Col. Leslie Hauck, the outgoing commander of the 52nd Fighter Wing, addresses local officials during the change of command ceremony at Spangdahlem Air Base, Germany. Hauck received a certificate of recognition for his help during a disastrous flood in 2021. (Alexander Riedel/Stars and Stripes)
SPANGDAHLEM AIR BASE, Germany — U.S. Air Force Col. Leslie Hauck didn’t get much sleep on the eve of assuming command of the 52nd Fighter Wing two years ago.
But that was because of nature, not nerves. Rain began falling before bedtime July 14, 2021, and didn’t let up for three days.
The historic flooding in western Germany, Belgium and neighboring countries displaced dozens of Air Force families stationed at Spangdahlem and killed more than 220 people across Europe.
The night before his change-of-command ceremony, Hauck jumped into the fray and joined local efforts to stem the damage.
On Friday, Hauck handed off the role of commanding the 5,000-some military and civilian personnel assigned to the F-16 wing known as “Saber Nation.”
And an official from the German state of Rheinland-Pfalz, which is home to the base, recalled how Hauck’s tenure began.
“Instead of preparing for your special day, you were filling sandbags until well after midnight,” said Michael Ebling, the state’s interior minister. “Literally from Day 1, you have been the commander who leads by example.”
Ebling presented Hauck with an award for the wing’s contributions during the floods.
Hauck worked with more than 200 volunteers from the air base “to support your German neighbors in a time of need,” Ebling said during the wing’s change-of-command ceremony. “I cannot think of a greater gesture of German-American friendship.”
The floods were just the beginning of what was a remarkably busy two years for Hauck and his command team.
Among other notable tasks, the wing provided support to Ramstein Air Base when 36,000 refugees from Afghanistan transited through Kaiserslautern during the fall of 2021.
The only fighter wing in Germany, Spangdahlem has played a continuing role in bolstering air defenses and reassuring allies in Eastern Europe following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
Hauck is headed to the Pentagon next, after giving way to Col. Kevin Crofton.
“I’m humbled by the opportunity,” Crofton said Friday.
He is a seasoned fighter pilot, having flown combat missions in Iraq and Syria, according to his Air Force biography.
Since receiving his commission at the Air Force Academy in 2001, he has commanded an F-16 fighter squadron and served as an F-16 instructor pilot and Top Gun F/A-18 instructor at the Navy Fighter Weapons School, among other assignments.
Crofton’s last job was also in Europe. He commanded the 31st Operations Group at Aviano Air Base in Italy.