fbpx
Wikipedia

Armed Forces Special Weapons Project

The Armed Forces Special Weapons Project (AFSWP) was a United States military agency responsible for those aspects of nuclear weapons remaining under military control after the Manhattan Project was succeeded by the Atomic Energy Commission on 1 January 1947. These responsibilities included the maintenance, storage, surveillance, security and handling of nuclear weapons, as well as supporting nuclear testing. The AFSWP was a joint organization, staffed by the United States Army, United States Navy and United States Air Force; its chief was supported by deputies from the other two services. Major General Leslie R. Groves, the former head of the Manhattan Project, was its first chief.

Armed Forces Special Weapons Project
Armed Forces Special Weapons Project patch
Active1 January 1947 – 6 May 1959
Country United States
Garrison/HQWashington, D.C.[1]
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Leslie Groves
Kenneth Nichols
Herbert Loper
Alvin Luedecke
Insignia
Seal

The early nuclear weapons were large, complex, and cumbersome. They were stored as components rather than complete devices and required expert knowledge to assemble. The short life of their lead-acid batteries and modulated neutron initiators, and the heat generated by the fissile cores, precluded storing them assembled. The large quantity of conventional explosive in each weapon demanded special care be taken in handling. Groves hand-picked a team of regular Army officers, who were trained in the assembly and handling of the weapons. They in turn trained the enlisted soldiers, and the Army teams then trained teams from the Navy and Air Force.

As nuclear weapons development proceeded, the weapons became mass-produced, smaller, lighter, and easier to store, handle, and maintain. They also required less effort to assemble. The AFSWP gradually shifted its emphasis away from training assembly teams, and became more involved in stockpile management and providing administrative, technical, and logistical support. It supported nuclear weapons testing, although after Operation Sandstone in 1948, this was increasingly in a planning and training capacity rather than a field role. In 1959, the AFSWP became the Defense Atomic Support Agency (DASA), a field agency of the Department of Defense.

Origins edit

Nuclear weapons were developed during World War II by the Manhattan Project, a major research and development effort led by the United States, with participation from the United Kingdom and Canada. From 1942 to 1946, it was under the direction of Major General Leslie R. Groves Jr., of the US Army Corps of Engineers. It created a network of production facilities, most notably for uranium enrichment at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, plutonium production at Hanford, Washington, and weapons research and design at the Los Alamos Laboratory in Los Alamos, New Mexico. The nuclear weapons that were developed were used in the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945.[2]

After the war ended, the Manhattan Project supported the nuclear weapons testing at Bikini Atoll as part of Operation Crossroads in 1946. One of Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal's aides, Lewis Strauss, proposed this series of tests to refute "loose talk to the effect that the fleet is obsolete in the face of this new weapon".[3] The nuclear weapons were handmade devices, and a great deal of work remained to improve their ease of assembly, safety, reliability and storage before they were ready for production. There were also many improvements to their performance that had been suggested or recommended, but not possible under the pressure of wartime development.[4]

Groves's biggest concern was about people. Soldiers and scientists wanted to return to their peacetime pursuits, and there was a danger that wartime knowledge would be lost, leaving no one who knew how to handle and maintain nuclear weapons, much less how to improve the weapons and processes. The military side of the Manhattan Project had relied heavily on reservists, as the policy of the Corps of Engineers was to assign regular officers to field commands.[5][6] The reservists were now eligible for separation. To replace them, Groves asked for fifty West Point graduates from the top ten percent of their classes to man bomb-assembly teams at Sandia Base, where the assembly staff and facilities had been moved from Los Alamos and Wendover Field in September and October 1945. He felt that only such high-quality personnel would be able to work with the scientists who were currently doing the job. They were also urgently required for many other jobs in the postwar Army. When General Thomas T. Handy turned down his request, Groves raised the matter with the Chief of Staff of the Army, General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower, who similarly did not approve it. Groves then went over his head too, and took the issue to the Secretary of War, Robert P. Patterson, who agreed with Groves.[5][7] The personnel manned the 2761st Engineer Battalion (Special), which became a field unit under the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project (AFSWP).[8]

Groves hoped a new, permanent agency would be created to take over the responsibilities of the wartime Manhattan Project in 1945, but passage of the Atomic Energy Act of 1946 through Congress took much longer than expected, and involved considerable debate about the proper role of the military with respect to the development, production and control of nuclear weapons.[9][10] The act that was signed by President Harry S. Truman on 1 August 1946 created a civilian agency, the United States Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), to take over the functions and assets of the Manhattan Project, but the commissioners were not appointed until October, and AEC did not assume its role until 1 January 1947.[11][12] In the meantime, the Military Appropriation Act of 1946 gave the Manhattan Project $72.4 million for research and development, and $19 million for housing and utilities at Los Alamos and Oak Ridge.[13]

The Atomic Energy Act provided for a Military Liaison Committee to advise the AEC on military matters,[14] so Patterson appointed Lieutenant General Lewis H. Brereton, who became chairman, along with Major General Lunsford E. Oliver and Colonel John H. Hinds as Army members of the Military Liaison Committee; Forrestal appointed Rear Admirals Thorvald A. Solberg, Ralph A. Ofstie and William S. Parsons as its naval members.[15]

Organization edit

Patterson asked Groves to create a new agency to take over responsibility for the aspects of nuclear weapons that still remained under the military. It was to be jointly staffed by the Army and Navy,[16] and on 29 January 1947, Patterson and Forrestal issued a memorandum that formally established the AFSWP. Its chief would be appointed jointly by the Chief of Staff of the Army and the Chief of Naval Operations, along with a deputy from the opposite service. Both would be members of the Military Liaison Committee, because the Atomic Energy Act stipulated that the Military Liaison Committee was the sole military body that dealt with the AEC. In February 1947, Eisenhower and Chief of Naval Operations Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz appointed Groves as head of the AFSWP, with Parsons as his deputy.[17] Accordingly, Groves was appointed to the Military Liaison Committee, although the newly appointed AEC chairman, David E. Lilienthal, told Patterson he did not think it was a good idea, because Groves had run the Manhattan Project by himself for four years, and was not used to having to compromise.[18]

Groves and Parsons drafted a proposed organization and charter for the AFSWP, which they sent to Eisenhower and Nimitz for approval in July 1947.[19] Groves did not get everything he asked for; he wanted a status equal to that of a deputy to the Chief of Staff and Chief of Naval Operations, but the most Eisenhower and Nimitz would allow was a status equal to that of the heads of a technical service, although Groves still reported directly to them. They also characterized his role as a staff post rather than a command, although Groves was already exercising the functions of a commander at Sandia. After the National Security Act of 1947 created an independent Air Force, Groves reported to the Chief of Staff of the Air Force as well, and was given a second deputy chief from the Air Force, Major General Roscoe C. Wilson, who had worked on the Silverplate project during the war.[20]

Groves initially established the headquarters of the AFSWP in the old offices of the Manhattan Project on the fifth floor of the New War Department Building in Washington, DC, but on 15 April 1947 it moved to the Pentagon.[21] As AFSWP headquarters expanded, it filled up its original accommodation, and began using office space in other parts of the building, which was not satisfactory from a security point of view. In August 1949, it moved to 18,000 square feet (1,700 m2) of new offices inside the Pentagon. This included space for a soundproof conference room, a darkroom, and vaults where its records and films were stored.[22]

 
A nuclear capable AJ Savage launching from the aircraft carrier USS Midway in 1955.

