Your cart
USAF 48th Tactical Fighter Wing TFW Patch Crest 1984 (3 Inch) – Subdued Variant G1
48th TFW Patch Sbd Crest USAF Tactical Fighter Wing USAFE F-111F Aardvark 1984 RAF Lakenheath 13 Stars 3 Inch Subdued Variant G1
48th TFW Patch Sbd Crest USAFE F-111F Aardvark Tactical Fighter Wing 3 Inch Subdued Variant G1
Very rare grey scales Variant with green in tiara and grey background base and lighter green highlights to face arm and cloak As Variant F1 but with grey background
Validation – Tangible authentic and original
Manufacturer – Taiwan made,
Manufacture – factory machine fully embroidered through green and white gauze layer, cut edge, tight white synthetic return thread, iron on clear plastic coating on back
Visibility – subdued grey low visibility Sbd
Condition – very good has been sewn to uniform and removed
Size – 75mm by 74mm
Approximate imperial size – two and fifteen sixteenth inches by two and seven eighth inches
Free Shipping
48th TFW Patch Sbd Crest USAF Tactical Fighter Wing USAFE F-111F Aardvark 1984 RAF Lakenheath 13 Stars 3 Inch Subdued Variant G1
48th TFW Patch Sbd Crest USAFE F-111F Aardvark Tactical Fighter Wing 3 Inch Subdued Variant G1
Very rare grey scales Variant with green in tiara and grey background base and lighter green highlights to face arm and cloak As Variant F1 but with grey background
Validation – Tangible authentic and original
Manufacturer – Taiwan made
Manufacture – factory machine fully embroidered through green and white gauze layer, cut edge, tight white synthetic return thread, iron on clear plastic coating on back
Visibility – subdued grey low visibility Sbd
Condition – very good has been sewn to uniform and removed
Size – 75mm by 74mm
Approximate imperial size – two and fifteen sixteenth inches by two and seven eighth inches
Free Shipping
48th Tactical Fighter Wing F-111F Aardvark
This original 48th TFW crest patch is from the famous F-111F Aardvark era of the Liberty Wing. Operating from RAF Lakenheath during the height of the Cold War the Wing flew advanced F-111F fighter bomber from 1977. 48th Tactical Fighter Wing became one of the most combat-capable tactical strike wings in USAF in Europe and NATO.
In 1977 the 48th TFW exchanged its F-4D Phantom II aircraft for the F-111F Aardvark transferred from the 347th TFW at Mountain Home Air Force Base. The successful transition earned the Wing its third Air Force Outstanding Unit Award. The Wing’s flying Squadrons remained the 492nd, 493rd and 494th Tactical Fighter Squadrons. Equipped with the long-range strike capability of the F-111F, the Wing immediately expanded operational deployments and exercises throughout Europe and the Middle East, including Italy, Iran, Greece and Pakistan.
The Wing’s operational strength increased further when the 495th Tactical Fighter Squadron was activated on 1 April 1977. Acting as a replacement training unit, the 495th TFS helped maintain combat readiness across the Liberty Wing. By 1979 the 48th TFW had flown the highest number of flying hours ever recorded by an F-111 unit in a fiscal year. The Wing passed its USAFE Operational Readiness Inspection and NATO Tactical Evaluation in 1980 and received its fourth Air Force Outstanding Unit Award.
During the 1980s the F-111F became internationally recognised through its precision strike capability and frontline NATO role. The 48th TFW deployed temporarily to RAF Sculthorpe in 1983 while RAF Lakenheath’s runway was resurfaced.
Operation El Dorado Canyon
In 1986 the Wing participated in the long-range strike mission against Libyan targets in Tripoli during Operation El Dorado Canyon. The attack was undertaken alongside the United States Navy Sixth Fleet. Although one aircraft and crew were lost, the Wing received the US Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation for the operation.
Operation Desert Shield and Operation Desert Storm
The Wing again entered combat during Operation Desert Shield and Operation Desert Storm following Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990. Deploying as 48th TFW (Provisional) to Taif Air Base, Saudi Arabia, the 492nd, 493rd and 494th Tactical Fighter Squadrons flew 2,500 combat sorties. They achieved more than 2,200 target hits using the F-111F Aardvark and and dropped 7.3 million pounds of precision-guided munitions. 48th TFW (P) executed the first combat drop of the GBU-28 “bunker buster” bomb on 27 February 1991 and is credited with destroying hundreds of Iraqi tanks. The Wing returned to RAF Lakenheath in May 1991 and soon began restructuring under the USAF Objective Wing Organization program.
On 1 October 1991 the 48th Tactical Fighter Wing was redesignated the 48th Fighter Wing, while the Tactical Fighter Squadrons became Fighter Squadrons. The 495th FS was inactivated in December 1991 followed by the 493rd FS in December 1992, marking the end of the famous F-111F era at RAF Lakenheath.
This original USAF 48th TFW F-111F Aardvark crest patch is highly collectible among RAF Lakenheath, USAFE, Operation Desert Storm and Cold War aviation memorabilia collectors, preserving the heritage of one of the United States Air Force’s most important combat fighter wings.
Emblem –
A new insignia design strengthened Franco-American relations during the Cold War period. Chaumont was located near Frederic Bartholdi’s workshops the designer of the famous Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor. The Wing incorporated the Statue of Liberty into its emblem. On 4 July 1954 the mayor of Chaumont granted the Wing its honorary title Statue de la Liberte subsequently used on its emblem. The Wing became known as “The Statue of Liberty Wing” and “Liberty Wing”.
Description – Azure, an orle of mullets Argent, issuant from base overall the bust of the Statue of Liberty facing to dexter Vert, all within a diminished bordure Or. Attached below the shield, a White scroll edged with a narrow Yellow border and inscribed “Statue De La Liberte” in Blue letters.
Significance – Ultramarine blue and Air Force yellow are the Air Force colors. Blue alludes to the sky, the primary theater of Air Force operations. Yellow refers to the sun and the excellence required of Air Force personnel. The emblem is symbolic of the Wing and its history. On 10 July 1954, the 178th anniversary of United States independence, the Wing was designated as “The Statue of Liberty Wing” in recognition of the long-standing friendship between the United States and France. The thirteen stars surrounding the Statue of Liberty represent the original colonies of the United States of America. The red edge to the shield denotes the sacrifice to achieve independence.
Used from 1954 Formally approved 5 July 1962, modified on 21 November 1994; replaced emblem approved on 20 March 1953
Motto –
French “Statue De La Liberte”-translates – “Statue of Liberty”
This Crest 48th TFW Sbd USAFE Patch F-111F Aardvark 3 inch is the very rare grey scales variant and dates from 1984. USAF directed in 1983 that the size of unit patches was to be no larger than the 3 inch Command MAJCOM crest patches. The MAJCOM crest patches had been reduced in size from 4 inches to 3 inches in 1970. In addition wear of subdued insignia on fatigues became mandatory in 1983.

