Wiki 24
Register
Advertisement
This article's subject relates to Season 4 of 24.This article's subject relates to Season 5 of 24.This article's subject relates to Season 6 of 24.This article's subject relates to Season 7 of 24.This article's subject relates to Season 8 of 24.This article's subject relates to 24: Live Another Day.

The United States Air Force (abbreviated USAF stylised as U.S.A.F.) was one of the five service branches of the United States armed forces, responsible for aerial military warfare and operations, as well as monitoring and policing domestic airspace. However, the Air Force was forbidden, under posse comitatus, to take part in federal law enforcement on American soil. ("Day 2: 1:00am-2:00am")

Organization[]

8x14 USAF

Insignia of the Air Force during Day 8

The President of the United States was the commander-in-chief of the entire armed services. For official business, the President traveled on a 747 designated with the call sign Air Force One; an aircraft carrying the Vice President was designated Air Force Two. ("Day 2: 10:00pm-11:00pm", "Day 6: 12:00pm-1:00pm")

The Chief of Staff of the Air Force was its highest-ranking officer, and a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who advised the President and his cabinet directly on critical matters. ("Day 2: 8:00am-9:00am")

Air Force Special Operations Command, based at Eglin AFB in Florida, was the official special ops division of the Air Force, often taking part in joint missions by the United States Army's Delta Force. (Findings at CTU)

Prospective officers attended the Air Force Academy. One of the service branch's highest decorations was the Air Force Silver Star. ("Day 4: 10:00pm-11:00pm")

Divisions[]

Service history[]

According to an urban legend, a World War II-era Air Force bomber had been ditched under the Hell Gate Bridge in New York City and then vanished without a trace. (Operation Hell Gate)

The Air Force, along with the Air National Guard, were alerted to the possibility of an aerial attack against the Sky Mount Round Table conference, and monitored the air space for several hundred square miles in the vicinity. (Head Shot)

The Air Force and the Navy were responsible for patrolling the sea-lanes in the Persian Gulf, used to transport oil from Saudi Arabia. (Storm Force)

Day 4[]

S4ep16

Radar image of Air Force One and escort moments before impact

In one of a series of violent terrorist attacks across the country, Habib Marwan hired former Air Force pilot Mitch Anderson to steal an F-117A Nighthawk stealth fighter from an Air Force base near Los Angeles, in order to shoot down Air Force One as it flew over the Mojave Desert.

Anderson and an accomplice, Nicole, held Captain John Hansen's family hostage to compel him to get Anderson onto the base, after which Anderson killed Hansen and cut off his thumb. Anderson used Hansen's thumb print to get past security, then shot and killed a mechanic so that he could impersonate the mechanic and clear the fighter for take-off. After he was in the air, Anderson was contacted by CTU agent Jack Bauer, who had learned of his plan and begged him to stop while he still could. Heedless, Anderson cut off communications and fired an air-to-air missile at the President's plane while it attempted an emergency landing, causing it to crash in the Mojave. Intercepting planes shot down Anderson a few minutes later. ("Day 4: 8:00pm-9:00pm", "9:00pm-10:00pm", "10:00pm-11:00pm", "11:00pm-12:00am")

Early the next morning, an Air Force F-18 pilot, Captain Clarke, was responsible for destroying a nuclear missile that Marwan had launched toward Los Angeles. ("Day 4: 6:00am-7:00am")

Day 5[]

After intercepting chatter about a possible attack on Russian President Yuri Suvarov's motorcade, CTU coordinated with Edwards Air Force Base to monitor the airspace in the northern part of Los Angeles County. ("Day 5: 4:00pm-5:00pm")

Day 6[]

GeneralWalsh

General Walsh

General Walsh, stationed at Edwards Air Force Base, was the primary contact for CTU Los Angeles as they worked with the Air Force to locate and destroy a nuclear aerial drone launched by Dmitri Gredenko and Abu Fayed. Walsh scrambled F-16s to intercept the drone's last-known position, but was forced to order them into a holding pattern after the drone disappeared from CTU's satellite grid. Ultimately, CTU managed to locate the drone piloting station and prevented it from detonating its payload in San Francisco. ("Day 6: 7:00pm-8:00pm")

Day 7[]

The Air Force scrambled an F-16 fighter jet to intercept Global Skies Airlines Flight 117, after it was cut off from Northeast Air Traffic Control and fed false landing vectors by Tony Almeida. However, the jet was still ten minutes away when Almeida directed it into a near-collision with another flight while landing at JFK International Airport. ("Day 7: 9:00am-10:00am")

Day 8[]

8x19 Choppers

Air Force helicopters flank Falcon 1 over Manhattan

In light of a possible dirty bomb detonation in Manhattan, President Allison Taylor relocated her staff and the other peace treaty delegates to McGuire Air Force Base in New Jersey. After the bomb was recovered and the separatists stopped, they returned to the United Nations building to hold the signing as planned. ("Day 8: 4:00am-5:00am", "8:00am-9:00am")

A pair of AH-64 Apaches from the Air Force stationed near New York City were sent to intercept Jack Bauer after he captured a CTU helicopter before he could be taken to McGuire Air Force Base. Jack managed to evade the helicopters, making a landing on the helipad of the Cooper Building and disappearing from view in the busy pedestrian traffic. ("10:00am-11:00am")


Aircraft[]

AirForceOneDay4

Air Force One in flight

  • AH-64 Apache
  • Boeing 737-200
  • Boeing 747 – commonly used as Air Force One, Air Force Two
  • Boeing Sikorski LO-88 Blackfoot
  • F-16C Fighting Falcon
  • F-22A Raptor
  • F-18 Hornet
  • F-117A Nighthawk
  • Lockheed C-130 Hercules
  • Lockheed MC-130 Combat Talon
  • MQ-1 Predator

Installations[]

8x17-mcguire-airforce

McGuire AFB, New Jersey

9x01 Lower Heyford AFB

Lower Heyford AFB, England

See also Vandenberg

Personnel[]

Active[]

Lower Heyford AFB[]

Main article: Lower Heyford Air Force Base

Groom Lake AFB[]

  • Dr. Philip Bascomb
  • Captain Brent
  • Dr. Beverly Chang
  • Trudi Hwang
  • Dr. Megan Reed
  • Steve Sable
  • Corporal Stratowski
  • Tom
  • Dr. Alvin Toth
  • Dr. Dani Welles

Retired[]

External links[]

Advertisement