12/31/2021 7:35:39 PM
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Section 22: Military Topics Subject: Be A Sea Soldier Msg# 1147251
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I'm glad I got into SAC years after you did and didn't see anything that serious. We had four nuclear armed B-52s on an alert pad and once every few months our turn rolled around to put two armed bombers in the air for operation Chrome Dome.
The only inspections/alerts I recall were the ORIs (Operational Readiness Inspections) that occurred about once every six months. A transport would come in with an Inspector General team aboard, or the red phone would ring, and the alert aircraft were told to launch. Everything was realistic until they got to the active runway, then they were told it was a drill and to stand down. Then the bomb wing's performance was evaluated. At Amarillo AFB we shared the base with Air Training Command and the runway with the local commercial aviation terminal. Anyone on base could drive over to the SAC area without passing a guard shack but they couldn't get access to the runway or the SAC aircraft parking area. Any private aircraft that blundered into our area were stopped by CDF (Combat Defense Force) vehicles full of armed guards, some with dogs. While I was there ('65-'67) our wing stopped the armed alert procedure and quit contributing armed aircraft to Chrome Dome. All the bombers were painted black on the bottom and camo on top, and we started supporting the Vietnam war effort with six-month temporary duty rotations to Anderson AFB on Guam. Just before I got out in '68 the base was closed and I was sent to Clinton-Sherman AFB in Oklahoma. |
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For reference, the above message is a reply to a message where: SAC was the "keeper of the bombs", very serious, no grab ass, base restricted to assigned personnel only, at a minimum 25% of all bombers were in the air loaded with nuclear weapons with another 25% on the ramp, engines running, all "bombed up" and ready to be airborne in 15 minutes or less. We had constant alerts and spot inspections by teams of SAC officers on a random basis. The alerts ran for 2-3 days, if you were off base in town you had to get back within 30 minutes or less. The last thing affected married guys with family in base housing, SAC bases were considered to be the first thing the Soviets would target and, most likely be history within an hour or so of the balloon going up, when the ICBM's were added in the time was reduced to 30 minutes or less! |