The 2761st Engineer Battalion (Special) at Sandia was commanded by Colonel Gilbert M. Dorland, and consisted of a headquarters company, a security company (Company A), a bomb assembly company (Company B) and a radiological monitoring company (Company C), although Company C was never fully formed. For training purposes, Company B was initially divided into command, electrical, mechanical and nuclear groups, but the intention was to create three integrated 36-man bomb assembly teams.[23]

To free the bomb assembly teams from having to train newcomers, a Technical Training Group (TTG) was created under Lieutenant Colonel John A. Ord, a Signal Corps officer with a Doctor of Science degree from Carnegie Institute of Technology who had directed the training of thousands of radar technicians at the Southern Signal Corps School during the war.[24] The battalion was redesignated the 38th Engineer Battalion (Special) in April 1947, and in July it became part of the newly created AFSWP Field Command, under the command of Brigadier General Robert M. Montague. The TTG was soon reporting directly to Montague as well.[25]

The first bomb assembly team was formed in August 1947, followed by a second in December and a third in March 1948. Experience with assembling the bombs convincingly demonstrated the requirement, in Sandia if not in Washington, for a much larger unit. Groves reluctantly approved a 109-man special weapons unit, and Montague converted the three lettered companies of the 38th Engineer Battalion into special weapons units.[26] In 1948, they began training a Navy special weapons unit, as the Navy foresaw delivery of nuclear weapons with its new North American AJ Savage bombers from its Midway-class aircraft carriers. This unit became the 471st Naval Special Weapons Unit on its certification in August 1948.[27] Two Air Force units were created in September and December 1948, which became the 502d and 508th Aviation Squadrons. An additional Army special weapons unit was created in May 1948, and in December, the 38th Engineer Battalion (Special) became the 8460th Special Weapons Group, with all seven special weapons units under its command. The four Army units were then renamed the 111th, 122d, 133d and 144th Special Weapons Units.[28][29] During the late 1940s the Air Force gradually became the major user of nuclear weapons, and by the end of 1949 it had twelve assembly units and another three in training. The Army had only four and the Navy three, one for each of the Midway-class aircraft carriers.[22]

In March 1948, the Chief of Staff of the Air Force, General Carl Spaatz, proposed that the Air Force take over the AFSWP, on the grounds that the Key West Agreement had given it responsibility for strategic bombing. This would have simplified command of the AFSWP, as it would have been answerable to only one service chief instead of three. The Army cautiously supported the proposal, but the Navy was strongly opposed, fearing that the Air Force's confusion of atomic bombing and strategic bombing would impede or even prevent the Navy from having access to nuclear weapons, which it felt was necessary to accomplish its primary maritime mission. Another series of talks was held at the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island, from 20 to 22 August 1948, which resulted in the Newport Agreement, under which the Navy agreed to drop its opposition to the AFSWP being placed under the Air Force temporarily, in return for the Air Force recognizing the Navy's requirement for nuclear weapons.[30] When the Air Force moved to make the temporary arrangement permanent in September 1948, the Army and Navy objected, and the Military Liaison Committee directed that the AFSWP should remain a tri-service organization answerable to the three service chiefs.[31]

Field operations edit

Groves and the wartime director of the Los Alamos Laboratory, Robert Oppenheimer, had begun the move of ordnance functions to Sandia in late 1945.[32] The laboratory's ordnance-engineering division, known as Z Division, after its first director, Jerrold R. Zacharias,[33] was split between Los Alamos and Sandia. Between March and July 1946, Z Division relocated to Sandia, except for its mechanical engineering (Z-4) section, which followed in February 1947.[34] Z Division worked on improving the mechanical and electrical reliability of the Mark 3 Fat Man bomb, but this work was disrupted by the Crossroads tests.[35]

 
Mark 3 Fat Man external components:
  1. AN 219 contact fuze (four)
  2. Archie radar antenna
  3. Plate with batteries (to detonate charge surrounding nuclear components)
  4. X-Unit, a firing set placed near the charge
  5. Hinge fixing the two ellipsoidal parts of the bomb
  6. Physics package (see details below)
  7. Plate with instruments (radars, baroswitches and timers)
  8. Barotube collector
  9. California Parachute tail assembly (0.20-inch (5.1 mm) aluminium sheet)
 
Mark 3 Fat Man internal components.

The 1947 nuclear stockpile consisted of nuclear weapons components, not weapons. Meeting with Truman in April 1947, Lilienthal informed him that not only were there no assembled weapons, there were only a few sets of components and no fully trained bomb-assembly teams.[35] By August 1946, Sandia Base held electrical and mechanical assemblies for about 50 Fat Man bombs, but there were only nine fissile cores in storage. The stockpile of cores grew to 13 in 1947, and 53 in 1948.[36] Oppenheimer noted that the bombs were "still largely the haywire contraptions that were slapped together in 1945".[36] With a half-life of only 140 days, the polonium-beryllium modulated neutron initiators had to be periodically removed from the plutonium pits, tested, and, if necessary, replaced. The cores had to be stored separately from the high-explosive blocks that would surround them in the bomb because they generated enough heat to melt the plastic explosive over time.[37] The heat could also affect the cores themselves, provoking a phase transition to a different allotrope of plutonium. They had to be periodically inspected by technicians wearing gloves and respirators.[38] The bomb's electrical power for its radar fuzes and detonators came from a pair of lead-acid batteries similar to those used in cars. These had to be charged 24 hours before use. After a few days the bomb had to be partially disassembled so they could be re-charged (and, only three days after that, replaced).[37]

The 38th Engineer Battalion's electrical group studied the batteries, the electrical firing systems and the radar fuzes which detonated the bomb at the required altitude. The mechanical group dealt with the exploding-bridgewire detonators and the explosive lenses. The nuclear group moved to Los Alamos to study the cores and initiators. As part of their training, they attended lectures by Edward Teller, Hans Bethe, Lise Meitner and Enrico Fermi.[39] The electrical and mechanical groups at Sandia, although not the nuclear group, completed their training around the end of October 1946 and spent the next month devising the best methods of assembling a Fat Man, drawing up detailed checklists so later bomb assembly teams could be trained. They also drew up a proposed table of organization and equipment for an assembly team. It took two weeks for them to assemble their first bomb in December 1946.[40]

Most of 1947 was spent planning for a field exercise in which a bomb team would deploy to a base and assemble weapons under field conditions.[40] A 20-foot (6.1 m) by 100-foot (30 m) portable building was acquired and outfitted as field workshops that could be loaded onto a C-54 or C-97 transport aircraft.[41] In November 1947, the 38th Engineer Battalion carried out its first major field exercise, Operation Ajax. It drew bomb components, except for fissile cores, from the AEC, and deployed by air to Wendover Field, Utah. This was the home of the 509th Bombardment Group, which was the only unit operating Silverplate B-29 bombers, and therefore the only B-29 group capable of delivering nuclear weapons. To simulate operational conditions, they took a roundabout route via New England and Seattle.[42] Over the following ten days, they assembled bombs and flew training missions with them, including a live drop at the Naval Ordnance Test Station at Inyokern, California.[43]

This was followed by other exercises. In one exercise in March 1948, the base personnel successfully fought off an "attack" by 250 paratroopers from Fort Hood, Texas.[44] In another exercise in November 1948, the 471st Special Weapons Unit flew to Norfolk, Virginia, and practiced bomb assembly on board the Midway-class aircraft carriers.[45]

Nuclear testing edit

 
An M65 Atomic Cannon firing during Operation Upshot–Knothole Grable in May 1953.

