VAW-127

Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron 127 (VAW-127), nicknamed the "Seabats", was an aviation unit of the United States Navy in service from 1983 to 1991. The squadron was equipped with the Grumman E-2C Hawkeye and was assigned only to Carrier Air Wing 13 (CVW-13) on the aircraft carrier USS Coral Sea (CV-43).

Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron 127
VAW-127 Insignia
Active2 September 1983 - 30 September 1991
CountryUnited States
BranchUnited States Navy
TypeAirborne Early Warning
Part ofCarrier Air Wing 13
Nickname(s)"Seabats"
EngagementsOperation Eldorado Canyon, Gulf of Sidra

Squadron History

An VAW-127 E-2C is launched from the USS Coral Sea, 1989.

The Seabats were established on 2 September 1983 as part of the Reagan-era build-up to a 600-ship Navy (to include as many as 15 aircraft carrier battle groups (CVBG). VAW-127 sailed with CVW-13 and USS Coral Sea until the end of the Cold War and subsequent drawdown of the Services which lead to the Coral Sea/CVW-13 team being one of the first units to be decommissioned. VAW-127 was soon decommissioned on 30 September 1991. In between, the Seabats participated in several noteworthy events to include Operation Eldorado Canyon, the strike conducted against Libya on April 15 1986 and operations in the Gulf of Sidra.[1]

gollark: It really is a rather cool triumph of technology and economics that they can be so small and cheap.
gollark: "Oops, I accidentally dropped the ultravaluable microcontroller bucket and it would take far too long to pick them up."
gollark: I didn't think of that. You may need a microcontroller laundering scheme.
gollark: Solution:- start limited liability corporation- take out £2750 loan as corporation- buy microcontrollers- corporation implodes- nobody can collect the debt because it has no money- ???- microcontrollers
gollark: Just make a two function calculator.

References

See also


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