The Space Operations Badge is an occupational badge for guardians of the
United States Space Force[18 SPCS certifies first United Kingdom operator](_blank)
by Kristen Allen, Peterson-Schriever Garrison Public Affairs, dated 7 August 2020, last accessed 25 September 2020 and space airmen of the
United States Air Force while the
United States Army (USA) version of the badge, known as the Space Badge, is a special skills badge for
soldiers
A soldier is a person who is a member of an army. A soldier can be a conscripted or volunteer enlisted person, a non-commissioned officer, or an officer.
Etymology
The word ''soldier'' derives from the Middle English word , from Old French ...
who qualify as space professionals.
History
Space and Missile Badge
The Air Force Space and Missile Badge (AFSMB) was a
military badge of the
United States Air Force which was awarded to airmen who completed space operations and missile training. It initially replaced the
Missile Badge when the space and missile operations fields were merged. However, the Missile Badge was reinstated in 2009, and the space and missile careers were split in 2013.
The Air Force Space and Missile Badge was presented in three grades being that of basic, senior, and master. The basic badge was awarded for completion of initial space training while the senior and master badges were awarded based on years of service in Air Force Space assignments; for officer the steps occur at seven and fifteen years respectively. For enlisted personnel the senior badge was awarded upon attaining a "7 skill level" and the master badge as a
Master Sergeant or above with five years in the specialty from award of the senior badge. The grades of the Air Force Space and Missile badge were denoted by a star (senior) and wreath (master) centered above the decoration.
The Space and Missile Badge was also awarded to
U.S. Army officers who graduated from the
functional area 40A (Army Space Operations Officer) course, becoming the first Air Force badge awarded by another service.
[SMDC-OPZ-FB, ASPDO Procedural Guide #1 - Procedures for Awarding the Space Badge to Army Space Cadre Personnel](_blank)
, dated 15 February 2011[Fact Sheet, ASCO/FA40 PPO](_blank)
U.S. Army Space Cadre Office, Functional Area 40 Space Operations Personnel Proponent Office, last accessed 1 March 2014
Space Operations Badge

In 2004, the commander of U.S. Air Force Space Command,
General Lance Lord
General Lance W. Lord (born July 12, 1946) is a retired four-star general in the United States Air Force who served as Commander of Air Force Space Command at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado.
Military career
Lord was educated at Castle Heigh ...
,
USAF, announced the introduction of the new Air Force Space Badge (AFSB), which replaced the Air Force Space and Missile Badge. The new badge was also awarded to U.S. Air Force scientists, engineers, communications, intelligence, and acquisition professionals who had performed space or missile operations, intelligence, and acquisition duties and had successfully completed the Space 100 course.
[Air Force Instruction 36-3701: Space Professional Development Program](_blank)
U.S. Air Force, dated 20 May 2010, last accessed 18 June 2014
In 2006, the U.S. Army, with the consent of the Air Force, authorized the awarding of the Air Force Space Badge to Army personnel who meet specific guidelines for training and time in a space billet. On 19 October 2006, SGT Daniel Holscher, a satellite control operations noncommissioned officer with U.S. Army Central Space Support Element, was the first enlisted soldier to earn the Air Force Space Badge.
In February 2011, the U.S. Air Force and U.S. Army officially approved the establishment of the Air Force Space Badge as a joint Air Force and Army badge; thus, the words "Air Force" were dropped from the official name of the badge. U.S. Army soldiers can be awarded the Space Badge after attending Air Force or Army space or satellite systems courses and have 12 months (for Active Army) or 24 months (for
Army Reserve and
Army National Guard
The Army National Guard (ARNG), in conjunction with the Air National Guard, is an organized Militia (United States), militia force and a Reserve components of the United States Armed Forces, federal military reserve force of the United States A ...
) experience in a space billet. This new badge is also awarded to graduates of the FA-40A Army Space Operations Officer course.
In January 2014,
General William L. Shelton, commander of Air Force Space Command, ordered the renaming of the Space Badge to the ''Space Operations Badge'' for the Air Force and changed the criteria for eligibility. The Space Operations Badge was then restricted to
Air Force Specialty Codes 13S and 1C6, but can be earned by non-operations personnel after meeting certain criteria. For airman to now earn the Space Operations Badge, members must have completed three years of operations-focused duties and receive
Air Force Space Command vice commander approval. To receive the Senior Space Operations Badge, members must complete seven years of operations-focused duties and get AFSPC vice commander approval. After completion of 15 years of operations-focused duties and AFSPC vice commander approval, airmen are eligible for the Command Space Operations Badge.
In 2019 and 2020 the Space Operations Badge was awarded to non-U.S. military members for the first time.
[Canadian space operators certified, awarded space wings in CSpOC](_blank)
Air Force Space Command, by Major Cody Chiles (14th Air Force Public Affairs), dated 25 January 2019, last accessed 2 February 2020 In 2019 four
Royal Canadian Air Force airmen assigned to the
Combined Space Operations Center successfully completed U.S. Air Force space training and were awarded the Space Operations Badge,
while in 2020 a
Royal Air Force airman assigned to the
18th Space Control Squadron
The 18th Space Defense Squadron (18 SDS) is a United States Space Force Space Domain Awareness unit located at Vandenberg Space Force Base, California. The 18th SDS is tasked with executing command and control of the space surveillance network ...
was the first
United Kingdom citizen to earn the same.
''Official heraldry of the Space Operations Badge:'' "The central globe represents the Earth as viewed from space, the Earth being the origin and control point for man's space endeavors. The global lines of latitude and longitude hearken to the original
20th Air Force patch and emphasize the global nature of the Air Force space mission. The thrusts and vectors behind the globe represent the dynamic and infinite space environment. The deltoid symbolizes the Air Force’s upward thrust into space, the reentry vehicles of our
intercontinental ballistic missile
An intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) is a ballistic missile with a range greater than , primarily designed for nuclear weapons delivery (delivering one or more thermonuclear warheads). Conventional, chemical, and biological weapons c ...
force and the launch vehicles that place satellites in orbit. The ellipses represent orbital paths traced by satellites in Earth orbit; the satellites symbolically depicted as four-pointed stars. The symmetric placement of the satellites signifies the Air Force's worldwide coverage in accomplishing its mission."
The badge is informally referred to as "space wings" due to the resemblance to other aeronautical badges or "wings".
AF Computer Warriors Get Wings. Seriously.
christianfighterpilot.com, posted 29 April 2010, accessed 8 April 2012
See also
* Obsolete badges of the United States military
* Badges of the United States Air Force
* Badges of the United States Army
Badges of the United States Army are military decorations issued by the United States Department of the Army to soldiers who achieve a variety of qualifications and accomplishments while serving on active and reserve duty in the United States Arm ...
References
{{US military navbox
United States military badges