Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 323 (VMFA-323) is a
United States Marine Corps F/A-18 Hornet squadron. The squadron is based at
Marine Corps Air Station Miramar,
California and falls under the command of
Marine Aircraft Group 11 (MAG-11) and the
3rd Marine Aircraft Wing (3rd MAW) but deploys with
Carrier Air Wing 9.
History
World War II
VMF-323 was commissioned
August 1,
1943 at
Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point,
North Carolina. According to oral history, the squadron got its name from three fighter pilots who killed a 6-foot rattlesnake and hung its skin in the squadron's ready room. VMF-323 began training in
F4U Corsairs almost immediately for combat in the
Pacific theater of
World War II. Much of the new squadron's training was done at
Marine Corps Air Station El Centro and
Marine Corps Air Station Camp Pendleton, California. In July 1944, the
Death Rattlers departed for the Pacific aboard the
USS Long Island. For the next nine months, VMF-323 flew training missions from secure island bases in the
South Pacific.
On
April 9,
1945, the
Death Rattlers flew into
Kadena airfield in support of
Operation Iceberg during the
Battle of Okinawa. Combat operations commenced the following day. Between then and the
Japanese surrender in August, the
Death Rattlers racked up 124 Japanese planes shot down without a single loss. Twelve
Death Rattlers became aces.
After the war, the
Death Rattlers were based at
Marine Corps Air Station El Toro, where they conducted training exercises. It was around this time that the squadron appeared in the 1949 movie
Sands of Iwo Jima.
Korean War and Post-war
When the
Korean War began in 1950, VMF-323 began combat operations from the
USS Badoeng Strait as part of
Marine Aircraft Group 33 (MAG-33), supporting ground forces in the
Battle of Pusan Perimeter,
Battle of Inchon,
Battle of Chosin Reservoir and almost every other major campaign of the conflict. During action near
Kosong, on
August 11,
1950, a VMF-323 Corsair pilot became the first Marine aviator killed in Korea. The unit also took part in the
attack on the Sui-ho Dam in June 1952.

VMF-323 F4U-4Bs on the USS Badoeng Strait in 1950.

FJ-4Bs of VMF-323, ca. 1957.
The squadron was re-designated Marine Attack Squadron 323 (
VMA-323) in June, 1952. The Death Rattlers
left Korea in July 1953. Once back home, the squadron began flying the F9F Panther and then the F9F Cougar, a swept-wing version of the Panther. In 1956 the squadron adopted the FJ-4 Fury, with which it deployed to the western Pacific in 1957. That year, the Death Rattlers
flew armed patrols over the Quemoy and Matsu islands to support Chinese nationalist forces.
Returning to MCAS El Toro in 1959, the squadron switched to the F8U Crusader and were assigned to the USS Lexington
.
In 1964 the squadron returned to MCAS Cherry Point, where they received their present designation of Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 323 (VMFA-323). This same year, the Death Rattlers
began flying the F-4 Phantom II. During the Dominican Crisis in 1965, the Death Rattlers
provided air cover while American citizens were evacuated. Vietnam War
As the United States grew closer to war in South Vietnam, the Death Rattlers
deployed to Da Nang Air Base. Combat operations started the day after they arrived. The squadron remained in Vietnam until 1969, flying combat sorties from Da Nang and Chu Lai. 1980s to 2001

F-4Ns of VMFA-323 on the USS Coral Sea, 1979/80

An F/A-18A of VMFA-323 intercepting a Soviet Tu-16 , 1986.

An F/A-18 Hornet from VMFA-323

VMFA-323 group photo with 2 squadron aircraft shown with CVW-9 tail code of NG instead of the usual WS
On September 14, 1982, VMFA-323 transitioned to its current aircraft, the F/A-18 Hornet. In October 1985, the squadron deployed again aboard the USS Coral Sea (CV-43), this time to the Mediterranean Sea. In spring of 1986 during Freedom of Navigation exercises held in international waters and airspace off the coast of Libya. Later on April 15, 1986 provided SAM suppression and fighter Combat Air Patrol (CAP) sorties during Operation El Dorado Canyon.
In 1994, 1995, 1997, 1999, and 2001 the Death Rattlers
flew missions in support of Operation Southern Watch. Global War on Terror
On 2 November 2002, VMFA-323 deployed aboard the USS Constellation
as part of CVW-2 to conduct Operation Southern Watch. While on this deployment, the Death Rattlers transitioned from Operation Southern Watch to Operation Iraqi Freedom conducting sorties into Baghdad on the first night of the war.
On May 2, 2005, two F/A-18C Hornet fighter jets from VMFA-323, BUNO 164721 and BUNO 164732, collided over south-central Iraq, during a sortie from the USS Carl Vinson'', killing the
XO and a Junior officer.
Squadron aces
Miscellaneous Information
See also