Skip to main content (Press Enter).
U.S. Air Force Logo
Home
News
Photos
Videos
Commentaries
Press Releases
Environmental
About Us
Biographies
Fact Sheets
NOTAM
Contact Us
Units
35th Operations Group
35th Maintenance Group
35th Medical Group
35th Mission Support Group
Newcomers
Base Directory
AMC Terminal
School Liaison
Traveling with Pets
Base Support
Legal Office
Public Affairs
Studio Appointments
Misawa Chapel
Inspector General
Area Defense Counsel
Honor Guard
SARC
Pass and Registration
Misawa Base Bulletin
Community Calendar
Weasel Express
REFORPAC
Sexual Misconduct Disciplinary Actions
Misawa Air Base
Community-Calendar
Studio Appointment
Misawa Base Bulletin
AMC Terminal
Base Directory
Sort By
Upload Date
Photo Date
Title
Category
All Images
Aircraft
Animals
Community Events
Deployment/TDY
Education
Environmental
Features
Historical
Landscape/Buildings
Mission
News
Partnership
People
Safety
Special Operations
Show Advanced Options
Only 100 pages of images will display. Consider refining search terms for better results.
Clear Filters
|
921 - 940 of 2572 results
The farewell speech
U.S. Air Force Col. Kristopher W. Struve, the 35th Fighter Wing commander, delivers a speech during a service recognition ceremony for Misawa City mayor, Kazumasa Taneichi, at Misawa Air Base, Japan, June 5, 2019. Attendees expressed the appreciation for Mayor Taneichi’s dedicated service to the U.S.-Japan alliance during the ceremony. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class China Shock)
Details
Download
Share
Representative aircraft
An F-84G sits on the flight line at Kunsan Air Base, Republic of Korea, in 1953. This aircraft is the same type of aircraft 1st Lt. David C. Clements, a 468th Strategic Fighter Squadron fighter pilot, was flying at the time of his death. (Courtesy Photo)
Details
Download
Share
Family honors 1st Lt David Clements
Jan Whitmore, left, a John Brown University fitness instructor, Eugene Whitmore, center, a United Natural Food Incorporate sales manager, and Tech. Sgt. Tyler Whitmore, right, the 35th Maintenance Group Air Force repair enhancement program manager, holds a photo of 1st David C. Clements in Risner Circle at Misawa Air Base, Japan, May 30, 2019. Clements, a 468th Strategic Fighter Squadron fighter pilot, passed away April 16, 1953, at 27, from an aircraft ejection malfunction. In his honor, his name is painted on the F-86F Sabre static display behind his family in this picture. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Collette Brooks)
Details
Download
Share
1st Lt. David C. Clements portrait
Tech. Sgt. Tyler Whitmore, the 35th Maintenance Group Air Force repair enhancement program manager, Eugene Whitmore, a United Natural Food Incorporate sales manager, and Jan Whitmore, a John Brown University fitness instructor, hold a photo of their late relative 1st Lt. David C. Clements at Misawa Air Base, Japan, May 30, 2019. Clements, a 468th Strategic Fighter Squadron fighter pilot, passed away April 16, 1953, but would remain missing until the early spring of 1992 when his remains and ejection seat were discovered by Japanese farmers on Mount Eboshi (Eboshi-Dake). (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Collette Brooks)
Details
Download
Share
Family pays respect to 1st Lt. David Clements
Tech. Sgt. Tyler Whitmore, left, the 35th Maintenance Group Air Force repair enhancement program manager, Eugene Whitmore, center, a United Natural Food Incorporate sales manager and Jan Whitmore, right, a John Brown University fitness instructor, pause for a photo in front of the Risner Circle F-86F static display at Misawa Air Base, Japan, May 30, 2019. 1st Lt. David C. Clements, a 468th Strategic Fighter Squadron fighter pilot, went missing April 16, 1953, after his aircraft experience an unknown malfunction forcing him to eject from his aircraft, however the ejection was not successful. His family keeps his memory alive by preserving each item found during the investigation, which was concluded with a positive body identification 40 years after the ejection. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Collette Brooks)
Details
Download
Share
F-86F Sabre in 1994 to today