In addition to assembly of weapons, the AFSWP supported nuclear weapons testing. For Operation Sandstone in 1948, Groves ordered Dorland to fill every possible job with his men.[46] He did this so well that Strauss, now an AEC commissioner, became disturbed at the number of AFSWP personnel who were participating, and feared that the Soviet Union might launch a sneak attack on Enewetak to wipe out the nation's ability to assemble nuclear weapons.[47] The successful testing in Operation Sandstone was a major leap forward.[48] The new Mark 4 nuclear bomb the AEC began delivering in 1949 was a production design that was much easier to assemble and maintain, and enabled a bomb-assembly team to be reduced to just 46 men.[49] Kenneth D. Nichols, the wartime commander of the Manhattan District, now "recommended that we should be thinking in terms of thousands of weapons rather than hundreds".[50]

After Operation Sandstone, only relatively small numbers of AFSWP personnel were involved in nuclear testing. The AFSWP was heavily involved in the planning, preparation and coordination of tests, but it had limited participation in the tests themselves, where the bomb-assembly function was usually undertaken by scientists.[51] During Operation Buster-Jangle, AFSWP personnel showed films and gave lectures to 2,800 military personnel who had been selected to witness the test, explaining what would occur and the procedures to be followed.[52] This was expanded to cater for the more than 7,000 personnel who were involved in Operation Upshot–Knothole in 1953.[53]

Custody of nuclear weapons edit

When the AEC was formed in 1947 it acquired custody of nuclear components from the Manhattan Project on the understanding that the matter would be reviewed.[54] In November 1947, the Military Liaison Committee requested that custody of the nuclear stockpile be transferred to the military, but Lilienthal believed AEC custody of the stockpile was an important aspect of civilian control of nuclear weapons. He was disturbed that the AFSWP had not informed the AEC in advance of Operation Ajax.[55] For his part, Groves suspected the AEC was not keeping bomb components in the condition in which the military wanted to receive them, and Operation Ajax only confirmed his suspicions.[56] Reviewing the exercise, Montague reported that "under the existing law, with the AEC charged with procurement and custody of all atomic weapons, there was no adequate logistic support for the weapon." He recommended a larger role for the military, a recommendation with which Groves concurred, but was powerless to implement.[46]

 
Armed Forces Special Weapons Project certificate for attending Weapons Orientation Advanced Class No. 132 in April 1958.

Groves retired at the end of February 1948, and Nichols was designated as his successor with the rank of major general. At the same time, Forrestal, now the Secretary of Defense, reorganized the Military Liaison Committee. A civilian, Donald F. Carpenter, replaced Brereton as chairman, and there were now two members from each of the three services.[57] On 11 March, Truman summoned Lilienthal, Nichols and Secretary of the Army Kenneth C. Royall to his office, and told them he expected the AFSWP and the AEC to cooperate.[58]

Nichols's position was the same as Groves's and Montague's: that nuclear weapons needed to be available in an emergency, and the men who had to use them in battle needed to have experience with their maintenance, storage and handling.[59] Norris Bradbury, who had replaced Oppenheimer as the director of the Los Alamos Laboratory in December 1945, argued that rapid transfer could be accomplished by improved procedures and that the other difficulties could best be resolved by further development, mostly from the scientists.[60] Forrestal and Carpenter took the matter up with Truman, who issued his decision on 21 July 1948: "I regard the continued control of all aspects of the atomic energy program, including research, development and the custody of atomic weapons as the proper functions of the civil authorities."[61]

With the outbreak of the Korean War in 1950, air transport resources were put under great strain, and it was decided to reduce the requirement for it by pre-positioning non-nuclear components at locations in Europe and the Pacific. That way, in an emergency, only the nuclear components would have to be flown out.[62] In June, Truman ordered the transfer of 90 sets of non-nuclear Mark 4 components to the AFSWP for training purposes. In December, he authorized the carriage of non-nuclear components on board the Midway-class carriers.[63] In April 1951, the AEC released nine Mark 4 weapons to the Air Force in case the Soviet Union intervened in the war in Korea.[64] These were flown to Guam, where they were maintained by the Air Force special weapons unit there.[65] Thus, at the end of 1951, there were 429 weapons in AEC custody and nine held by the Department of Defense.[66]

In the light of this, a new AEC-AFSWP agreement on "Responsibilities of Stockpile Operations" was drawn up in August 1951, but in December, the Joint Chiefs of Staff began a new push for weapons to be permanently assigned to the armed forces, so as to ensure a greater degree of flexibility and a higher state of readiness.[67] On 20 June 1953, Eisenhower, now as president, approved the deployment of nuclear components in equal numbers to non-nuclear components,[68] and the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 amended the sections of the old act that gave exclusive custody to the AEC.[69] By 1959, the nuclear stockpile had grown to 12,305 weapons of which 3,968 were in AEC custody and the remaining 8,337 were held by the Department of Defense.[66] The total yield of the stockpile was now in excess of 19,000 megatons of TNT (79,000 PJ).[70]

As Bradbury had promised, with research and development, nuclear weapons became smaller, simpler and lighter. They also became easier to store, assemble, test and maintain.[71] Thus, while under Eisenhower's New Look policy the Armed Forces became more heavily involved with aspects of nuclear weapons than ever, the role of the AFSWP diminished. It began moving away from training assembly teams, which were increasingly not required, as its primary mission, and became more involved in the management of the rapidly growing nuclear stockpile, and providing technical advice and logistical support.[72] In 1953, the AFSWP Field Command had 10,250 personnel.[73] On 16 October 1953, the Secretary of Defense charged the AFSWP with responsibility for "a centralized system of reporting and accounting to ensure that the current status and location" of all nuclear weapons "will be known at all times". The Atomic Warfare Status Center was created within the AFSWP to handle this mission.[53]

Conversion to Defense Atomic Support Agency edit

In April 1958, Eisenhower asked Congress for legislation to overhaul the Department of Defense. Over a decade had passed since the legislation which had established it, and he was concerned about the degree of inter-service rivalry, duplication and mismanagement that was evident in many programs. In ballistic missile development, the Soviet Sputnik program had demonstrated that country's technological lead over the United States. The Army and Air Force had rival programs, PGM-19 Jupiter and PGM-17 Thor respectively, and the additional cost to the taxpayers of developing two systems instead of one was estimated at $500 million.[74]

