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Comments from Roger T. Goss,
Assigned Walker AFB: Sep 1962 - Jun 64 |
Comments
Air Police
Training School at Lackland AFB, TX was full because so
many Security Guards were needed for ICBM sites being
brought online in 1962; during this time there were no
electronic surveillance systems available beyond TV
technology. My entire Basic Training Flight #962, except
for 3, were assigned to Air Police/Combat Defense
Squadrons.
I was assigned to the 6th Combat Defense Squadron at
Walker AFB, Roswell, NM from 9/1962 to 6/1964. Walker
was home of the 6th Strategic Aerospace Wing with about
50 B-52E's. The 6th SAW included the 6th Air Refueling
Squadron (now located at McDill AFB, FL, just a few
miles from me) with about 30 KC-135's and 579th
Strategic Missile Squadron with 12 Atlas F ICBM sites.
Walker was the largest SAC base.
I was a
rookie Air Policemen taking "Tough Tiger" OJT classes to
prepare for security duty; one morning in late October
the klaxons sounded and all hell broke loose! It was the
day President John F. Kennedy blockaded Cuba. You could
see the faces of “old” veterans who were scared to death
that nuclear war was at hand; from the third floor of
our barracks you could see alert B-52 bombers exiting
Quickstrike and sitting at the end of the runway with
engines idling! I was 18 and didn’t really understand
the seriousness of DEFCON 2, that very long day in
October 1962!
Within 24 hours I'd filled out a DD Form 398 to get an
interim Secret Security Clearance, been examined by a
psychiatrist and given a SAC Security Badge with the
number "13" punched out. After lunch, we were put on a 1
1/2 ton truck and hauled out to the rifle range to
qualify with Cal .30 M2 Carbine (with full automatic
selector lever), Cal .38 S&W Police Special Revolver,
Cal .45 Pistol, M1911A1 and
Cal .30 Browning Automatic Rifle; including night fire
with tracers!
We were returned to the barracks after midnight and told
to report to the Mess hall for lunch; we would be picked
up at 1 p.m. for transport to the Armory for briefing on
weapons issue and clearing process. A Flight Sergeant
explained how Guardmount was conducted, posting done and
important SAC/DoD Two-Man Policies involving Nuclear
Weapons we needed to understand completely. We were
released in time for supper meal and told to report to
the Armory for midnight Guardmount.
After Guardmount, I was posted as a Boundary/Tail Guard
walking behind several B-52’s in the B-52 parking area
with the curved engine exhaust blast shields; the
bombers had been uploaded and on full alert "cocked"
status; I was not relieved for over 18 hours! Finally a
sharp Staff Sergeant realized I’d been on duty too long
and relieved me. The duty officer felt bad and told me
take 12 hours off and report for 0700 Guardmount.
Next day, I was assigned to guard the transit barracks
turned into “Alert” barracks for Tanker Air Crews. All
the KC-135 tankers were on alert in their parking area.
Wives of tanker crew members came and sweet talked us
and tried to bribe us with food to let them see their
spouses.
After a few days, older troops realized how good we had
it and we were moved "up" to flight line duty. Since I
was a big guy, I was assigned to south end of the main
jet runway guarding Ground Control Approach equipment,
carrying a Browning Automatic Rifle w/bipod (27 pounds).
I learned to drink my coffee black there, as the
unpaved, bumpy perimeter road made everything fall off
the back of the 1-1/2 ton coffee/chow truck, except the
coffee jug and a tube of paper cups strapped to the
stake sides.
We were at DEFCON2 and all the Mk-36/39? Hydrogen Bombs
were being pulled from MMS and uploaded, so within days
ALL the B-52's in the B-52 parking area were on alert
status, not just those in "QuickStrike". AGM-28 Hound
Dog Missiles were attached to many B-52’s and uploaded
with their W-28 nuclear warheads. The 37th MMS and our
SAT Teams were very busy 24/7 with weapons convoys for
many days and eventually MMS was virtually empty!
After some time, I worked "up" to guarding KC-135
tankers on Alert. Eventually, I was assigned as an
Access Controller or "Point" Guard for alert B-52's in “QuickStrike”.
We were on duty,12 on, 12 off for 16 days, then 8 on, 16
off for a total of 62 days.
During the Cuban Missile Crisis, the US Strategic Air
Command was placed on DEFCON 2 for the first time in
history, while the rest of US military commands (with
the exception of the US Air Forces in Europe) went on
DEFCON 3. On 22 October 1962 SAC responded by
establishing Defense Condition Three (DEFCON III), and
ordered B-52s on airborne alert. Tension grew and the
next day SAC declared DEFCON II, a heightened state of
alert, ready to strike targets within the Soviet Union.
On 15 November 1965 the day Strategic Air Command (SAC)
postured down to defense condition DEFCON III. ( from:
http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/usa/c3i/defcon.htm
)
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I have
several
"war" stories I can share. |
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My first memory happened early in the Cuban Crisis. An
old 2 1/2 ton truck pulling a Nuclear Weapons trailer
broke down and I was posted to guard it while 37th MMS
folks went to get another truck. I started reading my
guard orders about the "Two-Man" concept and suddenly
realized I'm just ONE, standing next to a live Mk-36/9
Hydrogen Bomb and I have a real gun with real bullets!
So when the NCO on patrol stops by I asked about this;
he says: "son during the time it takes us to have this
conversation we could go to war and in wartime rules may
be bypassed to accomplish the mission. I had to take a
risk and trust you to do the right thing; we have no
other guards, so I am the other guard and I have been
watching as i drive about my post." So, I ate my “sack”
lunch alone leaning up against the weapons trailer. (I
thought is was “SAC” till I learned in the south the
word sack, like poke, is commonly used instead of paper
bag, a term I normally used)
---------------
I saw the large fireball from Atlas ICBM missile site #1
blowing up, while on duty as an Access Control Guard in
Quickstrike; it looked like a sunrise! Walker’s 579th
SMS lost 3 sites that way. Official AF investigations
said it was accidental during a PLX; but anyone who
worked on missile site duty knew the root cause was
common knowledge; head gaskets from diesel power engine
generators leaking oil down onto LOX tank connections; a
site I worked had rags stuffed up against engines to
absorb oil, but all the levels were like fire escape
grate type flooring.
---------------
One morning I was assigned to a 4-man Sabotage Alert
Team inside “QuickStrike” when SAC initiated an
Operation Readiness Inspection at about 3 a.m. by
landing a KC-135 without flight plans and taxing right
up the security cable across the QuickStrike taxi way.
Our Central Security Control Desk Sergeant initiated a
“7High” situation alert over our radio network and
notified the Wing Command Post, the Wing Command Post
transmitted this to a SAC Command Post duty officer in
Omaha, NE before the plane touched down! My Sabotage
Alert Team (“Strike Team” to us) blocked the QuickStrike
taxi way. The two Boundary Guards joined us along with 2
Sentry Dogs and their Handlers; we spread out and stood
our ground across the cable, weapons loaded and at the
ready to shoot out the tires and pilots.
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