Strategic Air Command (SAC) was a United States Department of Defense Specified Command and a United States Air Force (USAF) Major Command responsible for command and control of the strategic bomber and intercontinental ballistic missile components of the United States military's strategic nuclear forces[2] from 1946 to 1992. SAC was also responsible for strategic reconnaissance aircraft; airborne command posts; and most of the USAF's aerial refueling aircraft.
Strategic Air Command | |
---|---|
Active | 1947–1992: US Air Force 1946–1947: US Army Air Forces |
Country | United States |
Branch | United States Air Force |
Type | Major Command / Specified Command |
Garrison/HQ | 9 November 1948: Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska 21 October 1946: Andrews Field, Maryland 21 March 1946: Bolling Field, District of Columbia |
Motto(s) | "Peace is Our Profession" |
March | "Strategic Air Command March"[1] |
Commanders | |
Notable commanders | Gen Curtis LeMay |
Insignia | |
Shield (subdued) |
SAC primarily consisted of the Second Air Force (2AF), Eighth Air Force (8AF) and the Fifteenth Air Force (15AF), while SAC headquarters (HQ SAC) included Directorates for Operations & Plans, Intelligence, Command & Control, Maintenance, Training, Communications, and Personnel. At a lower echelon, SAC headquarters divisions included Aircraft Engineering, Missile Concept,[3] and Strategic Communications.
In 1992, as part of an overall post-Cold War reorganization of the U.S. Air Force, SAC was disestablished as both a Specified Command and as a MAJCOM, and its personnel and equipment redistributed among the Air Combat Command (ACC), Air Mobility Command (AMC), Pacific Air Forces (PACAF), United States Air Forces in Europe (USAFE), and Air Education and Training Command (AETC), while SAC's central headquarters complex at Offutt AFB, Nebraska was concurrently transferred to the newly created United States Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM), which was established as a joint Unified Combatant Command to replace SAC's Specified Command role.
In 2009, SAC was reactivated and redesignated as the Air Force Global Strike Command (AFGSC). AFGSC eventually acquired all USAF bomber aircraft and the intercontinental ballistic missile force.[4]
Background
editThe Strategic Air Forces of the United States during World War II included General Carl Spaatz's European command, United States Strategic Air Forces in Europe (USSTAF), consisting of the 8AF and 15AF, and the United States Strategic Air Forces in the Pacific (USASTAF) and its Twentieth Air Force (20AF).[5]
The U.S. Army Air Forces' first mission in the Strategic Bombing Campaign in the European Theater during World War II included the VIII Bomber Command, which conducted the first European "heavy bomber" attack by the USAAF on 17 August 1942; the Ninth Air Force, which conducted the first Operation Crossbow "No-Ball" missions on 5 December 1943;[6] the Twelfth Air Force; and the Fifteenth Air Force, which executed bombing operations on 2 November 1943 during Operation Pointblank.
The Operation Overlord air plan for the strategic bombing of both Germany and German military forces in continental Europe prior to the 1944 invasion of France used several Air Forces, primarily those of the USAAF and those of the Royal Air Force (RAF), with the command of air operations transferring to the Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force on 14 April 1944.
Planning to reorganize for a separate and independent postwar U.S. Air Force had begun by the fall of 1945, with the Simpson Board tasked to plan, "...the reorganization of the Army and the Air Force...".[7] In January 1946, Generals Eisenhower and Spaatz agreed on an Air Force organization composed of the Strategic Air Command, the Air Defense Command, the Tactical Air Command, the Air Transport Command and the supporting Air Technical Service Command, Air Training Command, the Air University, and the Air Force Center.[7]
Establishment and transfer to USAF
editStrategic Air Command was originally established in the U.S. Army Air Forces on 21 March 1946 upon the redesignation of Continental Air Forces (CAF), the World War II command tasked with the air defense of the continental United States (CONUS). At the time, CAF headquarters was located at Bolling Field (later Bolling AFB) in the District of Columbia and SAC assumed occupancy of its headquarters facilities until relocating SAC headquarters (HQ SAC) to nearby Andrews Field (later Andrews AFB), Maryland as a tenant activity until assuming control of Andrews Field in October 1946.[9]
SAC initially totaled 37,000 USAAF personnel.[10] In addition to Bolling Field and, seven months later, Andrews Field, SAC also assumed responsibility for:
- Roswell AAF, New Mexico (later renamed Roswell AFB, then Walker AFB), then home of the USAAF's sole nuclear-capable bomb wing, and
- Smoky Hill AAF, Kansas (later renamed Smoky Hill AFB, then Schilling AFB)
SAC also had seven additional CAF bases transferred on 21 March 1946 which remained in SAC through the 1947 establishment of the U.S. Air Force as an independent service. Those installations included:
- Castle Field, California (later Castle Air Force Base)
- Clovis AAF, New Mexico (later Cannon Air Force Base)
- Fort Worth AAF, Texas (later Carswell Air Force Base)
- Davis-Monthan Field, Arizona (later Davis-Monthan Air Force Base)
- Rapid City AAF, South Dakota (later Ellsworth Air Force Base)
- MacDill Field, Florida (later MacDill Air Force Base)
- Mountain Home AAF, Idaho (later Mountain Home Air Force Base)
On 31 March 1946, the following additional installation was also assigned to SAC:
- Kirtland Field, New Mexico (later Kirtland Air Force Base)
Under the first SAC Commander in Chief, General George C. Kenney, initial units reporting to the Strategic Air Command headquarters on 21 March 1946 included the Second Air Force, the IX Troop Carrier Command and the 73d Air Division.
Fifteenth Air Force was assigned to SAC on 31 March (15th AF's 263rd Army Air Force Base Unit—with SAC's radar detachments—transferred the same date directly under HQ SAC [11]), while the IX Troop Carrier Command was inactivated the same date and its assets redistributed within SAC.
With postwar demobilization still underway, eight of the ten assigned bomb groups were inactivated before the Eighth Air Force was assigned to SAC on 7 June 1946.[12]
Despite the pressures of demobilization, SAC continued the training and evaluation of bomber crews and units still on active duty in the postwar Army Air Forces. Radar Bomb Scoring became the preferred method of evaluating bomber crews, with the last of 888 simulated bomb runs scored against a bombing site near San Diego, California during 1946, subsequently increasing to 2,449 bomb runs by 1947.[13][11] In the wake of the successful employment of air-dropped nuclear weapons against Hiroshima and Nagasaki to effectively end World War II, SAC became the focus of the nation's nuclear strike capability, to the extent that Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) Publication 1259/27 on 12 December 1946 identified that, "...the 'air atomic' strategic air force should only come under the orders of the JCS."[5]
In addition to the strategic bombing mission, SAC also devoted significant resources to aerial reconnaissance. In 1946, SAC's reconnaissance aircraft inventory consisted of F-2 photo variants of the C-45 Expeditor support aircraft, but by 1947 SAC had acquired an F-9C squadron consisting of twelve photo-reconnaissance variants of the B-17G Flying Fortress. An F-13 squadron, the F-13 later re-designated as the RB-29 Superfortress, was also established. SAC conducted routine aerial reconnaissance missions near the Soviet borders or near the 12-mile international waters limit, although some missions actually penetrated into Soviet airspace. The flight profiles of these missions—above 30,000 feet and in excess of 300 knots—made interception by Soviet air forces difficult until the Soviet's 1948 introduction of the MiG-15 jet fighter.[14] Project Nanook, the Cold War's first Top Secret reconnaissance effort, used the first RB-29 missions for mapping and visual reconnaissance in the Arctic and along the northern Soviet coast. Later missions were Project LEOPARD along the Chukchi Peninsula, followed by Projects RICKRACK, STONEWORK, and COVERALLS.[15]
In 1946, the US possessed only nine atomic bombs and twenty-seven B-29s capable at any one time of delivering them.[16] Furthermore, it was later determined that an attack by the 509th Composite Bomb Group during the 1947 to 1948 time frame would have required at least five to six days just to transfer custody of the bombs from United States Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) sites to SAC and deploy the aircraft and weapons to forward operating bases before launching nuclear strikes.[17][18]
Postwar budget and personnel cuts had an insidious effect on SAC as its Deputy Commander, Major General Clements McMullen, implemented mandated force reductions. This continued to wear down SAC as a command and morale plummeted. As a result, by the end of 1947, only two of SAC's eleven groups were combat ready.[5] After the 1948 Bikini Atoll nuclear tests, the "Half Moon" Joint Emergency War Plan developed in May 1948[19] proposed dropping 50 atomic bombs on twenty Soviet cities,[16]: 68 with President Harry S. Truman approving "Half Moon" during the June 1948 Berlin Blockade,[16]: 68–9 (Truman sent B-29s to Europe in July).[20] SAC also ordered special ELINT RB-29s to detect improved Soviet radars and, in cooperation with the 51st Air Force Base Unit, SAC also monitored radioactive fallout from Soviet atomic testing on Novaya Zemlya.
