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The 52nd Air Defense Artillery Regiment is an air defense artillery regiment of the United States Army first organized in 1917 as a railway gun unit. It continued in that role unit 1943, when the regiment was broken in separate railway gun battalions, and in the following year the units were reorganized and redesignated as field artillery.
Army Capital Defense Command Direct Headquarters Unit; 35th Special Mission Battalion; 1st Air Defense Brigade; 1st Security Group; 122nd Signal Group; 1113th Engineer Corps; Capital Defense Command Military Police Group; Shield Education Corps; Attached 52nd Infantry Division; 56th Infantry Division; Army Special Warfare Command. Headquarters Unit
The battalion is part of 11th Air Defense Artillery Brigade and the 32nd Army Air & Missile Defense Command (32nd AAMDC). The battalion consists of a Headquarters and Headquarters Battery (HHB), four Patriot missile batteries (A/5-52, B/5-52, C/5-52, and D/5-52) and a maintenance company (E Company, formerly the 507th Maintenance Company).
557th Military Police Company; 8th Korean Service Corps Company; 22nd Korean Service Corps Company; Charlie Battery, 6th Battalion, 52nd Air Defense Artillery Regiment; Headquarters and Headquarters Company, United States Army Garrison Humphreys; Detachment 2, 607th Weather Squadron, United States Air Force
11th Air Defense Artillery Brigade (ADAB) 32nd AAMDC Fort Bliss, Texas 30th ADAB: Army Air Defense Artillery School: Fort Sill, Oklahoma 31st ADAB: 32nd AAMDC Fort Sill, Oklahoma 35th ADAB: Eighth United States Army / 94th AAMDC [32] Osan Air Base, South Korea: 38th ADAB: 94th AAMDC Sagami General Depot, Japan 52nd ADAB [33] [34] 10th AAMDC ...
North Korea's forward-deployed long-range artillery guns pose a serious security threat to Seoul, a city with 10 million people which is about 40 to 50 kilometers (25 to 30 miles) from the border ...
South Korea: Branch ... Air Defense Company; Reconnaissance Battalion; ... 52nd Infantry Brigade (K808 APCs) Artillery Brigade; Notable former members
The site houses a AN/TPY-2 Surveillance Transportable Radar operated in 2021 by the United States Army's 1st Space Brigade. [3] Originally operated by approximately 100 soldiers, [ 4 ] that number has increased significantly since the site's initial construction, with a $35.8 million expansion in 2023 increasing the base's capacity to 1000.