The Defense Reorganization Act of 1958 was signed by Eisenhower in August 1958. It increased the authority of the Secretary of Defense, who was authorized to establish such defense agencies as he thought necessary "to provide for more effective, efficient and economical administration and operation". The first field agency established under the act was the Defense Atomic Support Agency (DASA).[75] The new agency reported to the Secretary of Defense through the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and was given responsibility for the supervision of all Department of Defense nuclear sites. Otherwise, Top Secret military expeditionary installations such as Sandia Base, Manzano Base, Bossier Base Clarksville Base, Killeen Base and Lake Mead Base to name a few, its role and organization remained much the same, and its commander, Rear Admiral Edward N. Parker, remained as its first director.[76] Eisenhower's proposed nuclear testing moratorium ultimately fundamentally changed DASA's mission, as nuclear testing was phased out, Cold War tensions eased, and nuclear disarmament became a prospect.[77][78]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Borg, D. C. (May 1954). "Report AFSWP-507: Radioactive Fallout Hazards from Surface Bursts of Very High Yield Nuclear Weapons" (PDF). U.S. Armed Forces Special Weapons Project. Retrieved 10 December 2022.
  2. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, pp. 2–8.
  3. ^ Rhodes 1995, pp. 228–229.
  4. ^ Rhodes 1995, pp. 212–213.
  5. ^ a b Groves 1962, pp. 373–376.
  6. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 75–76.
  7. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 625.
  8. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, p. 2.
  9. ^ Groves 1962, pp. 389–391.
  10. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 628–630.
  11. ^ Groves 1962, pp. 394–395.
  12. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 620–622.
  13. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 635.
  14. ^ Jones 1985, p. 598.
  15. ^ Lilienthal et al. 1947, p. 199.
  16. ^ Groves 1962, pp. 398–399.
  17. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, pp. 29–30.
  18. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 6–7.
  19. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, p. 131.
  20. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, pp. 36–37.
  21. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, p. 30.
  22. ^ a b Brahmstedt 2002, p. 71.
  23. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, pp. 21–24.
  24. ^ Abrahamson & Carew 2002, pp. 79–80.
  25. ^ Abrahamson & Carew 2002, pp. 67–68.
  26. ^ Abrahamson & Carew 2002, pp. 67–69.
  27. ^ Abrahamson & Carew 2002, p. 114.
  28. ^ Abrahamson & Carew 2002, p. 153.
  29. ^ . The Army Historical Foundation. Archived from the original on 29 March 2012. Retrieved 17 August 2011.
  30. ^ Rearden 1984, pp. 398–401.
  31. ^ Rearden 1984, p. 437.
  32. ^ Truslow & Smith 1961, p. 2.
  33. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, p. 12.
  34. ^ Truslow & Smith 1961, pp. 95–96.
  35. ^ a b Hansen 1995b, p. 143.
  36. ^ a b Hansen 1995b, p. 144.
  37. ^ a b Abrahamson & Carew 2002, pp. 30–31.
  38. ^ Abrahamson & Carew 2002, p. 41.
  39. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, pp. 24–25.
  40. ^ a b Abrahamson & Carew 2002, pp. 48–50.
  41. ^ Abrahamson & Carew 2002, pp. 61–62.
  42. ^ Abrahamson & Carew 2002, pp. 54, 71–76.
  43. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, pp. 49–50.
  44. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, p. 62.
  45. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, p. 65.
  46. ^ a b Brahmstedt 2002, p. 50.
  47. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, p. 159.
  48. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, p. 60.
  49. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, p. 69.
  50. ^ Nichols 1987, p. 269.
  51. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, pp. 80, 87, 96.
  52. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, p. 80.
  53. ^ a b Brahmstedt 2002, p. 100.
  54. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 65–66.
  55. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 150–151.
  56. ^ Abrahamson & Carew 2002, p. 73.
  57. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 154–158.
  58. ^ Nichols 1987, p. 259.
  59. ^ United States 1978, p. 8.
  60. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 166–167.
  61. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 169–170.
  62. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 521–522.
  63. ^ United States 1978, pp. 16–17.
  64. ^ Anders 1988, pp. 1–2.
  65. ^ United States 1978, p. 18.
  66. ^ a b Hansen 1995a, p. 170.
  67. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 579–580.
  68. ^ United States 1978, p. 29.
  69. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, p. 125.
  70. ^ Hansen 1995a, p. 172.
  71. ^ Hansen 1995a, p. 214.
  72. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, p. 81.
  73. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, p. 102.
  74. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, p. 149.
  75. ^ "Transmittal Letter for Summary of Armed Forces Special Weapons Project Development" (PDF). US Department of Energy. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
  76. ^ "DNA and Defense Atomic Support Agency Organizational Charts, from 1 July 1969 - 1 July 1973" (PDF). US Department of Energy. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
  77. ^ Brahmstedt 2002, pp. 149–150.
  78. ^ "Records of the Defense Nuclear Agency". National Archives. 15 August 2016. Retrieved 1 January 2021.

References edit

  • Abrahamson, James L.; Carew, Paul H. (2002). Vanguard of American Atomic Deterrence. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger. ISBN 0-275-97819-2. OCLC 49859889.
  • Anders, Roger M. (January 1988). "The Atomic Bomb and the Korean War: Gordon Dean and the Issue of Civilian Control". Military Affairs. 52 (1). Society for Military History: 1–6. doi:10.2307/1988372. ISSN 0026-3931. JSTOR 1988372.
  • Brahmstedt, Christian (2002). (PDF). DTRA history series. Washington, DC: Defense Threat Reduction Agency, US Department of Defense. OCLC 52137321. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 June 2011.
  • Groves, Leslie (1962). Now it Can be Told: The Story of the Manhattan Project. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 0-306-70738-1. OCLC 537684.
  • Hansen, Chuck (1995). Swords of Armageddon: US Nuclear Weapons Development since 1945. Vol. I: The Development of US Nuclear Weapons. Sunnyvale, California: Chukelea Publications. ISBN 978-0-9791915-1-0. OCLC 231585284.
  • Hansen, Chuck (1995). Swords of Armageddon: US Nuclear Weapons Development since 1945. Vol. V: US Nuclear Weapons Histories. Sunnyvale, California: Chukelea Publications. ISBN 978-0-9791915-5-8. OCLC 231585284.
  • Hewlett, Richard G.; Anderson, Oscar E. (1962). The New World, 1939–1946 (PDF). A History of the United States Atomic Energy Commission. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 0-520-07186-7. OCLC 637004643. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  • Hewlett, Richard G.; Duncan, Francis (1969). Atomic Shield, 1947–1952 (PDF). A History of the United States Atomic Energy Commission. University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 0-520-07187-5. OCLC 3717478. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  • Jones, Vincent (1985). (PDF). Washington, DC: United States Army Center of Military History. OCLC 10913875. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 October 2014. Retrieved 29 December 2013.
  • Lilienthal, David E.; Bacher, Robert F.; Pike, Sumner T.; Strauss, Lewis L.; Waymack, William W. (21 February 1947). "First Report of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission". Science. 105 (2721): 199–204. Bibcode:1947Sci...105..199L. doi:10.1126/science.105.2721.199. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 17737874.
  • Nichols, Kenneth David (1987). The Road to Trinity: A Personal Account of How America's Nuclear Policies Were Made. New York: William Morrow and Company. ISBN 0-688-06910-X. OCLC 15223648.
  • Rearden, Steven L. (1984). Volume I, The Formative Years, 1947–1950. History of the Office of the Secretary of Defense. Washington, DC: Office of the Secretary of Defense, Historical office. OCLC 463881489.
  • Rhodes, Richard (1995). Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-684-80400-X. OCLC 32509950.
  • Truslow, Edith C.; Smith, Ralph Carlisle (1961). Project Y: The Los Alamos Project August 1945 through November 1946 (PDF). Los Alamos, New Mexico: Los Alamos National Laboratory. Retrieved 11 August 2011.
  • United States (1978). History of the Custody and Deployment of Nuclear Weapons (U): July 1945 through September 1977. Washington, DC: The Office of the Assistant to the Secretary of Defense (Nuclear Energy). OCLC 43574850.

