Strategic Air Command: Difference between revisions

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Between 1946 and 1992, the '''Strategic Air Command''' of the [[United States Air Force]] had the primary responsibility for using [[nuclear weapon]]s against the [[Soviet Union]], [[China]], and other Cold War targets. It was built from WWII forces by GEN [[Curtis LeMay]], changing the mission from mass raids to nuclear attack. Until 1959, it also developed the target lists and attack plans, until President [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]] sent his Science Advisor, [[George Kistiakowsky]], to SAC Headquarters at Offutt Air Force Base near Omaha, Nebraska.  
'''Strategic Air Command''' was an arm of the [[United States Air Force]] from its formation in 1946 until, following the end of the [[Cold War]], it was dis-established in 1992. In 1955, the service was the eponymous subject of a film starring [[James Stewart]], himself a USAF pilot.


At first, the SAC generals refused to share nuclear plans with Kistiakowsky, who went back to Washington, and returned with Presidential orders essentially giving the SAC staff the choice of making all information available to Kistiakowsky, his representative, or to retire. The information was provided, and, in the final months of the Eisenhower Administration, Presidential policy started to guide nuclear war planning.
[[Category:Reviewed Passed if Improved]]
 
The Air Force monopoly on strategic weapons delivery ended with the Navy's first test of a Polaris [[submarine-launched ballistic missile]] in 1960. The need for coordinating Air Force and Navy programs, as well as the imposition of White House policy, led to the first [[Single Integrated Operational Plan]] (SIOP-62) issued in 1962.  From then on, strategic planning was by a joint staff.
 
In 1992, a major Air Force reorganization put the bombers under the new [[Air Combat Command]], and SAC was abolished. A new [[United States Strategic Command]] was formed, to which the bombers and missiles would be detailed for nuclear war.

Latest revision as of 03:14, 2 April 2024

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Strategic Air Command was an arm of the United States Air Force from its formation in 1946 until, following the end of the Cold War, it was dis-established in 1992. In 1955, the service was the eponymous subject of a film starring James Stewart, himself a USAF pilot.