In terms of overall Air Force basing and infrastructure, SAC continued to acquire an ever-increasing share of USAF infrastructure and the USAF associated budget. In 1947, before the USAF was established as an independent service, construction commenced on Limestone AAF, Maine (later renamed Loring AFB), a new SAC installation specifically designed to accommodate the B-36 Peacemaker. Fort Dix AAF, New Jersey (later McGuire AFB); Spokane AAF, Washington (later Fairchild AFB); and Wendover Field, Utah (later Wendover AFB) were also transferred to SAC between 30 April and 1 September 1947. Following the establishment of the USAF as a separate service, SAC bases in the United States consisted of:[21]
- Castle Air Force Base, California
- Patrick Air Force Base, Florida[22]
- Cannon Air Force Base, New Mexico
- Carswell Air Force Base, Texas
- Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona
- Ellsworth Air Force Base, South Dakota
- MacDill Air Force Base, Florida
- Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho
- Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico
- Loring Air Force Base, Maine
- McGuire Air Force Base, New Jersey
- Fairchild Air Force Base, Washington
- Wendover Air Force Base, Utah
Those bases subsequently added to SAC in the United States included:[21]
- 1 July 1948: Topeka Air Force Base, Kansas (later Forbes Air Force Base)
- 1 October 1948: Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska
- 1 October 1948: Biggs Air Force Base, Texas
- 1 July 1947: Castle Air Force Base, California
- 21 March 1949: Bergstrom Air Force Base, Texas
- 1 May 1949: March Air Force Base, California
- 1 May 1949: Fairfield-Suisun AFB, California (later Travis Air Force Base)
- 1 November 1949: Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana[23]: 59
- 29 September 1950: Hunter Air Force Base, Georgia
- 1 November 1950: Ramey Air Force Base, Puerto Rico
- 1 February 1951: Lake Charles Air Force Base, Louisiana
(later Chennault Air Force Base) - 1 March 1951: Lockbourne Air Force Base, Ohio (later Rickenbacker Air Force Base)
- 23 July 1951: George Air Force Base, California
- 1 August 1951: Sedalia Air Force Base, Missouri (later Whiteman Air Force Base)
- 1 September 1951: Pinecastle Air Force Base, Florida (later McCoy Air Force Base)
- 20 May 1952: Dow Air Force Base, Maine
- 5 January 1953: Homestead Air Force Base, Florida
- 15 February 1953: Loring Air Force Base, Maine
- 18 December 1953: Malmstrom Air Force Base, Montana
- 1 February 1954: Lincoln Air Force Base, Nebraska
- 21 June 1954: Altus Air Force Base, Oklahoma
- 1 February 1955: Little Rock Air Force Base, Arkansas
- 1 February 1955: Plattsburgh Air Force Base, New York
- 1 February 1955: Portsmouth Air Force Base, New Hampshire
(later Pease Air Force Base) - 15 March 1955: Clinton-Sherman Air Force Base, Oklahoma
- 1 April 1955: Westover Air Force Base, Massachusetts
- 1 April 1955: Columbus Air Force Base, Mississippi
- 15 April 1956: Abilene Air Force Base, Texas (later Dyess Air Force Base)
- 1 May 1956: Turner Air Force Base, Georgia
- 1 July 1956: Beale Air Force Base, California
- 1 April 1957: Laughlin Air Force Base, Texas
- 5 June 1957: Richard I. Bong Air Force Base, Wisconsin
(base never completed; declared excess 23 August 1960) - 1 September 1957: Bunker Hill Air Force Base, Indiana (later Grissom Air Force Base)
- 1 January 1958: Vandenberg Air Force Base, California
- 1 February 1958: Francis E. Warren Air Force Base, Wyoming
- 1 April 1958: Blytheville Air Force Base, Arkansas (later Eaker Air Force Base)
- 1 August 1958: Wurtsmith Air Force Base, Michigan
- 1 January 1960: Larson Air Force Base, Washington
- 1 April 1960: Glasgow Air Force Base, Montana
- 1 July 1962: Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota
- 1 July 1963: Grand Forks Air Force Base, North Dakota
- 1 January 1964: K. I. Sawyer Air Force Base, Michigan
- 1 October 1968: Kincheloe Air Force Base, Michigan
- 1 July 1970: Griffiss Air Force Base, New York
- 1 July 1972: McConnell Air Force Base, Kansas
- 1 October 1979: Peterson AFB, Colorado and various BMEWS and SSN radar stations
In addition to bases under its operational control, SAC also maintained tenant wings at several bases under the control of other USAF MAJCOMs. These non-SAC bases with SAC tenants included:
- Amarillo AFB, Texas
- Eglin AFB, Florida
- Lowry AFB, Colorado
- Mather AFB, California
- Robins AFB, Georgia
- Seymour Johnson AFB, North Carolina
- Sheppard AFB, Texas
- Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio
SAC also often maintained a tenant presence at former SAC bases that the command subsequently transferred and relinquished to other MAJCOMs, to include but not limited to:
- Altus AFB, Oklahoma
- Laughlin AFB, Texas
- MacDill AFB, Florida
- Homestead AFB, Florida
- Travis AFB, California
Run-up to Korea and start of the Cold War
editSAC transferred to the United States Air Force on 26 September 1947, concurrent with the latter's establishment as a separate military service. Units directly under SAC HQ included the 8AF and 15AF, as well as the 311th Air Division, 4th Fighter Wing, 82nd Fighter Wing, 307th Bomb Wing, and two reconnaissance units, the 311th Reconnaissance Wing and the 46th Reconnaissance Squadron.[24] The 56th Fighter Wing was subsequently assigned to SAC on 1 October 1947.
Following the establishment of the U.S. Air Force, most SAC installations on U.S. territory were renamed as "Air Force Base" during late 1947 and into 1948, while non-U.S. installations were renamed as "Air Base".[25][26]
In May 1948, in an exercise versus Air Defense Command's "Blue" force, a SAC "Red" strike force simulated attacks on Eastern Seaboard _targets as far south as Virginia.[27]: 77 After a "scathing" 1948 Lindbergh review of SAC operations in the air and at six SAC bases,[5] General Kenney was removed as Commanding General on 15 October 1948[28] and replaced on 19 October 1948 by 8AF's commander, Lieutenant General Curtis LeMay. Upon LeMay's assumption of command, SAC had only 60 nuclear-capable aircraft, none of which possessed a realistic long range capability against the Soviet Union.[29]
LeMay proposed that SAC should be able to deliver 80% of its weapons in one mission.[30] The B-29D, which had become the B-50 in December 1945,[31] was first delivered to SAC in June 1948.[32] This was followed by SAC's first Convair B-36 Peacemaker bomber arriving at Kirtland AFB, New Mexico in September 1948.[33]
In November 1948, LeMay had SAC's headquarters and its command post moved from Andrews AFB, Maryland to Offutt AFB, Nebraska. At Offutt, the command moved into the "A Building", a three-story facility that had previously been used by the Glenn L. Martin Company during World War II. Concurrent with the establishment of this new headquarters facility, Lemay also increased SAC Radar Bomb Scoring (RBS) runs the same year to 12,084.[11] SAC also enhanced its organic fighter escort capability by initiating replacement of its World War II vintage piston-engine F-51D Mustang and F-82E Twin Mustang fighter aircraft with F-84G Thunderjets.
In January 1949, SAC conducted simulated raids on Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio. Assessments of these simulated raids by "...LeMay's entire command...were appalling",[30][28] despite the SAC deputy commander, Major General McMullen, having instructed all bomber units to improve their effectiveness. To motivate crews and improve operational effectiveness command-wide, SAC established a competition, the first so-called "Bomb Comp" in 1948. Winners of this inaugural event were the 43rd Bombardment Group (unit) and, for aircrew award, a B-29 team from the 509th Bombardment Group.[34]
Given its global operating environment, SAC also opened its own survival school at Camp Carson, Colorado in 1949, later moving this school to Stead AFB, Nevada in 1952 before transferring the school to the Air Training Command in 1954.[23]
SAC also created Emergency War Plan 1–49 (EWP 1–49), which outlined the means for delivering 133 atomic bombs, "...the entire stockpile...in a single massive attack..." on 70 Soviet cities over a 30-day period.[35]
The first Soviet atomic bomb test occurred on 29 August 1949 and the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) subsequently identified SAC's primary objective was to damage or destroy the Soviet Union's ability to deliver nuclear weapons. The JCS further defined SAC's secondary objective was to stop any Soviet advances into Western Europe, and its tertiary objective was the previous EWP 1–49 industrial mission.
Korean War
editIn July 1950, in response to combat operations on the Korean peninsula, SAC dispatched ten nuclear-capable bombers to Guam and deployed four B-29 bomber wings in Korea for tactical operations, although this action caused SAC commander LeMay to comment "...too many splinters were being whittled off the [deterrence] stick".[29]
Initial SAC B-29 successes against North Korea in the summer of 1950 were countered by subsequent Soviet MiG-15 fighter-interceptors, and SAC's 27th Fighter Escort Wing began escorting the bombers with F–84 Thunderjets.[36] Ground-directed bombing (GDB) was subsequently used for close air support (CAS) missions after three SAC radar bomb scoring (RBS) squadron detachments (Dets C, K, & N) arrived at Pusan in September 1950.[36] In 1951, SAC "began to eliminate its combat groups", transferring medium bombardment groups "to Far East Air Forces (FEAF) Bomber Command for combat."[36] In 1951, LeMay convinced the Air Staff to allow SAC to approve nuclear _targets,[37]: 18 and he continued refusing to submit war plans for JCS review, which the JCS eventually came to accept[37]: 37 (of 20,000 candidates in 1960, SAC designated 3,560 as bombing _targets—mostly Soviet air defense: airfields and suspected missile sites.)[37]: 60
Although experimented with prior to World War II, SAC refined aerial refueling to a fine art. SAC's in-flight refueling mission began in July 1952 when its 31st Fighter-Escort Wing refueled sixty F-84G Thunderjets from Turner AFB, Georgia to Travis AFB, California non-stop with fuel from twenty-four KB-29P Superfortresses modified into aerial tankers. Exercise FOX PETER ONE followed with 31st FEW fighters being refueled Hickam AFB en route to Hawaii.[38]
On 15 March 1953, a 38th Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron RB-50 returned fire on a Soviet MiG-15, while a 343d Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron RB-50 was shot down over the Sea of Japan 2 days after the Korean Armistice, while on 7 November 1954, an RB-29 was shot down near Hokkaido Island in northern Japan. By the time of 27 July 1953 Korean War cease-fire, SAC B-29s had flown over 21,000 sorties and dropped nearly 167,000 tons of bombs, with thirty-four B-29s lost in combat[39] and forty-eight B-29s were lost to damage or crashes.
