Bunker Baddies Deployed to PSAB Patch - Prince Sultan Air Base Deployed Unit Morale Embroidered Patch, Al Kharj, Saudi Arabia.
Desert heat, coalition airspace, and the kind of deployed identity that only comes from earning your callsign far from home.
Prince Sultan Air Base, known across the joint force as PSAB, sits in Al Kharj, Saudi Arabia, and carries one of the most operationally dense histories of any expeditionary air base in the Central Command theater. The base hosted a large United States military presence across Operations Southern Watch, Enduring Freedom, and Iraqi Freedom, serving as a critical hub for coalition air operations that spanned decades of sustained engagement. After the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing relocated all USAF activities to PSAB, the base grew into the largest expeditionary operations center in AFCENT's area of responsibility. U.S. Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps units rotated through on 90-day to 6-month cycles, building a culture of short-notice readiness, tight base perimeters, and the kind of dark humor that produces callsigns like Bunker Baddies. The base surged again in 2019 when roughly 2,700 U.S. troops, F-22 Raptors, B-1B bombers, and Patriot batteries reactivated the installation under the 378th Air Expeditionary Wing. A patch like this one captures the informal identity that deployed crews build when the mission is serious, the conditions are austere, and the unit name comes from the people living it rather than a headquarters document.
Perfect For: PSAB veterans and rotators, deployed Air Force and Marine Corps alumni, Operation Southern Watch and Iraqi Freedom collectors, 378th Air Expeditionary Wing members, morale patch board builders, shadow box displays, reunion keepsakes, and anyone who served at Al Kharj and wants one embroidered piece that captures the attitude, the dust, and the deployed pride that no official insignia ever quite covers.
Bunker Baddies, stitched in thread, earned in the desert.