Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC), based at Hurlburt Field near Destin (VPS), Florida, is testing whether its new OA-1K Skyraider II can be disassembled, loaded into a cargo jet, and reassembled in the field. Officials confirmed the capability development this week at Special Operations Forces Week.
The single-engine, propeller-driven aircraft currently operates from Will Rogers Air National Guard Base, co-located with Will Rogers World Airport (OKC) in Oklahoma City. The fleet will eventually fly from Cannon Air Force Base near Clovis (CVN), New Mexico, and Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson (TUS), Arizona.

Modular Skyraider II Built for Global Reach
The OA-1K is a militarized version of the Air Tractor AT-802 crop duster. AFSOC built the platform to provide isolated special operations teams with overhead surveillance and on-call firepower from rough dirt strips that require minimal support infrastructure.
Lt. Col. Robert Wilson, AFSOC’s armed overwatch requirements branch chief, described the aircraft as a versatile asset during a media briefing. “It is essentially a Swiss Army Knife of airborne capability,” Wilson stated.
Wilson further explained the deployment concept in an AFSOC release. “Rapid disassembly and reassembly means, in a matter of hours, the aircraft can be loaded into mobility aircraft like a C-5 or C-17 for worldwide deployment,” he said. Wilson added that the OA-1K converts the AFSOC motto of “any place, any time, anywhere” into a practical operational capability rather than a slogan.
Cost-Effective Consolidation of Mission Roles
Lt. Gen. Mike Conley, AFSOC commander, emphasized the financial efficiency of the platform. He stated that the OA-1K offers a unique and modular solution for a wide range of operations, including armed overwatch, at a fraction of the cost of other platforms.
The cost argument rests on platform consolidation. A 2023 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report noted that SOCOM refers to the combined mix of close air support, strike, and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) aircraft flown over a single special operations mission as “the stack.”
AFSOC has positioned the modular Skyraider II as a cheaper airframe capable of performing the work of multiple aircraft types within that stack.
The aircraft draws its name from the Vietnam-era A-1 Skyraider, which served as a long-endurance close air support platform for US forces in Southeast Asia, Defense News reported.
Current Fleet Status and Basing Plans
The Air Force currently operates 18 Skyraider IIs, with Wilson confirming that “a handful more” aircraft will arrive by October. The fleet remains based at Will Rogers Air National Guard Base in Oklahoma City (OKC) during the initial operational phase.
Future basing plans place additional squadrons at Cannon AFB in New Mexico and Davis-Monthan AFB in Arizona. Both locations support special operations and combat search and rescue missions, providing geographic dispersion for the growing fleet.

Program Cuts and Strategic Realignment
The original program of record called for 75 aircraft. However, the Pentagon has reduced the total to 53 units. The same 2023 GAO report found that SOCOM had not adequately justified the 75-aircraft fleet target and recommended a slowdown in procurement.
The fleet reductions align with a broader Pentagon shift toward preparing for a potential high-end conflict with China. In that operational environment, a slow, low-flying turboprop without an ejection seat presents significant survivability concerns against advanced air defense systems.
Wilson acknowledged the resource pressure on the program directly. “The 75 quantity figure is the program record,” he stated. He added that AFSOC, as the capability sponsor, views any total below 75 as undesirable. However, he conceded that pragmatic resource constraints could potentially limit the program below that target.

About OA-1K Skyraider II
The OA-1K Skyraider II is a single-engine, propeller-driven aircraft operated by Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC). The platform is a militarized derivative of the Air Tractor AT-802 and serves as the centerpiece of AFSOC’s armed overwatch program.
Mission
The Skyraider II functions as a cost-effective crewed aircraft adaptable across the full spectrum of conflict. The platform supports special operations forces and the Joint Force through three primary mission sets: close air support, precision strike, and armed intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR).
Features
The OA-1K Skyraider II marks the start of a new era in aircraft modularity for AFSOC. The aircraft adapts its capabilities to required mission sets, switching between close air support, precision strike, and armed ISR roles based on operational demand. This flexibility allows AFSOC to meet directives issued by the Secretary of Defense and the President.
Built on a proven aircraft platform, the Skyraider II allows operators to adjust effects for required missions and create dilemmas for adversaries across the spectrum of armed conflict. Beyond its versatility, the aircraft requires a much smaller maintenance footprint and costs less per flying hour than conventional aircraft or other special operations platforms.
Background
AFSOC accepted the first missionized OA-1K Skyraider II on April 3, 2025. The aircraft draws its name from the Douglas A-1 Skyraider, which served during the Korean War and the Vietnam War. The original Skyraider provided extra muscle and firepower for Air Commando combat operations, with notable variants including the A-1E and A-1H.
Major Bernard Fisher earned the first United States Air Force Medal of Honor in the Southeast Asia War while flying an A-1E Skyraider. The OA-1K moniker renews the rugged and versatile nature of the original A-1 Skyraider, traits carried forward into the modern platform.
Key Specifications at a Glance
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer Base | Air Tractor AT-802 |
| Operator | Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC) |
| Configuration | Single-engine, turboprop |
| Primary Roles | Close air support, precision strike, armed ISR |
| First Aircraft Accepted | April 3, 2025 |
| Current Fleet | 18 aircraft (as of May 2026) |
| Program of Record | 75 aircraft (funded total reduced to 53) |
| Initial Operating Base | Will Rogers Air National Guard Base, Oklahoma |
| Future Operating Bases | Cannon AFB, New Mexico, and Davis-Monthan AFB, Arizona |
| Namesake | Douglas A-1 Skyraider (Korean War and Vietnam War era) |
Bottom Line
The OA-1K Skyraider II gives AFSOC a flexible, low-cost airborne platform capable of rapid global deployment through C-5 and C-17 transport aircraft.
The rapid disassembly capability strengthens the operational case for the platform, while ongoing fleet reductions reflect the Pentagon’s shifting strategic priorities toward great-power competition in the Indo-Pacific region.
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