Cold War and massive retaliation
editSAC's first jet strategic bomber was the swept-wing B-47[40] medium bomber, which first entered service in 1951 and became operational within SAC in 1953. The B-47 was a component of the October 1953 New Look strategy, which articulated, in part, that: "...to minimize the threat[41]...the major purpose of air defense was not to shoot down enemy bombers—it was to allow SAC[27]...to get into the air[--and] not be destroyed on the ground[--to allow] massive retaliation."[42]
Concern of a bomber gap grew after the 1955 Soviet Aviation Day and the Soviets rejected the "Open Skies" Treaty proposed at the Geneva Summit on 21 July 1955. US bomber strength peaked with "over 2,500 bombers" after production "of over 2,000 B-47s and almost 750 B-52s" (circa 1956, 50% of SAC aircraft & 80% of SAC bombers were B-47s).[9]: 104
In an effort to concurrently enhance its reconnaissance capabilities, SAC also received several RB-57D Canberra aircraft in April 1956, with the aircraft initially based at Turner AFB, Georgia.[43] In 1957, these aircraft were forward deployed to Rhein-Main Air Base, West Germany, in order to conduct reconnaissance missions along the borders of the Soviet Union and other Warsaw Pact nations. However, an unintended consequence of this deployment was that Hawker Hunter fighters of the Royal Air Force stationed in the United Kingdom and in continental Europe often intercepted these classified RB-57 missions as they returned to Rhein-Main AB from over the Baltic.[43]
Since it was designed as a medium bomber, SAC's B-47 Stratojet traded speed for range. Because of this shorter range, and in order to better enable the B-47 fleet to reach its _target sets in the Soviet Union, SAC routinely deployed its US-based B-47 wings to overseas forward operating bases in North Africa, Spain and Turkey. This program, in effect from 1957 to 1966, was known as "Reflex" with Sixteenth Air Force (16AF), a SAC numbered air force permanently stationed in Europe, having tactical and administrative control of the forward-deployed aircraft and units.[32]
Beginning in 1955, SAC also moved a portion of its bomber and aerial refueling aircraft to 24-hour alert status, either on the ground or airborne. By 1960, fully one third of SAC's bombers and aerial refueling aircraft were on 24-hour alert, with those crews and aircraft not already airborne ready to take off from designated alert sites at their respective bases within fifteen minutes. Bomber aircraft on ground alert were armed with nuclear weapons while aerial tanker aircraft were sufficiently fueled to provide maximum combat fuel offload to the bombers.[44]
Concurrent with this increased alert posture and in order to better hone strategic bombing skillsets, the 1955 SAC Bombing and Navigation Competition was characterized by radar bomb scoring (RBS) runs on Amarillo, Denver, Salt Lake City, Kansas City, San Antonio[45] and Phoenix;[46] and the 1957 competition (nicknamed "Operation Longshot")[47] had three _targets: Atlanta, Kansas City, and St. Louis.[48] This use of RBS with simulated _target areas utilizing mobile and fixed bomb scoring sites adjacent to major cities, industrial areas, military installations and dedicated bombing ranges throughout the United States. This format would continue through successive SAC Bombing and Navigation Competitions through the remainder of the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. Commencing in the late 1950s, in addition to representation from every SAC wing with a bombing and/or air refueling mission, later SAC competitions would also include participating bomber and aerial refueling units from the Royal Air Force's Bomber Command and (after 30 April 1968) its successor, RAF Strike Command.
Nuclear Bunkers, SAC Ground Alert, and transfer of SAC's Fighter-Escort Wings
editIt was described as the "Western Pentagon," specifically a, "...four-story, reinforced concrete and masonry office building..." above ground and a "...segregated, adjacent three-story below ground command post." This was the description of what would become Building 500 at Offutt AFB and the new headquarters complex built expressly for SAC, with construction commencing in 1955.[20] SAC headquarters moved from the A Building at Offutt AFB to Building 500 in 1957. The underground nuclear bunker had 24-inch thick walls and base floor, 10-inch thick intermediate floors, and 24-to-42-inch thick roof. It also contained a war room with six 16-foot data display screens and the capacity to sustain up to 800 people underground for two weeks.[20] The below ground bunker portion of the headquarters complex also contained an IBM 704 computer, which was used to develop monthly weather forecasts at _targets, as well as for computing fuel consumption and fallout cloud patterns for planning strike routes and egress routes (e.g., determining the timing as to which _targets to bomb first).[49]
In 1957, SAC also constructed The Notch, a facility alternatively known as the 8th Air Force Combat Operations Center (COC) and the Westover Communications Annex, since it was a sub-post of nearby Westover AFB. A 3-story nuclear bunker located on Bare Mountain, Massachusetts, The Notch was built with three-foot thick walls, 1.5 foot thick steel blast doors, and 20 feet underground to protect 350 people for 35 days.[50] The Notch was shut down as a SAC facility in 1970 when 8th Air Force was relocated to Barksdale AFB, Louisiana.
Despite this investment in "hardened" headquarters and command and control facilities, the 1957 Gaither Commission identified, "...little likelihood of SAC's bombers surviving [a Soviet first strike] since there was no way to detect an incoming attack until the first [Soviet nuclear weapon] warhead landed."[51] As a result, SAC's bombers and tankers began sitting armed ground alert at their respective bases on 1 Oct 57.[52]
In another organizational change during this time period, SAC's fighter escort wings were transferred to Tactical Air Command (TAC) during 1957 and 1958.[53] Finally, during January 1958's Exercise Fir Fly, SAC "faker" aircraft (twelve B-47s) simulated bombing strikes against metropolitan areas and military installations in the United States defended by Air Defense Command's 28th Air Division.[54]
Nuclear missiles, aircrew readiness, airborne alert, and strategic reconnaissance
editAfter SAC's 1st Missile Division was activated on 18 March 1957, SAC HQ established the Office of Assistant CINCSAC (SAC MIKE) at the Air Force Ballistic Missile Division in California on 1 January 1958. SAC MIKE was responsible for missile development liaison,[55] the intermediate range Jupiter and Thor missiles having been transferred to SAC for alert in 1958.[56]
Beginning on 1 February 1958, a SAC Liaison Team was also located at the NORAD Command Post at Ent AFB, Colorado, and the two commands agreed that direct land line communications should connect SAC bases with NORAD's Air Defense Direction Centers.[54] Also in the late 1950s, SAC continued to enhance its intelligence collection activities and develop innovative means of improving the survivability of its forces to surprise attack. From 1958 to about 1967, a SAC Detachment (TUSLOG Det 50) operated at Incirlik AB, Turkey, monitoring Soviet missile telemetry from the Kapustin Yar and Tyuratam launch complexes. In 1959-60, SAC evaluated deploying Minuteman I ICBMs via civilian railroad tracks on USAF-operated locomotives and trains.
President Eisenhower approved the first Atlas ICBM launch by a SAC crew for 9 September 1959 at Vandenberg AFB.[57]
While missile operations continued to ramp up, robust training for flight crews to ensure survivability for strike missions also continued. In some instances SAC bombers would oppose ADC fighter-interceptors simulating Soviet interceptors. Conversely, SAC assisted ADC readiness by simulating Soviet bomber threats to the continental United States that ADC fighters would respond to. However, following a mid-air collision between an ADC F-102 and a SAC B-47 during a 17 December 1959 Quick Kick exercise, simulated NORAD fighter attacks were prohibited against SAC bombers.[58]: 63
On 18 March 1960, SAC intercontinental missiles began alert at Maine's Snark Missile Launch Complex adjacent to Presque Isle AFB. The following month, on 22 April 1960, SAC turned over the last British-based PGM-17 Thor IRBM to the Royal Air Force. This was soon followed by SAC's first Titan I ICBMs at Lowry AFB's Titan I Missile Complex 1A in Colorado being placed on alert that June.
Beginning in November 1959, in order to counter Soviet surface-to-air missile threats, SAC began adding low-altitude bombing training for its manned bomber force as an adjunct to its legacy high-altitude training. Use of low level flight route corridors known as "Oil Burner" routes (later renamed "Olive Branch" routes in the 1970s),[59] and the first of three SAC RBS trains were utilized starting in 1960. On 30 June 1960, SAC had 696 aircraft on alert in the Zone of Interior, also known as the ZI (referred to today as the Continental United States, or CONUS) and at overseas bases. These 696 aircraft were 113 B-52s, 346 B-47s, 85 KC-135s, and 152 KC-97s. SAC's Emergency War Order (EWO) required the first aircraft to be airborne within 8 minutes and all aircraft to be airborne within 15 minutes after notification.[60]
During the mid-1950s, having recalled numerous World War II USAAF and Korean War USAF combat veteran pilots, navigators, bombardiers and aircrewmen from inactive reserve status back to various lengths of active duty, SAC took the lead in integrating the Air Force's reserve components into the overall SAC structure. By the beginning of the 1960s, SAC had also engineered the assignment of KC-97 Stratofreighter aerial refueling aircraft to Air National Guard groups and wings and having them fall under SAC's operational claimancy.
On 11 August 1960, President Eisenhower approved the creation of the Joint Strategic _target Planning Staff (JSTPS), co-located at SAC headquarters at Offutt AFB.[61]) JSTPS also included non-SAC agencies tasked with preparing the Single Integrated Operation Plan, or SIOP, and the National Strategic _target List for nuclear war.[37]: 62
On 1 July 1960, a SAC RB-47 with a six-man crew was shot down in international airspace over the Barents Sea by a Soviet MiG-19. Four of the crewmen were killed and two surviving crewmen were captured and held in Lubyanka Prison in Moscow for seven months.[62]
On 3 February 1961, SAC's Boeing EC-135 Looking Glass, began operations[63] as the Airborne Command Post for the Nuclear Triad and the Post-Attack Command and Control System. From this date and for the next 29+1⁄2 years, until 24 July 1990, SAC would maintain at least one Looking Glass aircraft continuously aloft 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, with an embarked SAC general officer and battle staff, ready to assume command of all strategic nuclear strike forces in the event that SAC headquarters was destroyed in a Soviet first strike.[64]
SAC's airborne alerts during this period also included Operation Chrome Dome for the bomber and tanker force. Although ostensibly a peacetime mission, Chrome Dome placed heavy demands on flight crews and five B-52 aircraft were lost to airborne mishaps during the operation's eight-year period.
On 11 May 1961, SAC took delivery of its first B-58 Hustler supersonic medium bomber, assigning it to the 305th Bombardment Wing at Bunker Hill AFB. Optimized for high-altitude, high-speed penetration into Soviet territory prior to Soviet advancements in high-altitude surface-to-air missiles, the B-58 was expensive to operate and inefficient at lower altitudes. Its service in SAC would be comparatively short, eventually being replaced by the FB-111 by 1970.
After an early 1961 development by SAC of a Radar Bomb Scoring (RBS) field kit for use in the U.S. Army's Nike surface-to-air missile systems,[65] SAC aircraft flew several mock penetrations into Air Defense Command sectors in the 1961 SAGE/Missile Master test program,[66] as well as the joint SAC-NORAD Sky Shield II exercise followed by Sky Shield III on 2 September 1962.[67]
In 1961, following the Berlin Crisis, President John F. Kennedy increased the number of SAC aircraft on alert to 50 percent[5] and during periods of increased tensions SAC kept some B-52 airborne in the event of a surprise attack.[69]
In 1962, SAC gained full control of the various "Q Areas" developed by Sandia Laboratories for nuclear weapon storage adjacent to Loring AFB (Site E (Maine)/Caribou AFS), Ellsworth AFB (Site F (South Dakota)/Rushmore AFS), Fairchild AFB (Site G (Washington)/Deep Creek AFS), Travis AFB (Site H (California)/Fairfield AFS), and Westover AFB (Site I (Massachusetts)/Stony Brook AFS). These adjunct sites were subsequently converted to USAF-operated and maintained weapon storage areas (WSAs) in the same manner as WSAs on other SAC bases.[20]
The solid fuel LGM-30A Minuteman I was first deployed in 1962 and the LGM-25C Titan II reached operational service in 1963.[39] Project Added Effort phased out all first-generation ICBMs beginning on 1 May 1964 when Atlas-D were taken off alert at Vandenberg AFB's 576th SMS[70] (LGM-30F Minuteman II replaced Minuteman I in 1965).
