
recognition would follow for the Indian Springs Air Force Auxiliary
Field where the revolutionary spy plane has been based.
That day will come Monday, when the once sleepy airfield gets a new
name in acknowledgement of its elevated mission.
Air Force and congressional officials confirmed the installation 45
miles northwest of Las Vegas will be renamed Creech Air Force Base,
in honor of Gen. Wilbur "Bill" Creech, who was credited with
reinventing tactical air training. Creech also was known as the
"father of the Thunderbirds" during a 40-year Air Force career,
according to officials at the Nellis base.
The new identity "would be a fitting and lasting tribute to honor
this visionary Air Force leader while also recognizing the enhanced
importance of the facility," said Col. Walter Givhan, commander of
the 99th Air Base Wing at Nellis Air Force Base, which oversees
Indian Springs' operations.
Creech died in Henderson in September 2003 at age 76 and was buried
at Arlington National Cemetery.
Givhan, Gen. John Jumper, the Air Force chief of staff, and Creech's
widow, Caroline, are among dignitaries expected to attend a
ribbon-cutting ceremony on Monday at Indian Springs to mark the
official change.
Besides the new title, little else will change at Indian Springs, at
least not right away, officials said Monday. The airfield houses
three Predator reconnaissance squadrons, and there are plans to add
a fourth squadron under the command of a special operations unit.
"There won't be any large facility changes except for the name on
the gate and the names everywhere," said Capt. Jess Smith, an Air
Force spokeswoman at the Pentagon.
As Nellis base commander, Givhan will retain responsibility for
operations at Creech Air Force Base, according to 1st Lt. Daniel
DuBois, a Nellis spokesman. The Predator squadrons will continue to
report to the commander of the 57th Wing, Brig. Gen. Gregory Ihde,
DuBois said.
But Air Force leaders and former military officials said it was
extraordinary for a small Nevada installation to be designated an
Air Force base, a title usually reserved for facilities that house a
wing or a major command.
"This was to honor General Creech and his contributions to the Air
Force for a number of years, and honestly also to show the
significance of the mission there," Smith said.
DuBois said that in making an exception, Air Force brass also noted
the Indian Springs base houses the Air Force Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
Center of Excellence, a high-profile battle laboratory for Predator
command and control that opened in March.
"Creech was one of the fathers of air power," said Napoleon Byars,
policy and communications director for the Air Force Association
that promotes the branch. "They wouldn't give that name to a
facility unless it had a mission that was one to be proud of and one
that was important."
A highly decorated warrior in the Korean and Vietnam wars, Creech
was a pioneering pilot for the Thunderbirds aerial demonstration
team when it was activated at Luke Air Force Base, Ariz., in 1953.
The team moved to Nellis Air Force Base in 1956 when it began flying
supersonic, F-100 Super Sabres. Over the years, the team has used
the skies over the Indian Springs airfield for training.
After the 1982 deadly crashes of four Thunderbird jets at Indian
Springs, Creech persuaded Pentagon leaders to keep the team because
the Thunderbirds attracted promising pilots and technicians to join
the Air Force.
Rep. Jim Gibbons, R-Nev., said Creech advocated "forward-looking
concepts within the military," making it fitting to attach his name
to a Predator base. The 27-foot-long drones have captured public
imagination while playing increasingly visible roles in U.S.
missions in Bosnia, Afghanistan and Iraq.
In December 2003, a Predator spy plane controlled via satellite from
7,500 miles away at Nellis Air Force Base helped U.S. forces capture
Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein at his hideout near Tikrit, Iraq.
The Air Force has 57 Predators, all based out of Indian Springs.
Last year, Air Force officials projected an expanded force will
include 1,377 military personnel and almost 200 other civilians and
contract workers.
An armed version of the Predator, the MQ-1, can fire laser-guided
Hellfire missiles at targets from miles away. Eventually, the Air
Force will deploy a larger version of the Predator, called the MQ-9
or B-model Predator. The MQ-9s will fire missiles, carry bombs, have
larger engines and fly twice as high at twice the speed.
Maj. Gen. Stephen Goldfein, commander of the Air Warfare Center at
Nellis Air Force Base, predicted in a March interview that the
Predator would propel the Indian Springs field to becoming a
full-fledged Air Force station or base with 2,500 personnel. The Air
Force was spending $25 million to expand the base this year, and was
expected to budget $65 million next year.
According to an Air Force history, Creech flew more than 275 combat
missions in Korea and Vietnam. As head of the Tactical Air Command
from 1978 to 1984, he improved air training tactics through
exercises such as the famous Red Flag games at Nellis. |