An F-86F Sabre aircraft displays “Lt David Clements” in Risner Circle at Misawa Air Base, Japan, in the spring of 1994 and in May 2019. Clements, a 468th Strategic Fighter Squadron fighter pilot, passed away April 16, 1953, at 27 years, from an aircraft ejection malfunction. In his honor, his name is painted on the F-86F Sabre static display. The aircraft is slated to be repainted within the next year. (U.S. Air Force photo illustration by Senior Airman Collette Brooks)
Details
Download
Share
Enjoying the great outdoors
U.S. Air Force Capt. Jacob “Primo” Impellizzeri, left, the Pacific Air Forces F-16 Fighting Falcon Demonstration Team commander and pilot, and Maj. Richard “Punch” Smeeding, right, a former PACAF F-16 Demo Team commander, pause for a photo on a mountain in Christchurch, New Zealand, March 27, 2019. In Impellizzeri’s free time, he enjoys hiking, skiing, hunting, boating, fishing and snowboarding. (Courtesy photo)
Details
Download
Share
A family of legends
U.S. Air Force Capt. Jacob “Primo” Impellizzeri, center right, the Pacific Air Forces F-16 Fighting Falcon Demonstration Team commander and pilot, pauses for a photo with retired U.S Air Force Col. George Rice, left, his maternal grandfather, and former U.S. Air Force Capt. Ken Impellizzeri, center, his father, and former Cpl. U.S. Army Air Corps Donald Impellizzeri, right, his paternal grandfather, after his commissioning ceremony at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio, June 8, 2012. Post-high school graduation, Impellizzeri commissioned through the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps program, creating a continued family legacy of service. (Courtesy photo)
Details
Download
Share
Teammates are everything
U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Emily Wall, left, former lead crew chief, Capt. Jacob “Primo” Impellizzeri, center, commander and pilot, and Staff Sgt. Dane Pendzinski, right, crew chief, all with the Pacific Air Forces F-16 Fighting Falcon Demonstration Team, pause for a photo at the Aero India Air Show, India, Feb. 23, 2019. Impellizzeri and his team have travelled to South Korea, Alaska, New Zealand, India, Thailand, Guam, the United Kingdom and multiple Japan prefectures to promote cohesion, unity and friendship between the United States and its allies. (Courtesy photo)
Details
Download
Share
Family first
Capt. Jacob “Primo” Impellizzeri, the Pacific Air Forces F-16 Fighting Falcon Demonstration Team commander and pilot, and his family pause for a photo at a local church, March 5, 2017. Impellizzeri attributes his success as a pilot to the love and support received from family, friends and his faith. (Courtesy photo)
Details
Download
Share
When friends become family
The Pacific Air Forces F-16 Fighting Falcon Demonstration Team pauses for a photo at the 43rd Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force – Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni Friendship Day 2019 at MCAS Iwakuni, Japan, May 5, 2019. U.S. Air Force Capt. Jacob “Primo” Impellizzeri, the PACAF F-16 Fighting Falcon Demo Team commander and pilot, oversees the team which consists of three crew chiefs, two avionics specialists, one electrical and engineering specialist, one engines maintainer, one superintendent and a safety observer. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Collette Brooks)
Details
Download
Share
Tricks and flips
U.S. Air Force Capt. Jacob “Primo” Impellizzeri, the Pacific Air Forces F-16 Fighting Falcon Demonstration Team commander and pilot, performs in an aerial demonstration at the 43rd Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force – Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni Friendship Day 2019 at MCAS Iwakuni, Japan, May 5, 2019. Impellizzeri describes flying in the F-16 as “freeing” because the bubble canopy on top gives a 360-degree point of view of the world around him. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Collette Brooks)
Details
Download
Share
F-16 Fighting Falcon brings a smile
U.S Air Force Capt. Jacob “Primo” Impellizzeri, the Pacific Air Forces F-16 Fighting Falcon Demonstration Team commander and pilot, checks out an F-16 at the 43rd Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force – Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni Friendship Day 2019 at MCAS Iwakuni, Japan, May 5, 2019. After completing four years of Reserved Officers’ Training Corps, and earning a pilot slot, Impellizzeri attended the 56-week Euro-NATO Joint Jet Pilot Training Program at Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas, in addition to a specialized F-16 training at Luke Air Force Base, Arizona. He arrived at Misawa Air Base in 2016 and became the PACAF F-16 Demo Team commander in 2018. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Collette Brooks)