In October 1962, an SAC BRASS KNOB mission U-2 piloted by Major Richard S. Heyser detected Soviet intermediate range ballistic missiles in Cuba. BRASS KNOB operations involving multiple U-2 aircraft were subsequently commenced at a forward operating location at McCoy AFB, Florida the same month. On the morning of 27 October, a SAC RB-47H of the 55th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing, forward deployed to Kindley AFB, Bermuda crashed on takeoff, killing all four crewmembers, while later that afternoon, a 4028th Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron U-2 forward deployed to McCoy AFB for BRASS KNOB operations was shot down over Cuba by an SA-2 Guideline missile, killing the pilot, Major Rudolf Anderson.[63]
Throughout the early 1960s, the Kennedy Administration, under the aegis of Secretary of Defense McNamara, cancelled numerous SAC modernization programs. This included the Mach 3 North American B-70 Valkyrie in 1961, the GAM-87 Skybolt missile in 1962, and the Rocky Mountain Deep Underground Support Center in 1963. The B-70's demise came due to its design as a high-altitude bomber with very limited low-altitude performance, making it vulnerable to rapid advances in Soviet high altitude surface-to-air missile defense systems. The following year, Skybolt, an air-launched ballistic missile, was cancelled following numerous test failures and the perceived greater reliability of land-based and submarine-based ballistic missile systems. Although initially entering service in 1957, SAC's 2nd-generation aerial refueling aircraft, the KC-135 Stratotanker, had reached sufficient inventory numbers to allow SAC to begin divestiture of its KC-97 Stratofreighter tankers, transferring them to SAC-gained Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard units. As the KC-135 became the primary aerial tanker in active service, SAC employed the aircraft for several non-stop B-52 and KC-135 flights around the world, demonstrating that SAC no longer needed to depend on Reflex stations at air bases in Spain and Britain.)[29]: 108
Vietnam War and latter half of the Cold War
editSAC's air war in Vietnam
editAfter the Secretary of Defense rejected LeMay's November 1964 proposal for a "...strategic air campaign against 94 _targets in North Vietnam...", thirty SAC B-52Fs were deployed to Andersen AFB, Guam on 17 February 1965, representing the first increment of SAC aircraft forward deployed for the Vietnam War.[5] The following month, in March 1965, the Strategic Air Command Advanced Echelon (SACADVON)[71] was established as a "...liaison unit for CINCSAC [was] located at MACV Headquarters to assist with the B-52 effort."[72]
On 23 May 1965, SAC B-52Fs began unarmed missions for radar mapping "...and later to test bombing with the assistance of ground homing beacons..."[73] SAC began saturation bombing[74] on 18 June 1965[75] (8000 tons per month in 1966)[76] and conducted Operation Arc Light missions from 1965 until the end of hostilities involving U.S. forces in 1973.[77]
All B-52F missions in 1965 were against _targets in South Vietnam (RVN) except for the December "...Duck Flight mission [that] hit a suspected VC supply storage area [for which] part of the _target box was in Laos."[78]: 121 In April 1966, Vietnam operations began with the B-52D model, a 1956 model designed to use the AGM-28 Hound Dog cruise missile and the ADM-20 Quail aerial decoys for low altitude operations and modified in late 1965 by Project Big Belly[79] to increase conventional bomb capacity.[32]
SAC's RBS Squadrons were discontinued when most detachment personnel transferred to Vietnam from 1966 to 1973 for Combat Skyspot ground-directed bombing operations. The first "Quick Reaction" bombing was the "Pink Lady" mission on 6 July 1966 using SAC B-52D/Fs to support the U.S. Army's 1st Air Cavalry Division.[78]: 186 The 1972 Operation Linebacker II also used Skyspot for Hanoi/Haiphong bombings in North Vietnam which resulted in the loss of 25 SAC aircrew members.[68]
By May 1967,[80] SACADVON had moved to Seventh Air Force headquarters[81] at Tan Son Nhut Air Base, South Vietnam to schedule and coordinate "...strikes for the 7th AF and MACV."[82] From a level of 161,921 military and 20,215 civilian assigned to SAC in June 1968, SAC lost 13,698 first term airmen from November 1968 to May 1969 in a three phase drawdown known as Project 693[75] to comply with Public Law 90-364.[83]
While conventional bombing, air refueling and strategic air reconnaissance operations in Southeast Asia increasingly occupied SAC's operational commitments, SAC's primary mission of nuclear deterrence continued to remain its primary focus. In 1969, "...SAC's B-52s and B-58s could carry B28, B41, B43, B53, and BA53 nuclear weapons" (SAC had 311 nuclear AGM-28 Hound Dog missiles at the end of the year.)[75]: 6 This also coincided with the B-58 Hustler's in-progress retirement from SAC's active inventory and its replacement with the FB-111.
On 18 March 1969, along the South Vietnamese border, SAC first bombed Cambodia (Operation Menu through 26 May 1970 was controlled by Skyspot).[72] On 17 February 1970, SAC conducted the first "GOOD LOOK" bombing of Laos at the Plaine des Jarres after B-52 photorecon missions ("GOOD LOOK ALPHA" in August 1969 and "GOOD LOOK BRAVO" c. 15 January 1970) and the observations of a Skyspot installation in Thailand.[72]: 19 SAC transferred "...HQ 8th AF...to Andersen AFB, Guam on 1 April 1970 to oversee B-52D/G operations and to complement SACADVON".[82] 8th AF took over from Third Air Division the generation of "frag" orders based on daily strike requests and amendments from COMUSMACV.[72]
In 1970, SAC deployed the LGM-30G Minuteman III ICBM with multiple independently _targetable reentry vehicle or MIRVs, for striking 3 _targets, while concurrently retiring the B-58 Hustler supersonic bomber.
1972 saw the commencement of Operation Linebacker II, a combined Seventh Air Force and U.S. Navy Task Force 77 aerial bombing campaign, conducted against _targets in North Vietnam during the final period of US involvement in the Vietnam War. Linebacker II was conducted from 18 to 29 December 1972, leading to several informal names such as "The December Raids" and "The Christmas Bombings". Unlike the previous Operation Rolling Thunder and Operation Linebacker interdiction operations, Linebacker II would be a "maximum effort" bombing campaign to destroy major _target complexes in the Hanoi and Haiphong areas which could only be accomplished by SAC B-52D/Gs. It saw the largest heavy bomber strikes launched by the U.S. Air Force since the end of World War II. Linebacker II was a modified extension of the Operation Linebacker bombings conducted from May to October 1972, with the emphasis of the new campaign shifted to attacks by B-52 Stratofortress heavy bombers rather than smaller tactical fighter aircraft. During Linebacker II, a total of 741 B-52D/G sorties were dispatched from bases in Thailand and Guam to bomb North Vietnam and 729 actually completed their missions.[84] Overall SAC losses during Linebacker II numbered fifteen B-52s. The U.S. government claimed that the operation had succeeded in forcing North Vietnam's Politburo to return to the negotiating table, with the Paris Peace Accords signed shortly after the operation.
By early 1973, offensive SAC air operations in Southeast Asia ceased and numerous SAC aircrewmen who had been shot down and captured as prisoners of war by North Vietnam were repatriated to the United States.
SAC aircraft used during the Vietnam War included B-52D, B-52F, B-52G, KC-135A, KC-135Q, various versions of the RC-135, SR-71, U-2, and EC-135.
Post-Vietnam, 1970s budget cuts, 1980s renewal, and the Cold War redux
editDuring the Vietnam War, due to the escalating costs of combat operations in Southeast Asia, SAC was required to close several SAC bases, consolidate other bases, or transfer several bases to other MAJCOMs, other services, or the Air Reserve Component in order to remain within budgetary constraints. This included:
- Altus AFB (transferred to MAC, later to AETC)
- Bergstrom AFB (transferred to TAC, then ACC until BRAC closure in 1993)
- Columbus AFB (transferred to ATC, now AETC)
- Clinton-Sherman AFB (closed)
- Dow AFB (closed; portion transferred to ANG as Bangor ANGB)
- Hunter AFB (transferred to US Army as Hunter AAF)
- Larson AFB (closed)
- Lincoln AFB (closed; portion transferred to ANG as Lincoln ANGB)
- Little Rock AFB (transferred to TAC, later MAC, now AMC)
- Mountain Home AFB (transferred to TAC, now ACC)
- Turner AFB (transferred to USN as NAS Albany in 1968, closed 1975)
With the Vietnam War draw-down following the Paris Peace Treaty in 1973, reduced defense budgets forced SAC to inactivate several more wings, close still more bases in CONUS and Puerto Rico, transfer still additional bases to other MAJCOMS or the Air Reserve Component, and retire older B-52B, B-52C, B-52E and B-52F aircraft:
- Davis-Monthan AFB (transferred to TAC, now ACC)
- Forbes AFB (closed; portion transferred to ANG as Forbes ANGB)
- Glasgow AFB (closed)
- Kincheloe AFB (closed)
- McCoy AFB (closed; portion transferred to USN as Naval Training Center Orlando McCoy Annex until its BRAC-directed closure in 1999)
- Ramey AFB (closed; portion transferred to USCG as CGAS Borinquen)
- Rickenbacker AFB (closed; portion transferred to ANG as Rickenbacker ANGB)
- Westover AFB (transferred to AFRES, now AFRC, as Westover ARB)
- Wright-Patterson AFB (tenant SAC presence departed and transferred to Beale AFB; base remained with AFLC, now AFMC)
In 1973, the National Emergency Airborne Command Post, or NEACP, aircraft entered SAC's inventory. Consisting of four Boeing E-4 aircraft, these highly modified Boeing 747 airframes were assigned to the 55th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing at Offutt AFB and were forward deployed as necessary to support the National Command Authority.
