The Combat Readiness Medal is an award of the United States Air Force which was first created in 1964. The original Combat Readiness Medal was an award senior to the Air Force Commendation Medal,
and it was awarded for superior and meritorious duty to the United
States Air Force. The award criteria for the medal were revised in 1967
and the Combat Readiness Medal adopted the designation as a service
medal.
The current Combat Readiness Medal is awarded to any member of U.S. Air Force, Air National Guard, or Air Force Reserve,
who have accomplished sustained individual combat mission readiness in
an Air Force weapon system or who have undertaken the preparedness for
direct weapon-system employment. A service member must have completed 24
cumulative months of sustained duty performance for the medal to be
received.
The Combat Readiness Medal is given as a service award by an Air
Force Major Headquarters. In many cases, those receiving the award have
also qualified for the Air Medal, the Aerial Achievement Medal or the Nuclear Deterrence Operations Service Medal.
For aeronautically rated Air Force officers and enlisted aircrew
personnel, it is not to receive one or both of the aforementioned flight
crew medals simultaneous with the Combat Readiness Medal.
Multiple presentations of the Combat Readiness Medal are authorized, with additional awards denoted by oak leaf clusters. The Combat crew badge, a qualification accoutrement worn by crew members collecting time towards the medal, is no longer awarded.
If an Air Force member has the Combat Readiness Medal and does the
Blue to Green program (Air Force to Army transition) they are still
authorized to wear the medal, but unlike in the Air Force, it will be
worn as the last medal/ribbon, but before any foreign awards.
Choose which version(s) you want on the grid below.