Details
Download
Share
ADD VIRIN
A 43rd Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force – Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni Friendship Day 2019 attendee, left, shakes hands with Capt. Jacob “Primo” Impellizzeri, right, the Pacific Air Forces F-16 Fighting Falcon Demonstration Team commander and pilot, at MCAS Iwakuni, Japan, May 5, 2019. Impellizzeri’s work duties include interacting with air show event spectators, performing aerial demonstrations and organizing and executing demo team missions. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Collette Brooks)
Details
Download
Share
Teamwork makes the dream work
Subcontractors from the Tokyo Gas Engineering Solutions, Suzuki Kensetsu Kogyo Company and Kosaka Komuten Company gather for the digging ritual during the ground-breaking ceremony for the new liquid natural gas plant as part of the Energy Savings Performance Contract at Misawa Air Base, Japan, May 15, 2019. Construction for the plant began this year and will continue to summer 2020. The new plant revamped how Misawa Air Base expends energy, minimizes costs on an annual basis. (U.S. Air Force photo by 1st Lt. Jeremy E. Garcia)
Details
Download
Share
I'll say a little prayer for you
A priest purifies the liquid natural gas site and prays for the safety of personnel during the ground-breaking ceremony for the new liquid natural gas plant at Misawa Air Base, Japan, May 15, 2019. Members of the 35th Civil Engineer Squadron gathered together for a traditional Shinto-style ceremony before construction of the liquid gas plant began. A Shinto-style ceremony derives from the traditional religion of Japan and focuses on ritual practices. (U.S. Air Force photo by 1st Lt. Jeremy E. Garcia)
Details
Download
Share
Wash up
A U.S. Air Force 35th Civil Engineer Squadron member cleanses his hands for the ground breaking ceremony for the new liquid natural gas plant as part of the Energy Savings Performance Contract at Misawa Air Base, Japan, May 15, 2019. The 35th CES hosted the ceremony to pray for safety and cleansing of the ground during the construction of the new liquid gas plant. (U.S. Air Force photo by 1st Lt. Jeremy E. Garcia)
Details
Download
Share
'Red man'
U.S. Navy Seaman Rodolfo Romero, a Naval Air Facility Far East Public Works Department construction mechanic and dressed as the "red man," takes a break from baton training during Police Week 2019 at Misawa Air Base, Japan, May 15, 2019. The red man training teaches how to use a baton in combat scenarios. The training, known as the "red man practical," consists of less-than lethal tactics used to gain compliance from a subject who is demonstrating the intent to cause serious bodily harm to oneself or others. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman China Shock)
Details
Download
Share
Keeping weapons secure
U.S. Air Force Airman 1st Class Aliciana Infante-Crawford, a 35th Security Forces Squadron armory journeyman, holsters a weapon during an armory display at Misawa Air Base, Japan, May 15, 2019. As a security forces member, she is responsible for protecting the U.S. Air Force’s most valuable assets–the lives of their fellow Airmen and aircraft. National Police Week pays special recognition to those who lost their lives in the line of duty for the safety and protection of others. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman China Shock)
Details
Download
Share
Armory booth
U.S. Air Force Airmen 1st Class Aliciana Infante-Crawford, left, and Jordan Masangcay, right, both 35th Security Forces Squadron armory journeymen, pause for a photo during Police Week 2019 at Misawa Air Base, Japan, May 15, 2019. Former President John F. Kennedy first established National Police Week in 1962 to pay tribute and honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice. The armory protects, secures and maintains over two-million dollars’ worth of weapons, ordinance, vehicles and other resources used in more than 2,500 ceremonies the honor guard performs yearly. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman China Shock)
Details
Download
Share
45
46
47
48
49
Go To Page
of 100
Go
46
47
48
Go To Page
of 100
Go