By 1975, SAC's manned bomber strength included several hundred B-52D, B-52G, B-52H and FB-111A aircraft,[39] and "...SAC's first major exercise in 23 years" was Exercise Global Shield 79.[85] As for the ICBM force, SAC reached a peak strength of 1000 Minuteman II and III and 54 Titan II ICBMs on active status before seeing reductions and retirements through a combination of obsolescing systems and various arms reduction treaties with the Soviet Union.[86]
By 1977, SAC had been pinning its hopes for a new manned strategic bomber in the form of the Rockwell B-1A Lancer. However, on 30 June 1977, President Jimmy Carter Carter announced that the B-1A would be canceled in favor of ICBMs, submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), and a fleet of modernized B-52s armed with air-launched cruise missiles (ALCMs).
On 1 December 1979, SAC assumed control of the ballistic missile warning system (BMEWS) and all Space Surveillance Network facilities from the inactivating Aerospace Defense Command (ADC).[87] These activities would later be (transferred to Air Force Space Command (AFSPC) when the latter was established in 1982. SAC also continued to operate the Air Force's entire KC-135 aerial refueling fleet, its EC-135 LOOKING GLASS and E-4 NEACAP command post aircraft, as well the entire strategic reconnaissance aircraft fleet consisting of the U-2, SR-71, RC-135, and WC-135.
In 1981, SAC received a new air refueling tanker aircraft to supplement the aging KC-135 Stratotanker force. Based on the McDonnell Douglas DC-10 commercial airliner, the KC-10A Extender was deployed equipped with improved military avionics, aerial refueling, and satellite communications equipment.[68] That same year, President Ronald Reagan reversed the 1977 Carter administration decision regarding the B-1, directing that 100 examples of a refined version of the aircraft, now designated the B-1B Lancer, be procured as a long-range combat aircraft for SAC.
The LGM-118A Peacekeeper ICBM reached SAC in 1986, and the 114 Peacekeepers had a total warhead yield of about 342 megatons.[68] This also served to offset the retirement of the obsolescent and maintenance-intensive LGM-25C Titan II ICBM, the last example of which was deactivated in May 1987. An additional underground "16,000 square-foot, two-story reinforced concrete" command post for HQ SAC was also constructed at Offutt AFB from 1986 to 1989 from a design by Leo A. Daly, who had designed the adjoining 1957 bunker.[20] The first Rockwell B-1B Lancer was also delivered to SAC in 1987.[32]
On 22 November 1988, the Northrop Grumman B-2 Spirit, under development as the Advanced Technology Bomber (ATB), a so-called "black program" since 1979, was officially acknowledged and rolled out for the first time for public display. The first "stealth bomber" designed for SAC, the aircraft made its first flight in May 1989.
End of the Cold War and Operation Desert Storm
editSAC reorganization at the end of the Cold War began as early as 1988 when the Carlucci Commission planned the closure of:
- Mather Air Force Base, California, an ATC undergraduate navigator training (UNT) base which hosted a tenant SAC B-52G / KC-135E bomb wing and a SAC-gained AFRES KC-135A air refueling group; and
- Pease Air Force Base, New Hampshire, a SAC base with an FB-111A and KC-135E bomb wing and a SAC-gained ANG KC-135A air refueling wing
The closures were the beginning of a post-Cold War process that would later become known as Base Realignment and Closure or BRAC. Although Mather AFB's navigator training mission would relocate to Randolph AFB, Texas, the Mather B-52G bomber/KC-135A tanker wing would inactivate and the AFRES KC-135 tanker group would relocate to nearby McClellan AFB, relocating again four years later to Beale AFB when another BRAC process would close McClellan AFB.
Concurrently, the Pease AFB bomber/tanker wing would lose its FB-111 aircraft and transfer to Whiteman AFB, Missouri in preparation for transition to the B-2 Spirit while a portion of Pease would be transferred to the New Hampshire Air National Guard for its ANG KC-135 air refueling wing and be renamed Pease Air National Guard Base.
Additional closures and divestments of SAC bases would continue throughout the late 1980s and early 1990s, accelerating even more so as a result the START I Treaty's mandated elimination of both the entire B-52G fleet and the inactivation of all Minuteman II and Peacekeeper ICBMs, as well as the 1992 reorganization of the Air Force that disestablished SAC and dispersed its assets to other new or existing MAJCOMs, primarily ACC and AMC. In addition to closures of Mather AFB and Pease AFB, this would eventually include the following subsequent closure and realignment actions, primarily due to BRAC:
- Altus AFB (tenant SAC presence disestablished and transferred to AMC, later AETC)
- Barksdale AFB (transferred to ACC, now AFGSC)
- Beale AFB (transferred to ACC)
- Carswell AFB (transferred to USN as NAS JRB Fort Worth per BRAC)
- AFRES (later AFRC) HQ 10th Air Force, an ACC-gained AF Reserve fighter wing, and an AMC-gained ANG airlift wing remain
- Castle AFB (closed by BRAC)
- Dyess AFB (transferred to ACC, now AFGSC)
- Eaker AFB (closed by BRAC)
- Ellsworth AFB (transferred to ACC, now AFGSC)
- Fairchild AFB (transferred to AMC)
- F. E. Warren AFB (transferred to ACC, then AFSPC, now AFGSC)
- Grand Forks AFB (transferred to AMC, now ACC)
- Griffiss AFB (closed by BRAC)
- AFMC Rome Air Development Center and ANG Northeast Air Defense Sector HQ remain
- Grissom AFB (transferred to AFRC as Grissom ARB)
- K. I. Sawyer AFB (closed by BRAC)
- Loring AFB (closed by BRAC)
- Malmstrom AFB (transferred to AMC, then AFSPC, now AFGSC)
- March AFB (transferred to AFRC as March ARB per BRAC)
- McConnell AFB (transferred to AMC)
- Minot AFB (transferred to ACC, now AFGSC)
- Offutt AFB (transferred to ACC)
- Plattsburgh AFB (closed by BRAC)
- Robins AFB (tenant Regular AF SAC presence disestablished; base remains an AFMC installation with ACC and ACC-gained ANG flying wings)
- Seymour Johnson AFB (TAC base transferred to ACC; tenant SAC presence disestablished and SAC-gained tenant AF Reserve presence transferred to AFRC, now gained by AMC)
- Whiteman AFB (transferred to ACC, now AFGSC)
- Wurtsmith AFB (closed by BRAC)
On 1 July 1989, the 1st Combat Evaluation Group reporting directly to SAC headquarters was split with most HQ 1CEVG organizations transferring to SAC HQ (e.g., the Command Instrument Flight Division) and RBS personnel, equipment, and radar stations becoming the 1st Electronic Combat Range Group. Airborne NEACP alerts ended in 1990[64] and during 1991's Operation Desert Storm to liberate Kuwait from Iraqi invasion and occupation, SAC bomber, tanker and reconnaissance aircraft flew operations (e.g., B-52s with conventional bombs and conventional warhead AGM-86 ALCMs) near Iraq from bases in Great Britain, Turkey, Cyprus, Diego Garcia, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates.
Following Operation Desert Storm, the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the de facto end of the Cold War, President George H. W. Bush and Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney directed SAC to take all bomber and refueling aircraft and Minuteman II ICBMs off of continuous nuclear alert on 27 September 1991[88] and placing said aircraft on quick reaction ground alert.[89]
The 31 May 1992 major reorganization of the USAF organizational structure subsequently disestablished SAC, moving its bomber, reconnaissance and aerial command post aircraft and all SAC ICBMs, along with all Tactical Air Command aircraft, to the newly established Air Combat Command (ACC). The newly established Air Mobility Command (AMC) inherited most of SAC's KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft and the entire KC-10 Extender aerial refueling tanker force, while some KC-135s were reassigned directly to USAFE and PACAF, with one additional air refueling wing assigned to the Air Education and Training Command (AETC) as the KC-135 formal training unit.
Land-based ICBMs were later transferred from ACC to Air Force Space Command (AFSPC), while manned bombers remained in ACC. USAF nuclear forces in ACC and AFSPC were then combined with the United States Navy's Fleet Ballistic Missile submarine forces to form the United States Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM), which took over the SAC Headquarters complex at Offutt AFB.
In 2009, the entire land-based USAF ICBM force and that portion of the USAF manned bomber force that was still nuclear-capable, e.g., the B-2 Spirit and B-52 Stratofortress, was transferred to the newly established Air Force Global Strike Command (AFGSC), while the B-1 Lancer conventional bomber force remained in ACC. In 2015, these B-1 units were also transferred to Air Force Global Strike Command, which assumed responsibility for all current and future USAF bomber forces.[90]
Culture and legacy
editThe Strategic Air Command left a lasting cultural impact in addition to its military legacy. The most prominent slogan associated with SAC is the official motto, “Peace Is Our Profession.”[91] This phrase captured the command's role in maintaining peace through deterrence during the Cold War. Another unofficial slogan became part of SAC lore: “To err is human; to forgive is not SAC policy.”[91] This saying reflected the high standards and strict discipline within SAC, where precision and accountability were paramount due to the critical nature of its mission. Additional, unofficial slogans include "Peace Through Strength" and "Peace Through Superior Firepower".[citation needed]
Commemoration and new commands
editThe SAC Museum located adjacent to Offutt AFB was moved in 1998[92] to a site near Ashland, Nebraska and renamed as the Strategic Air and Space Museum in 2001.
Organizations commemorating SAC include the Strategic Air Command Veterans Association, the SAC Society, the B-47 Stratojet Association, the B-52 Stratofortress Association, the FB-111 Association, the SAC Airborne Command Control Association, the Association of Air Force Missileers, the SAC Elite Guard Association[93] and the Strategic Air Command Memorial Amateur Radio Club.[94] After the Cold War, SAC histories included a 1990 almanac and a 2006 organizational history.[95]
In 2009, the Air Force Global Strike Command (AFGSC) was activated with the lineage of Strategic Air Command.[96] AFGSC, headquartered at Barksdale AFB, Louisiana, is one of two USAF component commands assigned to United States Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM). AFGSC currently consists of Eighth Air Force (8AF), responsible for the nuclear-capable manned heavy bomber force, and Twentieth Air Force (20AF), responsible for the ICBM force.
