26th Special Tactics Squadron insignia
Unit History / Air Force Special Tactics

26th Special Tactics Squadron

The 26th Special Tactics Squadron adds an Air Force Special Operations Command ground-force partner page to the site archive. The unit is tied to Cannon Air Force Base, New Mexico, and aligns the site with the air-ground integration lanes used by special tactics teams: combat control, personnel recovery, joint fires, airfield assessment, special reconnaissance, and forward medical support.

Core IdentitySpecial tactics · Global access · Personnel recovery · Joint terminal attack control
StationCannon Air Force Base, New Mexico
Parent Alignment720th Special Tactics Group / AFSOC special tactics enterprise
HISTORY

Public Historical Breakdown

7026th Special Activities Squadron

The unit lineage begins with the 7026 Special Activities Squadron, activated on 1 August 1991 and stationed at Zweibrücken Air Base, Germany, before inactivation on 1 May 1992.

Redesignation

The organization was redesignated as the 26th Special Tactics Squadron on 28 February 2014 and activated at Cannon Air Force Base on 24 April 2014.

720th STG Assignment

Public Air Force historical records identify the squadron’s assignment under the 720th Special Tactics Group beginning with the 2014 activation period.

Special Tactics Mission Set

Air Force Special Tactics teams combine combat controllers, pararescue, special reconnaissance, TACP specialists, and special tactics officers to integrate ground teams with air assets and support strategic missions.

Insertion And Access

AFSOC describes special tactics expertise as including parachuting, combat diving, close air support, airfield seizure, personnel recovery, and other air-ground integration tasks.

SOTF Use

Inside the site, 26th STS gives the unit system a joint special tactics page for airfield control, terminal attack control, personnel recovery, rescue medical response, weather/reconnaissance reporting, and link-up with Marine reconnaissance elements.

AFSC / MOS LANES

Common Specialty Tracks

Special tactics is built around Air Force specialty tracks rather than Marine MOS codes. The page still links to the site MOS directory where the roles overlap with fires, reconnaissance, rescue, aviation, and command-and-control work.

PIPELINE

Training Pipeline Overview

Assessment And Selection

Special tactics career fields use screening and selection to identify candidates with the physical ability, water confidence, mental resilience, and decision-making required for small-team operations.

Combat Control Path

CCT-oriented training builds air-traffic control, terminal attack control, small-unit tactics, airfield assessment, communications, and expeditionary global-access skills.

Pararescue / Personnel Recovery

PJ and rescue-oriented pipelines emphasize emergency medicine, personnel recovery, isolated casualty care, survival skills, extraction procedures, and integration with aviation rescue assets.

Special Reconnaissance

SR lanes focus on reconnaissance, environmental reporting, surveillance, communications, and mission support for special operations teams operating across complex terrain.

TACP / Joint Fires

Special tactics TACP specialists bring joint fires, close air support integration, mission planning, and advanced air-ground coordination to special operations teams.

Advanced Qualifications

Follow-on qualification can include static-line parachuting, military free fall, combat diver training, SERE, advanced marksmanship, communications, medical sustainment, and mission-specific insertion methods.

PROFILE USE

Assignment Lane

Current Assignment Only

This unit lane controls background art, insignia, and active-unit identity for profiles assigned here. Individual names stay inside the Chain of Command system.

Clean Historical Page

Unit history pages focus on lineage, mission, MOS lanes, training pipeline, and public references. Personal biography details stay on the member profile.

EXPANDED BRIEF

How 26th STS Fits The Site

Joint Air-Ground Control

The page gives the site a dedicated lane for battlefield airmen who control aircraft, recover personnel, coordinate fires, survey landing zones, and integrate with ground maneuver units.

Reconnaissance Link

Special tactics pairs naturally with 2d Recon, Force Recon, SARC, JTAC, and intelligence pages because these teams rely on accurate reporting, controlled fires, aviation routing, and casualty recovery.

Future Use

Future special tactics profiles can draw from this lane when their active assignment belongs here. Biography detail remains on command profiles.

USAF Combat Control insignia
TEAMS / SPECIAL TACTICS

26th Special Tactics Squadron Task Organization

26th Special Tactics Squadron is the Air Force special tactics lane for combat control, joint fires, assault-zone control, air-ground integration, and personnel-recovery support.

Squadron

26th Special Tactics Squadron

Provides the AFSOC special tactics framework for combat controllers and attached air-ground integration personnel.

Combat Control

Combat Controller Team

Integrates tactical air control, assault-zone coordination, airfield seizure support, terminal control, and air-ground command-and-control.

Joint Fires

JTAC / Terminal Control

Coordinates close-air support, precision fires, deconfliction, and target handoff between ground commanders and aviation assets.

Attachment

Recon Support Attachment

Allows combat controllers to attach to reconnaissance elements for fires integration, air movement, recovery support, and joint effects.

Recovery

Personnel Recovery / CASEVAC Link

Supports recovery planning, casualty movement coordination, landing-zone control, and emergency air integration during operations.

SOURCES

Public References