Further reading edit

  • United States (1997). Defense Special Weapons Agency 1947–1997: The First 50 Years of National Service (PDF). Washington, DC: Defense Technical Information Center.

armed, forces, special, weapons, project, afswp, united, states, military, agency, responsible, those, aspects, nuclear, weapons, remaining, under, military, control, after, manhattan, project, succeeded, atomic, energy, commission, january, 1947, these, respo. The Armed Forces Special Weapons Project AFSWP was a United States military agency responsible for those aspects of nuclear weapons remaining under military control after the Manhattan Project was succeeded by the Atomic Energy Commission on 1 January 1947 These responsibilities included the maintenance storage surveillance security and handling of nuclear weapons as well as supporting nuclear testing The AFSWP was a joint organization staffed by the United States Army United States Navy and United States Air Force its chief was supported by deputies from the other two services Major General Leslie R Groves the former head of the Manhattan Project was its first chief Armed Forces Special Weapons ProjectArmed Forces Special Weapons Project patchActive1 January 1947 6 May 1959Country United StatesGarrison HQWashington D C 1 CommandersNotablecommandersLeslie GrovesKenneth NicholsHerbert LoperAlvin LuedeckeInsigniaSeal The early nuclear weapons were large complex and cumbersome They were stored as components rather than complete devices and required expert knowledge to assemble The short life of their lead acid batteries and modulated neutron initiators and the heat generated by the fissile cores precluded storing them assembled The large quantity of conventional explosive in each weapon demanded special care be taken in handling Groves hand picked a team of regular Army officers who were trained in the assembly and handling of the weapons They in turn trained the enlisted soldiers and the Army teams then trained teams from the Navy and Air Force As nuclear weapons development proceeded the weapons became mass produced smaller lighter and easier to store handle and maintain They also required less effort to assemble The AFSWP gradually shifted its emphasis away from training assembly teams and became more involved in stockpile management and providing administrative technical and logistical support It supported nuclear weapons testing although after Operation Sandstone in 1948 this was increasingly in a planning and training capacity rather than a field role In 1959 the AFSWP became the Defense Atomic Support Agency DASA a field agency of the Department of Defense Contents 1 Origins 2 Organization 3 Field operations 4 Nuclear testing 5 Custody of nuclear weapons 6 Conversion to Defense Atomic Support Agency 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further readingOrigins editNuclear weapons were developed during World War II by the Manhattan Project a major research and development effort led by the United States with participation from the United Kingdom and Canada From 1942 to 1946 it was under the direction of Major General Leslie R Groves Jr of the US Army Corps of Engineers It created a network of production facilities most notably for uranium enrichment at Oak Ridge Tennessee plutonium production at Hanford Washington and weapons research and design at the Los Alamos Laboratory in Los Alamos New Mexico The nuclear weapons that were developed were used in the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945 2 After the war ended the Manhattan Project supported the nuclear weapons testing at Bikini Atoll as part of Operation Crossroads in 1946 One of Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal s aides Lewis Strauss proposed this series of tests to refute loose talk to the effect that the fleet is obsolete in the face of this new weapon 3 The nuclear weapons were handmade devices and a great deal of work remained to improve their ease of assembly safety reliability and storage before they were ready for production There were also many improvements to their performance that had been suggested or recommended but not possible under the pressure of wartime development 4 Groves s biggest concern was about people Soldiers and scientists wanted to return to their peacetime pursuits and there was a danger that wartime knowledge would be lost leaving no one who knew how to handle and maintain nuclear weapons much less how to improve the weapons and processes The military side of the Manhattan Project had relied heavily on reservists as the policy of the Corps of Engineers was to assign regular officers to field commands 5 6 The reservists were now eligible for separation To replace them Groves asked for fifty West Point graduates from the top ten percent of their classes to man bomb assembly teams at Sandia Base where the assembly staff and facilities had been moved from Los Alamos and Wendover Field in September and October 1945 He felt that only such high quality personnel would be able to work with the scientists who were currently doing the job They were also urgently required for many other jobs in the postwar Army When General Thomas T Handy turned down his request Groves raised the matter with the Chief of Staff of the Army General of the Army Dwight D Eisenhower who similarly did not approve it Groves then went over his head too and took the issue to the Secretary of War Robert P Patterson who agreed with Groves 5 7 The personnel manned the 2761st Engineer Battalion Special which became a field unit under the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project AFSWP 8 Groves hoped a new permanent agency would be created to take over the responsibilities of the wartime Manhattan Project in 1945 but passage of the Atomic Energy Act of 1946 through Congress took much longer than expected and involved considerable debate about the proper role of the military with respect to the development production and control of nuclear weapons 9 10 The act that was signed by President Harry S Truman on 1 August 1946 created a civilian agency the United States Atomic Energy Commission AEC to take over the functions and assets of the Manhattan Project but the commissioners were not appointed until October and AEC did not assume its role until 1 January 1947 11 12 In the meantime the Military Appropriation Act of 1946 gave the Manhattan Project 72 4 million for research and development and 19 million for housing and utilities at Los Alamos and Oak Ridge 13 The Atomic Energy Act provided for a Military Liaison Committee to advise the AEC on military matters 14 so Patterson appointed Lieutenant General Lewis H Brereton who became chairman along with Major General Lunsford E Oliver and Colonel John H Hinds as Army members of the Military Liaison Committee Forrestal appointed Rear Admirals Thorvald A Solberg Ralph A Ofstie and William S Parsons as its naval members 15 Organization editChiefs of the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project nbsp Major General Leslie R Groves Jr 1947 1948 nbsp Major General Kenneth D Nichols 1948 1951 nbsp Major General Herbert B Loper 1952 1953 nbsp Major General Alvin R Luedecke 1953 1957 nbsp Rear Admiral Edward N Parker 1957 1959 Patterson asked Groves to create a new agency to take over responsibility for the aspects of nuclear weapons that still remained under the military It was to be jointly staffed by the Army and Navy 16 and on 29 January 1947 Patterson and Forrestal issued a memorandum that formally established the AFSWP Its chief would be appointed jointly by the Chief of Staff of the Army and the Chief of Naval Operations along with a deputy from the opposite service Both would be members of the Military Liaison Committee because the Atomic Energy Act stipulated that the Military Liaison Committee was the sole military body that dealt with the AEC In February 1947 Eisenhower and Chief of Naval Operations Fleet Admiral Chester W Nimitz appointed Groves as head of the AFSWP with Parsons as his deputy 17 Accordingly Groves was appointed to the Military Liaison Committee although the newly appointed AEC chairman David E Lilienthal told Patterson he did not think it was a good idea because Groves had run the Manhattan Project by himself for four years and was not used