Lineage
edit- Established as Continental Air Forces on 13 December 1944[97]
- Redesignated: Strategic Air Command on 21 March 1946[97]
- Replaced as a specified command by a new unified combatant command, United States Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM), on 1 June 1992;[98] concurrently disestablished as a USAF major command (MAJCOM) same date
- Components
|
|
- Overseas components
Strategic Air Command in the United Kingdom was among the command's largest overseas concentrations of forces, with additional forces under SAC's 16th Air Force at air bases in North Africa, Spain and Turkey during the 1950s and 1960s.
SAC "Provisional" wings were also located in Kadena AB, Okinawa and U-Tapao Royal Thai Navy Airfield / U-Tapao AB, Thailand during the Vietnam War
SAC also maintained bomber, tanker, and/or reconnaissance aircraft assets at the former Ramey AFB, Puerto Rico in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, and at Andersen AFB, Guam; RAF Mildenhall, RAF Fairford and RAF Alconbury in the United Kingdom; Moron AB, Spain; Lajes Field, Azores (Portugal); Diego Garcia, BIOT; and the former NAS Keflavik, Iceland through the 1990s.
SAC also conducted operations from RAF Fairford, RAF Alconbury and RAF Mildenhall in the United Kingdom, Moron AB in Spain, Lajes Field in the Azores (Portugal), RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus, Incirlik AB in Turkey, Diego Garcia in the British Indian Ocean Territory, and from multiple air bases in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Oman, and the United Arab Emirates during the first Gulf War (Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm) from 1990 to 1991.[99]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Williams, Clifton (27 August 2014). "Strategic Air Command March". Spotify. Retrieved 25 January 2022.
- ^ Wragg, David W. (1973). A Dictionary of Aviation (first ed.). Osprey. p. 232. ISBN 9780850451634.
- ^ "Alliant Techsystems Names Blalock to Head New Colorado Springs Field Marketing Office" (news release). ATK.com. 9 December 1997. Retrieved 8 September 2013.
Chief, Missile Concept Division, Headquarters, Strategic Air Command
- ^ "Fact Sheet: Air Force Global Strike Command". afhra.af.mil. 17 July 2009. Archived from the original (news release) on 18 July 2012. Retrieved 19 June 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f Worden, Col. Mike (July 2000). Rise of the Fighter Generals: The Problem of Air Force Leadership 1945–1982 (Report). Air University Press. ISBN 1-58566-048-5. Archived from the original on 25 May 2017. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
43. Richard H. Kohn and Joseph Harahan, eds., Strategic Air Warfare An Interview with Curtis E. LeMay, Leon W. Johnson, David A. Burchinal, and Jack J. Catton (Washington, D.C.: OAFH, 1988), 93. This account indicates that SAC needed five to six days to go pick up atomic weapons and fly to forward bases before launching atomic air strikes. Also in March 1946 only 27 B-29s were atomic capable. Nine bombs were available in 1946, 13 in 1947, and 50 in 1948. Atomic Energy Commission teams could prepare only two bombs each day by mid-1948 (p. 95). Rosenberg, 14. ... Vandenberg, sent the highly regarded Charles A. Lindbergh to inspect six SAC bases. Lindbergh spent more than one thousand hours in the air with SAC crews. His September 1948 report cited low standards of professionalism, poor morale, low proficiency, personnel disruptions, and command training policies that "seriously interfered with training in the primary mission of the atomic squadrons."5
- ^ Zaloga, Steven J. (2008) [2007]. German V-Weapon Sites 1943–45. Fortress Study Group (72). Johnson, Hugh & Taylor, Chris (Illustrations). Osprey Publishing Ltd. p. 29. ISBN 978-184603-247-9.
- ^ a b Leonard, Barry (2009). History of Strategic Air and Ballistic Missile Defense (PDF). Vol. II, 1955–1972. Fort McNair: Center for Military History. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-4379-2131-1. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 December 2019. Retrieved 15 August 2013.
In November 1945, General Dwight D. Eisenhower became Army Chief of Staff. One of General Eisenhower's first actions was to appoint a board of officers, headed by Lieutenant General W. H. Simpson, to prepare a definitive plan for the reorganization of the Army and the Air Force that could be effected without enabling legislation and would provide for the separation of the Air Force from the Army.
- ^ History of Strategic Air Command: Chapter III Operations and Training (Report). Vol. Historical Study No. 61. Historical Division, SAC Office of Information. c. 1957. Archived from the original (partial transcript at AlternateWars.com) on 2 October 2013. Retrieved 27 September 2013. Following are the bases assigned on 21 March:
- Abilene Army Air Field, Texas
- Alamogordo Army Air Field, New Mexico
- Andrews Field, Maryland
- Arlington Auxiliary #4
- Avon Park Army Air Field, Florida
- Bolling Field, Washington, D. C. ,
- Caddo Mills Auxiliary #1
- Cash, Texas, Auxiliary #2
- Castle Field, California
- Center Auxiliary #2, Parma, New Mexico
- Chico Army Air Field, California
- Clovis Army Air Field, New Mexico
- Davis-Monthan Field, Arizona
- Deming Army Air Field, New Mexico
- Dow Field, Maine
- Fairmont Army Air Field, Nebraska (sub-base of Grand Island Army Air Field, Nebraska)
- Fort Sumner Army Airfield, New Mexico
- Fort Worth Army Air Field, Texas
- Geiger Field, Washington
- Gowen Army Air Field, Idaho
- Grand Island Army Air Field, Nebraska
- Great Bend Army Air Field, Kansas
- Greensboro-Highpoint Army Air Field, North Carolina
- Greensboro Oversea Replacement Depot (ORD), North Carolina
- Grenier Army Air Field, New Hampshire
- Harvard Army Air Field, Nebraska
- Headquarters Area, Colorado Springs, Colorado
- Kearney Army Air Field, Nebraska
- Kearns Oversea Replacement Depot (ORD), Utah
- Kirtland Army Air Field, New Mexico
- La Junta Army Air Field, Colorado
- Las Animas Auxiliary #2, Colorado
- MacDill Army Air Field, Tampa, Florida
- Majors Field, Texas
- McCook Army Air Field, Nebraska
- Mountain Home Army Air Field, Idaho
- Oscoda Army Air Field, Michigan
- Peterson Field, Colorado
- Pratt Army Air Field, Kansas
- Pueblo Army Air Base, Colorado
- Rapid City Army Air Field, South Dakota
- Richmond Army Air Base, Virginia
- Rocky Ford Auxiliary #1, Colorado
- Roswell Army Air Base, New Mexico
- Roswell Auxiliary #3, New Mexico,
- Salt Lake City Army Air Field, Utah
- Selfridge Army Air Field, Michigan
- Seymour-Johnson Field, North Carolina
- Sioux City Army Air Field, Iowa
- Sioux Falls Army Air Field, South Dakota
- Smoky Hill Army Air Field, Salina, Kansas
- South Auxiliary #1, Deming, New Mexico
- South Sulphur Auxiliary #3, Texas
- Tonopah Army Air Field, Nevada
- Walla Walla Army Air Field, Washington.
- ^ a b Boyne, Walter J (1997), Beyond The Wild Blue: A History of the United States Air Force 1947–1997, New York: St. Martin's Press
- ^ Adams, Chris (2005). Inside The Cold War; A Cold Warrior's Reflections (Report) (3rd printing ed.). Air University Press. Retrieved 15 September 2013.
- ^ a b c Horstead, Terry L. (9 November 1983). Historical Summary: Radar Bomb Scoring, 1945–1983 (PDF) (Report). Barksdale AFB, Louisiana: Office of History, 1st Combat Evaluation Group. Retrieved 29 March 2022.
With the activation of the 8th Air Force the demand for radar bomb scoring training increased greatly. The 263rd was relieved from assignment to 15th Air Force and assigned directly to Headquarters Strategic Air Command.
- ^ Broyhill, Marvin T. "SAC History: This section is still under development". Strategic-Air-Command.com. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
Startup – 1944 – 1946. SAC is formed. Assigned 15th Air Force. First 10 Bomb Groups. 8 inactivated.
- ^ Herring, G. B. (Jr.) (19 May 1966). "TBD". Laurel Leader Call. Laurel, Mississippi. Retrieved 11 July 2012.
Radar bomb scoring began in 1946 with 888 bomb releases for the year against a site in the[verification needed] San Diego
- ^ Wack, Fred J (1992). The Secret Explorers: Saga of the 46th/72nd Reconnaissance Squadrons. Seeger's Print. ASIN B0006EZ8GQ.
- ^ "Cold War Story, Chapter 2, The Need to Know-Cold War Aerial Recon Begins, Page 4 of 5 Pages". rb-29.net. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
- ^ a b c Rosenberg, David A (June 1979). "American Atomic Strategy and the Hydrogen Bomb Decision". The Journal of American History. 66 (1): 62–87. doi:10.2307/1894674. JSTOR 1894674.
- ^ Kohn, R. H.; Harahan, J. P. (1988). "U.S. Strategic Air Power, 1948–1962: Excerpts from an Interview with Generals Curtis E. LeMay, Leon W. Johnson, David A. Burchinal, and Jack J. Catton". International Security. 12 (4): 78–95. doi:10.2307/2538995. JSTOR 2538995. S2CID 154782339.
- ^ Richard Kohn and Joseph Harahan, eds., Strategic Air Warfare: An Interview with Curtis E. LeMay, Leon W. Johnson, David A. Burchinal, and Jack J. Catton (Washington, DC: OAFH, 1988), 93.
- ^ "Half Moon". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
- ^ a b c d e Weitze, Karen J. (November 1999). Cold War Infrastructure for Strategic Air Command: The Bomber Mission (PDF) (Report). United States Army Corps of Engineers. Retrieved 15 August 2013.
The first six B-36s arrived at Sidi Slimane, another SAC base built in French Morocco, in early December 1951, completing their 5,000-mile training flight from Carswell Air Force Base ... SAC built approximately 50 to 60 of its second generation bomber maintenance hangars at approximately 46 Air Force installations in the U.S. and internationally between 1952 and 1955
- ^ a b Mueller, Robert (1989). Air Force Bases (PDF) (Report). Vol. I: Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982. Office of Air Force History. p. 600. ISBN 0-912799-53-6. Retrieved 15 August 2013.
- ^ "Patrick AFB - Cape Canaveral Air Base". strategic-air-command.com. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
- ^ a b A Brief History of Keesler AFB and the 81st Training Wing (PDF) (Report). Vol. A-090203-089. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 September 2012. Retrieved 8 July 2013.
Flight Engineer Training [was a] Mather-based program transferred to Strategic Air Command in early 1947 ... [a] flight engineer rating [required] successfully complet[ing] flying training in SAC [after] February 1947, and within several months ATC transferred the B-29s to SAC. ... Geiger Field transferred to Strategic Air Command as of 15 September. [ATC also] transferred a Geiger subpost, Fort George E. Wright, to Strategic Air Command on 16 July.
(the fort had SAC's RBS Detachment D by 1950.) - ^ Strategic Air Command (organizational chart), Fall 1947, Accessed 2013-08-14 (published in Mixer, Ronald E (1999). The Genealogy of the Strategic Air Command. Battermix.)
- ^ "Borinquen Field Renamed in 1948 - Ramey Air Force Base Historical Association". Archived from the original on 2 November 2014. Retrieved 2 November 2014.
- ^ "Joe McCusker's Air Force Base List". airforcebase.net. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
- ^ a b Schaffel, Kenneth (1991). The Emerging Shield: The Air Force and the Evolution of Continental Air Defense, 1945–1960. Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. Archived from the original on 13 November 2005.
- ^ a b Alexander, Sigmund (July 2005). "Radar Bomb Scoring: RBS Operations" (PDF). The Stratojet Newsletter. Vol. 22. B-47 Stratojet Association. Retrieved 9 July 2012.
- ^ a b c Tillman, Barrett (2007). LeMay. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 94. ISBN 9781403971357.
- ^ a b Rhodes, Richard (11 June 1995). "The General and World War III". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
- ^ Knaack, Marcelle Size (1988). "Appendix II: Experimental and Prototype Bombers, North American XB-70A". Encyclopedia of U.S. Air Force Aircraft and Missile Systems (Report). Vol. II: Post-World War II Bombers 1945–1973. Washington DC: Office of Air Force History, United States Air Force. ISBN 0-912799-59-5.
- ^ a b c d Baugher, Joseph F. "Welcome to Joe Baugher's Home Page!". JoeBaugher.com. Individual aircraft/model pages: B-2A, B-47, B-36, B-52 (B-52D)
- ^ "Kirtland AFB, New Mexico". Military Facilities: Air Force Bases. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
- ^ Stives, Brian (5 November 2010). "Global Strike Challenge – A legacy of excellence". Eighth Air Force Public Affairs. Retrieved 15 September 2013.
- ^ Englehardt, Tom (2007). The End of Victory Culture: Cold War America... Univ of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 9781558495869. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
- ^ a b c Organizational History Branch, Research Division, Air Force Historical Research Agency (2001). Endicott, Judy G. (ed.). The USAF in Korea: Campaigns, Units, and Stations 1950–1953 (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Air Force History and Museums Program. ISBN 9780160509018. OCLC 994583778.
To help meet the threat of the Soviet-built MiG–15 fighter in Korea, the USAF diverted Strategic Air Command's 27th FEW with its F–84 Thunderjets to the Far East instead of sending it as planned to England. In early December 1950, the wing established a rear echelon at Itazuke, Japan and took its F–84s to Taegu AB, South Korea. Less than two months later, fearful that Chinese ground forces would overrun United Nations jet bases in South Korea, Fifth Air Force withdrew the 27th FEW to Japan. The wing continued combat operations from Japan until the 136th FBW replaced it in late June 1951.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c d Rosenberg, David A (Spring 1983). "The Origins of Overkill: Nuclear Weapons and American Strategy, 1945–1960". International Security. 7 (4). Los Angeles: University of Southern California: 3–71. doi:10.2307/2626731. JSTOR 2626731. S2CID 154529784.
- ^ "History of aerial refueling: Fueling the fighters". af.mil. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
- ^ a b c Lloyd (2000). A Cold War Legacy: A Tribute to Strategic Air Command (1st ed.). Pictorial Histories Publishing Co. ISBN 1-575100-52-5.
- ^ Lloyd, Alwyn T (1988). B-47 Stratojet in detail & scale. TAB Books. ISBN 9780816850235. Retrieved 15 September 2013.
- ^ Joint Chiefs of Staff summary[specify] (cited by Schaffel p. 194)
- ^ House of Commons of Canada transcript (quoted by Schaffel, p. 251—speaker not identified). Note: Massive retaliation was "espoused publicly in January 1954 by Eisenhower's Secretary of State, John Foster Dulles" (Schaffel p. 194)
- ^ a b Mikesh, Robert C (1995). Martin B-57 Canberra: The Complete Record. Schiffer Pub Ltd. ISBN 0-88740-661-0.
- ^ http://www.jeromegoolsby.net/military/sacstats.htmlkept [dead link ]
- ^ "7th Bombardment Wing Operations, Carswell AFB, 1955–1958". 7bwb-36assn.org. Archived from the original on 6 October 2012. Retrieved 15 September 2013.
- ^ "Fairchild Wing To Get Trophy in Bomb Tests" (Google news archive). Spokane Daily Chronicle. 2 May 1955. Retrieved 16 August 2013.
- ^ 1957 | 1525 | Flight Archive. FlightGlobal. (18 October 1957). Retrieved 2013-09-18.
- ^ Haugland, Vern (31 October 1957). "90 SAC Planes to H-Bomb 3 _target Cities Off Map". The Milwaukee Sentinel. Archived from the original on 24 January 2013. Retrieved 15 September 2013.
- ^ "Race for the Superbomb" (5 webpages transcribing SAC Lt. Gen. James Edmundson's interview). PBS. Public Broadcasting System (SAC mission Archived 20 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Response Time Archived 20 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine, War Plans Archived 20 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine, End of the Cold War Archived 20 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine)
- ^ "Mt. Holyoke Timeline: 1950–1974". chronos-historical.org/mtholyoke. Chronos-Historical.org. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ Freeman, Maj Steve (September 1997). "Visionaries, Cold War, hard work built the foundations of Air Force Space Command". Guardian Magazine...funded Air Force newspaper. Vol. 5, no. 6 (Special Anniversary Edition). Peterson Air Force Base. p. 6.
- ^ Narducci, Henry M (1 April 1988). Strategic Air Command and the Alert Program: A Brief History (PDF) (Report). Offutt Air Force Base: Office of the Historian, Headquarters Strategic Air Command. Retrieved 8 September 2013.
- ^ Boyd, Robert J (1988). SAC's fighter planes and their operations. Office of the Historian, Headquarters Strategic Air Command (Supt. of Docs, U.S. G.P.O.).
- ^ a b Preface by Buss, L. H. (Director) (1 November 1959). North American Air Defense Command and Continental Air Defense Command Historical Summary: January–June 1959 (Report). Directorate of Command History: Office of Information Services.
- ^ Clark, Major Rita F. (1 May 1990). SAC Missile Chronology 1939–1988 (PDF) (Report). Office of the Historian, HQ. SAC, Offutt AFB. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
Creation of the new command was achieved by redesignating Headquarters Continental Air Forces ... 1958...1 January Headquarters SAC established the Office of Assistant CINCSAC (SAC MIKE) at Inglewood, California. This position was designated to serve as an extension of Headquarters SAC and was responsible for working closely with the Air Force Ballistic Missile Division ... 1958...17 June The Air Force accepted delivery of the first Titan I ICBM from the Martin Company, formerly the Glenn L Martin Aircraft Company. ... 1959...8 June First SAC launch of a Quail missile. The launch took place over the Eglin Gulf Test Range. ... 1961...4 August Work was completed on all three Titan I ICBM complexes at the 724th Strategic Missile Squadron, Lowry AFB, Colorado, and they were turned over to the Strategic Air Command by the Army Corps of Engineers. ... 1961 ... 7 December Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara canceled the Mobile Minuteman development program. ... 1966 ... 1 July Headquarters SAC organized a special agency, Ballistic Missile Evaluation (BME), to evaluate and make formal reports to the Joint Chiefs of Staff on the reliability and capability of the various SAC ICBM weapon systems. ... 1966...3–7 April The Strategic Air Command conducted its first missile combat competition. ... 17 April The first attempted launch of a Minuteman II ICBM by means of the Airborne Launch Control System (ALCS) ... 1969 ... 29 July The first flight-test of the SRAM was successful. The missile, launched from a B-52H, flew down the White Sands Missile Range and impacted in the _target area. ... 1973 ... 9 January Operational testing and Evaluation (OT&E, nicknamed Bullet Blitz) of the SRAM from B-52 aircraft began at Holloman AFB, New Mexico.
- ^ Condit, Kenneth W. (1992) [1971 classified vol]. "Chapter 4: The Weapons Revolution and Service Functions". The Joint Chiefs of Staff and National Policy: 1955–1956 (Report). Vol. VI of History of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Washington, DC: Historical Office, Joint Staff. (Condit's footnote 41 on p. 294 cites:
JCS Hist Div, Chronology of Significant Events and Decisions Relating to the U.S. Missile and Earth Satellite Development Programs (1957), p. 76 and passim. Semiannual Report of the Secretary of Defense, 1 Jan-30 Jun 58, pp. 283–284.) - ^ Secretary of Defense (9 September 1959), handwritten memorandum to the President (typewritten record at Eisenhower Archives with 6/19/79 date at top)
- ^ Preface by Buss, L. H. (Director) (1 May 1960). North American Air Defense Command and Continental Air Defense Command Historical Summary: July–December 1959 (PDF) (Report). Directorate of Command History: Office of Information Services. "On 19 December 1959, NORAD and SAC informed their unlts that, for the interim, no [mock] fighter attacks against bomber aircraft would be allowed. The order was issued as a result of a mid-air collision on 17 December between an F-102 and a B-47 engaged in exercise Quick Kick."
- ^ "Jet Bombers To Descend Near Alto For Series of Mock Air Attacks" (UniSv of Tennessee archives). The Cherokeean. Rusk, Texas. 28 December 1961. Retrieved 18 September 2013.
Strategic Air Command will begin flying missions on 1 Jan. against simulated _targets near Greenville, Miss. They will use a low-level entry point near Alto. ... Low level bombing and navigation training has been conducted against fixed sites under the code name "Oil Burner" since November 1959... The RBS train will carry about 65 Air Force personnel. ... The RBS Express...has 10 cars...consisting of existing U.S. Army stock from the Odgen General Depor
- ^ History of the Strategic Air Command, 1 January 1960 – 30 June 1960 (Report). Headquarters, Strategic Air Command. p. 135. (quotation and citation from Evolution of U.S. Strategic Command and Control and Warning: Part 2)
- ^ Adams, Chris (2001). Ideologies in Conflict; A Cold War Docu-Story (Report). Writers' Showcase. Retrieved 15 September 2013.