to having to compromise 18 Groves and Parsons drafted a proposed organization and charter for the AFSWP which they sent to Eisenhower and Nimitz for approval in July 1947 19 Groves did not get everything he asked for he wanted a status equal to that of a deputy to the Chief of Staff and Chief of Naval Operations but the most Eisenhower and Nimitz would allow was a status equal to that of the heads of a technical service although Groves still reported directly to them They also characterized his role as a staff post rather than a command although Groves was already exercising the functions of a commander at Sandia After the National Security Act of 1947 created an independent Air Force Groves reported to the Chief of Staff of the Air Force as well and was given a second deputy chief from the Air Force Major General Roscoe C Wilson who had worked on the Silverplate project during the war 20 Groves initially established the headquarters of the AFSWP in the old offices of the Manhattan Project on the fifth floor of the New War Department Building in Washington DC but on 15 April 1947 it moved to the Pentagon 21 As AFSWP headquarters expanded it filled up its original accommodation and began using office space in other parts of the building which was not satisfactory from a security point of view In August 1949 it moved to 18 000 square feet 1 700 m2 of new offices inside the Pentagon This included space for a soundproof conference room a darkroom and vaults where its records and films were stored 22 nbsp A nuclear capable AJ Savage launching from the aircraft carrier USS Midway in 1955 The 2761st Engineer Battalion Special at Sandia was commanded by Colonel Gilbert M Dorland and consisted of a headquarters company a security company Company A a bomb assembly company Company B and a radiological monitoring company Company C although Company C was never fully formed For training purposes Company B was initially divided into command electrical mechanical and nuclear groups but the intention was to create three integrated 36 man bomb assembly teams 23 To free the bomb assembly teams from having to train newcomers a Technical Training Group TTG was created under Lieutenant Colonel John A Ord a Signal Corps officer with a Doctor of Science degree from Carnegie Institute of Technology who had directed the training of thousands of radar technicians at the Southern Signal Corps School during the war 24 The battalion was redesignated the 38th Engineer Battalion Special in April 1947 and in July it became part of the newly created AFSWP Field Command under the command of Brigadier General Robert M Montague The TTG was soon reporting directly to Montague as well 25 The first bomb assembly team was formed in August 1947 followed by a second in December and a third in March 1948 Experience with assembling the bombs convincingly demonstrated the requirement in Sandia if not in Washington for a much larger unit Groves reluctantly approved a 109 man special weapons unit and Montague converted the three lettered companies of the 38th Engineer Battalion into special weapons units 26 In 1948 they began training a Navy special weapons unit as the Navy foresaw delivery of nuclear weapons with its new North American AJ Savage bombers from its Midway class aircraft carriers This unit became the 471st Naval Special Weapons Unit on its certification in August 1948 27 Two Air Force units were created in September and December 1948 which became the 502d and 508th Aviation Squadrons An additional Army special weapons unit was created in May 1948 and in December the 38th Engineer Battalion Special became the 8460th Special Weapons Group with all seven special weapons units under its command The four Army units were then renamed the 111th 122d 133d and 144th Special Weapons Units 28 29 During the late 1940s the Air Force gradually became the major user of nuclear weapons and by the end of 1949 it had twelve assembly units and another three in training The Army had only four and the Navy three one for each of the Midway class aircraft carriers 22 In March 1948 the Chief of Staff of the Air Force General Carl Spaatz proposed that the Air Force take over the AFSWP on the grounds that the Key West Agreement had given it responsibility for strategic bombing This would have simplified command of the AFSWP as it would have been answerable to only one service chief instead of three The Army cautiously supported the proposal but the Navy was strongly opposed fearing that the Air Force s confusion of atomic bombing and strategic bombing would impede or even prevent the Navy from having access to nuclear weapons which it felt was necessary to accomplish its primary maritime mission Another series of talks was held at the Naval War College in Newport Rhode Island from 20 to 22 August 1948 which resulted in the Newport Agreement under which the Navy agreed to drop its opposition to the AFSWP being placed under the Air Force temporarily in return for the Air Force recognizing the Navy s requirement for nuclear weapons 30 When the Air Force moved to make the temporary arrangement permanent in September 1948 the Army and Navy objected and the Military Liaison Committee directed that the AFSWP should remain a tri service organization answerable to the three service chiefs 31 Field operations editGroves and the wartime director of the Los Alamos Laboratory Robert Oppenheimer had begun the move of ordnance functions to Sandia in late 1945 32 The laboratory s ordnance engineering division known as Z Division after its first director Jerrold R Zacharias 33 was split between Los Alamos and Sandia Between March and July 1946 Z Division relocated to Sandia except for its mechanical engineering Z 4 section which followed in February 1947 34 Z Division worked on improving the mechanical and electrical reliability of the Mark 3 Fat Man bomb but this work was disrupted by the Crossroads tests 35 nbsp Mark 3 Fat Man external components AN 219 contact fuze four Archie radar antennaPlate with batteries to detonate charge surrounding nuclear components X Unit a firing set placed near the chargeHinge fixing the two ellipsoidal parts of the bombPhysics package see details below Plate with instruments radars baroswitches and timers Barotube collectorCalifornia Parachute tail assembly 0 20 inch 5 1 mm aluminium sheet nbsp Mark 3 Fat Man internal components The 1947 nuclear stockpile consisted of nuclear weapons components not weapons Meeting with Truman in April 1947 Lilienthal informed him that not only were there no assembled weapons there were only a few sets of components and no fully trained bomb assembly teams 35 By August 1946 Sandia Base held electrical and mechanical assemblies for about 50 Fat Man bombs but there were only nine fissile cores in storage The stockpile of cores grew to 13 in 1947 and 53 in 1948 36 Oppenheimer noted that the bombs were still largely the haywire contraptions that were slapped together in 1945 36 With a half life of only 140 days the polonium beryllium modulated neutron initiators had to be periodically removed from the plutonium pits tested and if necessary replaced The cores had to be stored separately from the high explosive blocks that would surround them in the bomb because they generated enough heat to melt the plastic explosive over time 37 The heat could also affect the cores themselves provoking a phase transition to a different allotrope of plutonium They had to be periodically inspected by technicians wearing gloves and respirators 38 The bomb s electrical power for its radar fuzes and detonators came from a pair of lead acid batteries similar to those used in cars These had to be charged 24 hours before use After a few days the bomb had to be partially disassembled so they could be re charged and only three days after that replaced 37 The 38th Engineer Battalion s electrical group studied the batteries the electrical firing systems and the radar fuzes which detonated the bomb at the required altitude The mechanical group dealt with the exploding bridgewire detonators and the explosive lenses The nuclear group moved to Los Alamos to study the cores and initiators As part of their training they attended lectures by Edward Teller Hans Bethe Lise Meitner and Enrico Fermi 39 The electrical and mechanical groups at Sandia although not the nuclear group completed their training around the end of October 1946 and spent the next month devising the best methods of assembling a Fat Man drawing up detailed checklists so later bomb assembly teams could be trained They also drew up a proposed table of organization and equipment for an assembly team It took two weeks for them to assemble their first bomb in December 1946 40 Most of 1947 was spent planning for a field exercise in which a bomb team would deploy to a base and assemble weapons under field conditions 40 A 20 foot 6 1 m by 100 foot 30 m portable building was acquired and outfitted as field workshops that could be loaded onto a C 54 or C 97 transport aircraft 41 In November 1947 the 38th Engineer Battalion carried out its first major field exercise Operation Ajax It drew bomb components except for fissile cores from the AEC and deployed by air to Wendover Field Utah This was the home of the 509th Bombardment Group which was the only unit operating Silverplate B 29 bombers and therefore the only B 29 group capable of delivering nuclear weapons To simulate operational conditions they took a roundabout route via New England and Seattle 42 Over the following ten days they assembled bombs and flew training missions with them including a live drop at the Naval Ordnance Test Station at Inyokern California 43 This was followed by other exercises In one exercise in March 1948 the base personnel successfully fought off an attack by 250 paratroopers from Fort Hood Texas 44 In another exercise in November 1948 the 471st Special Weapons Unit flew to Norfolk Virginia and practiced bomb assembly on board the Midway class aircraft carriers 45 Nuclear testing edit nbsp An M65 Atomic Cannon firing during Operation Upshot Knothole Grable in May 1953 In addition to assembly of weapons the AFSWP supported nuclear weapons testing For Operation Sandstone in 1948 Groves ordered Dorland to fill every possible job with his men 46 He did this so well that Strauss now an AEC commissioner became disturbed at the number of AFSWP personnel who were participating and feared that the Soviet Union might launch a sneak attack on Enewetak to wipe out the nation s ability to assemble nuclear weapons 47 The successful testing in Operation Sandstone was a major leap forward 48 The new Mark 4 nuclear bomb the AEC began delivering in 1949 was a production design that was much easier to assemble and maintain and enabled a bomb assembly team to be reduced to just 46 men 49 Kenneth D Nichols the wartime commander of the Manhattan District now recommended that we should be thinking in terms of thousands of weapons rather than hundreds 50 After Operation Sandstone only relatively small numbers of AFSWP personnel were involved in nuclear testing The AFSWP was heavily involved in the planning preparation and coordination of tests but it had limited participation in the tests themselves where the bomb assembly function was usually undertaken by scientists 51 During Operation Buster Jangle AFSWP personnel showed films and gave lectures to 2 800 military personnel who had been selected to witness the test explaining what would occur and the procedures to be followed 52 This was expanded to cater for the more than 7 000 personnel who were involved in Operation Upshot Knothole in 1953 53 Custody of nuclear weapons editWhen the AEC was formed in 1947 it acquired custody of nuclear components from the Manhattan Project on the understanding that the matter would be reviewed 54 In November 1947 the Military Liaison Committee requested that custody of the nuclear stockpile be transferred to the military but Lilienthal believed AEC custody of the stockpile was an important aspect of civilian control of nuclear weapons He was disturbed that the AFSWP had not informed the AEC in advance of Operation Ajax 55 For his part Groves suspected the AEC was not keeping bomb components in the condition in which the military wanted to receive them and Operation Ajax only confirmed his suspicions 56 Reviewing the exercise Montague reported that under the existing law with the AEC charged with procurement and custody of all atomic weapons there was no adequate logistic support for the weapon He recommended a larger role for the military a recommendation with which Groves concurred but was powerless to implement 46 nbsp Armed Forces Special Weapons Project certificate for attending Weapons Orientation Advanced Class No 132 in April 1958 Groves retired at the end of February 1948 and Nichols was designated as his successor with the rank of major general At the same time Forrestal now the Secretary of Defense reorganized the Military Liaison Committee A civilian Donald F Carpenter replaced Brereton as chairman and there were now two members from each of the three services 57 On 11 March Truman summoned Lilienthal Nichols and Secretary of the Army Kenneth C Royall to his office and told them he expected the AFSWP and the AEC to cooperate 58 Nichols s position was the same as Groves s and Montague s that nuclear weapons needed to be available in an emergency and the men who had to use them in battle needed to have experience with their maintenance storage and handling 59 Norris Bradbury who had replaced Oppenheimer as the director of the Los Alamos Laboratory in December 1945 argued that rapid transfer could be accomplished by improved procedures and that the other difficulties could best be resolved by further development mostly from the scientists 60 Forrestal and Carpenter took the matter up with Truman who issued his decision on 21 July 1948 I regard the continued control of all aspects of the atomic energy program including research development and the custody of atomic weapons as the proper functions of the civil authorities 61 With the outbreak of the Korean War in 1950 air transport resources were put under great strain and it was decided to reduce the requirement for it by pre positioning non nuclear components at locations in Europe and the Pacific That way in an emergency only the nuclear components would have to be flown out 62 In June Truman ordered the transfer of 90 sets of non nuclear Mark 4 components to the AFSWP for training purposes In December he authorized the carriage of non nuclear components on board the Midway class carriers 63 In April 1951 the AEC released nine Mark 4 weapons to the Air Force in case the Soviet Union intervened in the war in Korea 64 These were flown to Guam where they were maintained by the Air Force special weapons unit there 65 Thus at the end of 1951 there were 429 weapons in AEC custody and nine held by the Department of Defense 66 In the light of this a new AEC AFSWP agreement on Responsibilities of Stockpile Operations was drawn up in August 1951 but in December the Joint Chiefs of Staff began a new push for weapons to be permanently assigned to the armed forces so as to ensure a greater degree of flexibility and a higher state of readiness 67 On 20 June 1953 Eisenhower now as president approved the deployment of nuclear components in equal numbers to non nuclear components 68 and the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 amended the sections of the old act that gave exclusive custody to the AEC 69 By 1959 the nuclear stockpile had grown to 12 305 weapons of which 3 968 were in AEC custody and the remaining 8 337 were held by the Department of Defense 66 The total yield of the stockpile was now in excess of 19 000 megatons of TNT 79 000 PJ 70 As Bradbury had promised with research and development nuclear weapons became smaller simpler and lighter They also became easier to store assemble test and maintain 71 Thus while under Eisenhower s New Look policy the Armed Forces became more heavily involved with aspects of nuclear weapons than ever the role of the AFSWP diminished It began moving away from training assembly teams which were increasingly not required as its primary mission and became more involved in the management of the rapidly growing nuclear stockpile and providing technical advice and logistical support 72 In 1953 the AFSWP Field Command had 10 250 personnel 73 On 16 October 1953 the Secretary of Defense charged the AFSWP with responsibility for a centralized system of reporting and accounting to ensure that the current status and location of all nuclear weapons will be known at all times The Atomic Warfare Status Center was created within the AFSWP to handle this mission 53 Conversion to Defense Atomic Support Agency editIn April 1958 Eisenhower asked Congress for legislation to overhaul the Department of Defense Over a decade had passed since the legislation which had established it and he was concerned about the degree of inter service rivalry duplication and mismanagement that was evident in many programs In ballistic missile development the Soviet Sputnik program had demonstrated that country s technological lead over the United States The Army and Air Force had rival programs PGM 19 Jupiter and PGM 17 Thor respectively and the additional cost to the taxpayers of developing two systems instead of one was estimated at 500 million 74 The Defense Reorganization Act of 1958 was signed by Eisenhower in August 1958 It increased the authority of the Secretary of Defense who was authorized to establish such defense agencies as he thought necessary to provide for more effective efficient and economical administration and operation The first field agency established under the act was the Defense Atomic Support Agency DASA 75 The new agency reported to the Secretary of Defense through the Joint Chiefs of Staff and was given responsibility for the supervision of all Department of Defense nuclear sites Otherwise Top Secret military expeditionary installations such as Sandia Base Manzano Base Bossier Base Clarksville Base Killeen Base and Lake Mead Base to name a few its role and organization remained much the same and its commander Rear Admiral Edward N Parker remained as its first director 76 Eisenhower s proposed nuclear testing moratorium ultimately fundamentally changed DASA s mission as nuclear testing was phased out Cold War tensions eased and nuclear disarmament became a prospect 77 78 Notes edit Borg D C May 1954 Report AFSWP 507 Radioactive Fallout Hazards from Surface Bursts of Very High Yield Nuclear Weapons PDF U S Armed Forces Special Weapons Project Retrieved 10 December 2022 Brahmstedt 2002 pp 2 8 Rhodes 1995 pp 228 229 Rhodes 1995 pp 212 213 a b Groves 1962 pp 373 376 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 75 76 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 625 Brahmstedt 2002 p 2 Groves 1962 pp 389 391 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 628 630 Groves 1962 pp 394 395 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 620 622 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 635 Jones 1985 p 598 Lilienthal et al 1947 p 199 Groves 1962 pp 398 399 Brahmstedt 2002 pp 29 30 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 6 7 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 p 131 Brahmstedt 2002 pp 36 37 Brahmstedt 2002 p 30 a b Brahmstedt 2002 p 71 Brahmstedt 2002 pp 21 24 Abrahamson amp Carew 2002 pp 79 80 Abrahamson amp Carew 2002 pp 67 68 Abrahamson amp Carew 2002 pp 67 69 Abrahamson amp Carew 2002 p 114 Abrahamson amp Carew 2002 p 153 8460th Special Weapons Group The Army Historical Foundation Archived from the original on 29 March 2012 Retrieved 17 August 2011 Rearden 1984 pp 398 401 Rearden 1984 p 437 Truslow amp Smith 1961 p 2 Brahmstedt 2002 p 12 Truslow amp Smith 1961 pp 95 96 a b Hansen 1995b p 143 a b Hansen 1995b p 144 a b Abrahamson amp Carew 2002 pp 30 31 Abrahamson amp Carew 2002 p 41 Brahmstedt 2002 pp 24 25 a b Abrahamson amp Carew 2002 pp 48 50 Abrahamson amp Carew 2002 pp 61 62 Abrahamson amp Carew 2002 pp 54 71 76 Brahmstedt 2002 pp 49 50 Brahmstedt 2002 p 62 Brahmstedt 2002 p 65 a b Brahmstedt 2002 p 50 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 p 159 Brahmstedt 2002 p 60 Brahmstedt 2002 p 69 Nichols 1987 p 269 Brahmstedt 2002 pp 80 87 96 Brahmstedt 2002 p 80 a b Brahmstedt 2002 p 100 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 65 66 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 150 151 Abrahamson amp Carew 2002 p 73 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 154 158 Nichols 1987 p 259 United States 1978 p 8 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 166 167 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 169 170 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 521 522 United States 1978 pp 16 17 Anders 1988 pp 1 2 United States 1978 p 18 a b Hansen 1995a p 170 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 579 580 United States 1978 p 29 Brahmstedt 2002 p 125 Hansen 1995a p 172 Hansen 1995a p 214 Brahmstedt 2002 p 81 Brahmstedt 2002 p 102 Brahmstedt 2002 p 149 Transmittal Letter for Summary of Armed Forces Special Weapons Project Development PDF US Department of Energy Retrieved 21 April 2021 DNA and Defense Atomic Support Agency Organizational Charts from 1 July 1969 1 July 1973 PDF US Department of Energy Retrieved 21 April 2021 Brahmstedt 2002 pp 149 150 Records of the Defense Nuclear Agency National Archives 15 August 2016 Retrieved 1 January 2021 References editAbrahamson James L Carew Paul H 2002 Vanguard of American Atomic Deterrence Westport Connecticut Praeger ISBN 0 275 97819 2 OCLC 49859889 Anders Roger M January 1988 The Atomic Bomb and the Korean War Gordon Dean and the Issue of Civilian Control Military Affairs 52 1 Society for Military History 1 6 doi 10 2307 1988372 ISSN 0026 3931 JSTOR 1988372 Brahmstedt Christian 2002 Defense s Nuclear Agency 1947 1997 PDF DTRA history series Washington DC Defense Threat Reduction Agency US Department of Defense OCLC 52137321 Archived from the original PDF on 11 June 2011 Groves Leslie 1962 Now it Can be Told The Story of the Manhattan Project New York Harper amp Row ISBN 0 306 70738 1 OCLC 537684 Hansen Chuck 1995 Swords of Armageddon US Nuclear Weapons Development since 1945 Vol I The Development of US Nuclear Weapons Sunnyvale California Chukelea Publications ISBN 978 0 9791915 1 0 OCLC 231585284 Hansen Chuck 1995 Swords of Armageddon US Nuclear Weapons Development since 1945 Vol V US Nuclear Weapons Histories Sunnyvale California Chukelea Publications ISBN 978 0 9791915 5 8 OCLC 231585284 Hewlett Richard G Anderson Oscar E 1962 The New World 1939 1946 PDF A History of the United States Atomic Energy Commission University Park Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 0 520 07186 7 OCLC 637004643 Retrieved 26 March 2013 Hewlett Richard G Duncan Francis 1969 Atomic Shield 1947 1952 PDF A History of the United States Atomic Energy Commission University Park Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 0 520 07187 5 OCLC 3717478 Retrieved 7 March 2015 Jones Vincent 1985 Manhattan The Army and the Atomic Bomb PDF Washington DC United States Army Center of Military History OCLC 10913875 Archived from the original PDF on 7 October 2014 Retrieved 29 December 2013 Lilienthal David E Bacher Robert F Pike Sumner T Strauss Lewis L Waymack William W 21 February 1947 First Report of the U S Atomic Energy Commission Science 105 2721 199 204 Bibcode 1947Sci 105 199L doi 10 1126 science 105 2721 199 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 17737874 Nichols Kenneth David 1987 The Road to Trinity A Personal Account of How America s Nuclear Policies Were Made New York William Morrow and Company ISBN 0 688 06910 X OCLC 15223648 Rearden Steven L 1984 Volume I The Formative Years 1947 1950 History of the Office of the Secretary of Defense Washington DC Office of the Secretary of Defense Historical office OCLC 463881489 Rhodes Richard 1995 Dark Sun The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 684 80400 X OCLC 32509950 Truslow Edith C Smith Ralph Carlisle 1961 Project Y The Los Alamos Project August 1945 through November 1946 PDF Los Alamos New Mexico Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 11 August 2011 United States 1978 History of the Custody and Deployment of Nuclear Weapons U July 1945 through September 1977 Washington DC The Office of the Assistant to the Secretary of Defense Nuclear Energy OCLC 43574850 Further reading editUnited States 1997 Defense Special Weapons Agency 1947 1997 The First 50 Years of National Service PDF Washington DC Defense Technical Information Center Portal nbsp Nuclear technology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Armed Forces Special Weapons Project amp oldid 1204785121, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.