- ^ "Fact Sheets : RB-47H Shot Down : RB-47H Shot Down". Archived from the original on 29 October 2007. Retrieved 29 October 2007.
- ^ a b Deaile, Melvin G. (2007). The SAC Mentality: The Origins of Organizational Culture in Strategic Air Command, 1946–1962 (Ph.D. dissertation). University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. doi:10.17615/xvz8-0261. Retrieved 16 September 2013.
Although LeMay had designated Deputy Commanders in other theaters (SACX-Ray, Zebra, Victor, Yoke, and Oboe) ... [Looking Glass] has authority when the National Command Authority is no longer there to push the button."63 ... SAC released balloons equipped with cameras in Norway, England, and Turkey, and retrieved them off the coast of Japan and Alaska... By presidential decree on 8 September 1955, Eisenhower announced that the ICBM would become America's chief focus in terms of the military arsenal.94
- ^ a b Pike, John (24 July 2011). "Strategic Air Command". Global Security. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
- ^ [full citation needed]"title tbd" (PDF). Ed-Thelen.org.
- ^ A Survey and Summary of Mathematical and Simulation Models as Applied to Weapon System Evaluation (Report). Aeronautical Systems Division, USAF. December 1961. Retrieved 13 September 2011.
the Phase II and Phase III NORAD SAGE/ Missile Master [program] employing SAC and ADC aircraft [under] the NORAD Joint Test Force stationed at Stewart AFB.
(cites Miller 1961) - ^ [full citation needed]"title tbd" (PDF). Archived from the original (AtlasMissileSilo.com pdf file) on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 17 August 2013. pdf p. 17
- ^ a b c d "Air Force Fact Sheets" (search page). USAF website.: KC-10, KC-135, LGM-118A Peacekeeper Archived 23 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine, SA-2 SAM Archived 4 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "the nuclear information project: the airborne alert program". nukestrat.com. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
- ^ Fisher, Lt Col David R.; Roig-Compton, Captain Aida E. (1 May 1990) [rewritten from 1976 report]. From Snark to Peacekeeper: A Pictorial History of Strategic Air Command Missiles (PDF) (Report). Office of the Historian, HQ. SAC, Offutt AFB. NE. 1990. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
Project "Added Effort", the Air Force nickname for the programmed phaseout of all first-generation ICBMs, began on 1 May 1964 when the first Atlas D's were taken off alert at the 576th Strategic Missile Squadron, Vandenberg AFB, California. ... SAC bubmitted a requirement to the Air Staff on 12 February 1959 calling for the first mobile Minuteman unit to be operational no later than January 1973....tests to be conducted, nicknamed "Operation Big Star." ... The Mobile Minuteman concept, Operation Big Star, test train rolls through the mountains of Utah in 1960.
- ^ IRISNUM 00904050 (Oral History Interview tape—21 minutes), vol. Project CORONA HARVEST Collection, Part of, SACADVON, Tan Son Nhut Air Base: abstract at Air Force History Index.org, 15 November 1968, retrieved 30 August 2013,
Operational Concept of BUGLE NOTE
- ^ a b c d ...Selected Air and Ground Operations in Cambodia and Laos (PDF) (Report). US Department of Defense. 10 September 1973. Archived from the original (presented during "Bombing in Cambodia" hearings before the Senate Armed Services Committee) on 13 July 2013. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
COMBAT SKYSPOT radar...controlled all Operation MENU missions.
- ^ Drenkowski, Drew (September 1977). "Operation Linebacker II". Soldier of Fortune 2, No. 3: 15–20. (cited by Worden p. 174)
- ^ "Part Three: Countering the Communist Threat During the Cold War". Air Force History. AirForce.com. Archived from the original on 29 November 2011. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
- ^ a b c History of the Strategic Air Command: 1969 (PDF) (Report). Vol. Historical Summary 116. Office of Command History. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
[from SAC] transfer, on 1 July 1968, of Homestead AFB [and] Altus AFB ... The definition of CONUS was that used for the USAF program document, PD-70-3: the contiguous states... cuts were directed by USAF...to keep assignments within the strength and man-year ceilings established by the ... Secretary of Defense ... The overall reduction, directed by USAF, was known as Project 693 ...77 ... the 18th Strategic Aerospace Division (SAD) was discontinued on 2 July. ... SAC had 64 detachments at the end of FY-69, an increase of nine, offset by a reduction of three. One discontinued was Detachment 4, 1st Combat Evaluation Group (CEG), Oronogo, Missouri. It was the second detachment of the 1CEG to be inactivated in 1968.100 ... Scoring activity stopped on 15 December, the equipment was moved,105 and the detachment inactivated on 25 January.106 The other two reductions were Detachments 3 and 19, 3902nd Support Squadron, at Altus and Homestead AFBs, where Manpower Evaluation Teams were no longer required. ... 100. Det 13, Ellisville, Miss, discontinued 2 Jun 68; Hist SAC, Jan–Jun 68, pp. 14–17.
- ^ Yenne, Bill (1992). SAC, A Primer of Modern Strategic Airpower (Google books). Presidio Press. ISBN 9780891411895.
By June [1966], after a year in the war zone, B-52s were dropping 8000 tons of bombs monthly in saturation raids on South Vietnam
- ^ Correll, John T. (January 2009). "Arc Light" (transcript of article). Air Force Magazine. Retrieved 16 August 2013.
- ^ a b 1966 SAC history https://www.scribd.com/doc/47549447/SAC-History-1966-Study-102 [SAC1966 http://dougkeeney.files.wordpress.com/2011/04/pages-from-sac_history_1966_study_102-laos-_targets1.pdf (pp. 121–122 on 1965-6 bombings)]
- ^ Boeing B-52 Stratofortress
- ^ "title tbd" (memorial webpage).
The attack of February 24, 1968, killed 1 of the 1CEG personnel, while wounding 4 (myself among them.) Sgts Rose and Norman Thomas of SAC ADVON were also killed.
- ^ Thompson, Wayne (2000). To Hanoi and Back: The United States Air Force and North Vietnam 1966–1973 (Google books). Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ a b Lessons from Vietnam: Should SAC Perform Both Nuclear and Conventional Missions? (Report). Archived from the original on 1 September 2013. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ Drea, Edward J. (1984). McNamara, Clifford, and theBurdens of Vietnam1965-1969 (PDF) (Report). Vol. VI, Secretaries of Defense Historical Series. Historical Office, Office of the Secretary of Defense. ISBN 978-0-16-088135-0. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
Strategic Air Command, denominated a specified command because...it came under the operational control of the JCS.24 ... Clifford had previously appointed a group, known as Project 693, to determine which programs to sacrifice when it became necessary.65 ... In late July, a special committee devising scenarios for T-Day, the day hostilities in Vietnam ended, posited that, depending on timing assumptions, anywhere between 30,000 troops and a two-division corps (about 60,000 personnel) might have to remain in South Vietnam indefinitely. ... Advanced Manned Strategic Aircraft (AMSA) ... McNamara test, 25 Jan 66, House Subcte No 2, HCAS, Hearing: Department of Defense Decision to Reduce the Number and Types of Manned Bombers in the Strategic Air Command, 6084.
- ^ Operation Linebacker II
- ^ "Sunday Union - Google News Archive Search". Retrieved 15 May 2016.
- ^ Hefner, [first name tbd] (2012). The Missile Next Door: The Minuteman in the American Heartland. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674059-11-5.
- ^ Winkler, David F; Webster, Julie L (June 1997). Searching the Skies: The Legacy of the United States Cold War Defense Radar Program (Report). Champaign, IL: U.S. Army Construction Engineering Research Laboratories. p. 48. LCCN 97020912. Archived from the original on 1 December 2012. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
- ^ "B52 Stratofortress Association". Stratofortress.org. Retrieved 21 July 2013.
"Strategic Air Command alert ends". Af.mil. Archived from the original on 19 February 2013. Retrieved 21 July 2013. - ^ Bush, George H. W. (27 September 1991) Address to the Nation on Reducing United States and Soviet Nuclear Weapons Archived 16 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "AF realigns B-1, LRS-B under Air Force Global Strike Command". Archived from the original on 19 June 2015. Retrieved 27 August 2015.
- ^ a b Correll, John T. (1 March 2013). "SAC's Half Century". Air & Space Forces Magazine. Retrieved 13 November 2024.
- ^ "About Us". Strategic Air & Space Museum. sasmuseum.com. Archived from the original on 19 November 2013. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
- ^ SAC Elite Guard Archived 7 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine. SAC Elite Guard. Retrieved 2013-09-18.
- ^ "SACMARC". sacmarc.org. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
- ^ Polmar, Norman, Strategic Air Command: People, Aircraft, and Missiles, 2nd Edition, Nautical & Aviation Publishing, 1990, ISBN 9780933852778.
Mixer, Ronald E., Strategic Air Command, An Organizational History, Battermix Publishing Company, 2006. - ^ "AIR FORCE GLOBAL STRIKE COMMAND (USAF)". Air Force Historical Research Agency. 17 July 2009. Archived from the original on 18 July 2012. Retrieved 9 November 2013.
- ^ a b "Home Page". strategic-air-command.com. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
- ^ Feickert, Andrew (3 January 2013). "The Unified Command Plan and Combatant Commands: Background and Issues for Congress" (PDF). Congressional Research Service. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
- ^ Organization of United States Air Force Units in the Gulf War
Further reading
edit- Clark, Rita F.; Herman F. Martin (1988). Strategic Air Command: Unit Mission and History Summaries. Offutt Air Force Base, Neb.: Office of the Historian, Headquarters Strategic Air Command. OCLC 19111731. Text Archived 24 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine at alternatewars.com.
- Deaile, Melvin G. (2007). Always at War: Organizational Culture in Strategic Air Command, 1946–62. Transforming War. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 9781682472484. OCLC 1085029166.
- Hopkins, J.C.; Goldberg, Sheldon A. (1986). The Development of the Strategic Air Command, 1946–1986: The Fortieth Anniversary History. Office of the Historian, HQ. SAC.
- Peace...Is Our Profession: Alert Operations and the Strategic Air Command, 1957–1991 (PDF) (Report). Offut Air Force Base, Neb.: Office of the Historian, Headquarters Strategic Air Command. 7 December 1991. Archived (PDF) from the original on 25 August 2016.
External links
edit- Air Force Special Film Project 1236, "SAC Command Post" is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive