Posted on 12/12/2003 9:44:15 AM PST by chance33_98
NNSA Dismantles Last Nuclear Artillery Shell; Battefield Weapons Were Retired by President George H.W. Bush
12/12/03 11:40:00 AM
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To: National Desk
Contact: Bryan Wilkes of U.S. Department of Energy, 202-586-7371
WASHINGTON, Dec. 12 /U.S. Newswire/ -- The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) has dismantled the last nuclear artillery shell in the U.S. nuclear stockpile, eliminating the vestiges of a type of battlefield nuclear weapons that comprised a key element of America's Cold War arsenal.
Employees at NNSA's Pantex facility in Amarillo, Texas, dismantled the last W-79 warhead earlier this year. Pantex officials will hold a ceremony at the plant today to mark the achievement.
"This administration is committed to reducing the threat of nuclear weapons worldwide," said U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham. "We have completed dismantlement of another class of nuclear weapons -- weapons that were a very important deterrent during the Cold War."
"Eliminating the last nuclear artillery warhead marks the end of an era in U.S. defense policy that included ground-launched battlefield nuclear weapons," said NNSA Administrator Linton Brooks. "This completes a historic step begun by the United States in 1991. I congratulate our employees at Pantex who were involved in this piece of history."
The United States introduced artillery-fired atomic weapons in its defense arsenal in 1957. Six types were deployed over the years. The W-79 was designed to be fired from an 8-inch artillery piece. These weapons strengthened deterrence by improving the capability of NATO battlefield commanders to stop a Warsaw Pact armored thrust into Western Europe.
In 1991, President George H.W. Bush announced his decision to retire artillery-fired atomic weapons in the U.S. stockpile. The President made his decision unilaterally, apart from any arms control agreement with the former Soviet Union. The weapons, including all W-79s, were returned to NNSA for dismantlement at the Pantex plant.
The Pantex Plant plays a critical role in the surveillance of the U.S. nuclear deterrent. Each year approximately 100 weapons from the active stockpile are sent to Pantex where they undergo a comprehensive diagnostic exam. While most of the weapons are reassembled and returned to the military services, the remaining weapons are subject to destructive evaluation, providing us additional insights into the health of the stockpile. Pantex also refurbishes nuclear weapons in the current stockpile as part of the Stockpile Life Extension Program. The dismantlement of the W79 and other weapons took place over the years as scheduling permitted.
------
NNSA is a semi-autonomous agency of the Department of Energy. It enhances U.S. national security through the military application of nuclear energy, maintains the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile, promotes international nuclear nonproliferation and safety, reduces global danger from weapons of mass destruction, provides the U.S. Navy with safe and effective nuclear propulsion, and oversees its national laboratories to maintain U.S. leadership in science and technology.
At that time, the American Army was trained to retreat. Fire your artillery and retreat 10 km. Your one and only mission was to delay the Russian Army for three days!
By the third day, we expected Frankfurt to be captured by the Russians.
Once Frankfurt was occupied by the Russian, we were authorized to use tactical nuclear weapons.
If you were involved in the incident involving one of 56 FA Command Pershing missile sites around Heilbronn, Germany, you might remember an E-5 Sergeant [first name *Dave*] who was decorated for his actions in that incident. At the time 3rd Infantry Division maintained an infantry reaction unit as a response force for the Pershing sites, said to have meen the last motorized infantry unit [mounted in trucks instead of tracked vehicles/*mechanized*] organized as per the old WWII infantry OOB/TO&E, better suited for the number of infantrymen who could fit in the back of a duece-and-a-half, though current M35A2 trucks were used instead of WWII-era Studebaker *Eager Beavers....* I believe that M60 machinegun-mounted M151 gun jeeps were also used in those pre-HUMVEE days, as well- nice and breezy during a German winter....
If you were involved in an action other than the one near Heilbronn, then there were multiple incidents, probasbly coordinated. The warheads in the Heilbronn *Empty Quiver* attempt were B61-11 warheads for the 4/9 Field Artillery's Pershing 1A missiles, intended for counterresponse at hardened military and political sites inside the Soviet Union- headquarters command centers and governmental *crisis relocation* sites.
*Important in our effort to prevent the Russians from invading West Germany?* Oh yeah, just a little bit....
Pershing 1A carried the W-50, and didn't have the range to reach the Moscow relocation arc. The B61-11 didn't enter service until the 1990s. Pershing II carried a W-85 warhead in a terminally-guided maneuvering reentry vehicle (MaRV) and was aimed at the Moscow target set, but didn't field until the mid-1980s.
I wonder how close it would have had to have been to the NukeDet for the M113s aluminum armor to melt. Neither does the thought of the fuel tank of the early gasoline-engined M113s, a large plastic bag behind the driver hung between the exterior armor and interior crew compartment walls, seem a real desirable feature for such activities. Range was supposed to be 2.5 miles, barring headwings affecting the 155mm projectile, which could cut the maximum range by almost half.
Incidentally, the little 37mm spotting rifle hung under the muzzle of the M29 Davy Crockett launcher was great fun to shoot....
Just so. But Moscow wasn't the only Warsaw Pact headquarters capital that was targeted. And decapitation of those leaders necessary to give an order to wind things down was not considered to be the smartest first move to be made, assuming less than an all-out throw the kitchen sink at 'em exchange.
-archy-/-
But it was the only one that counted--the WP armies were completely subordinate to Moscow in a shooting war, and their cee-cubed didn't go through their national capitols.
I had a web site that showed M110A2 still being deployed in DivArty in 2001. Things change pretty quick.
But it was the only one that counted--the WP armies were completely subordinate to Moscow in a shooting war, and their cee-cubed didn't go through their national capitols.
Among other unclas references, see General Sir John *Shan* Hackett's account of a fictional 1985 Third World War, published in 1978.
And if the C4 didn't go through their national capitols, their raillines generally did. Two birds could be had with one thermonuclear stone there.
-archy-/-
I have.
See Viktor Suvorov (pseudonym of Vladimir Rezun, the only GRU agent to defect to the West and live to tell the tale), Inside the Soviet Army.
Correct. The 8-inch was AKA the 203mm. The same vehicle mount and recoil system was used for the long barrelled 175mm gun, which the cannon cockers sometimes called *the sniper's rifle. And there was some shared technology between the Army and Naval 8-inch projectiles, too.
Haven't seen one anywhere, and I'd have loved to have seen one.
The highest we have currently is a 155mm.
But the biggest in the world IIRC is in South Africa.
Don't remember the size of the round offhand though.
They played with a 245mm gun-mortar, IIRC- not sure if it was rifled or smoothbore. Wisely, they pushed the development of the SRC G5 long-range 155mm artillery instead. Of course the *Superguns* designed by SRC founder Gerald Bull for the Iraqis were 350 and 1,000-MM smoothbore tubes, though happily not mobile. I wouldn't bet on the Soviets not having something of similar size, though; during WWII they had at least one field piece [305mm BR-18] that used the ammunition of their 305mm TM-2-12 and TM-3-12 railroad guns...which were NOT their largest mobile artillery; the 500mm TG-1 probably holds that record.
And no, there aren't any 8 inch howies around anymore.
Well the Israelis still use 'em, to be sure. As do a few of our NATO allies. But we've gone to the MLRS rocket launcher instead. And the Israelis are developing their lightweight 20-ton RASCAL 155 SP gun with 45-cal barrel on a modified Merkava tank chassis, which should outrange the 8-inch...unless the SRC developments for the 155 are applied to the 203mm guns and projos too.
Muzzle-loading cannon bump.
This was back when Brezhnev, Chernyenko and Andropov were taking turns catching cold and dropping out of sight and then being announced to have died. We got lucky things turned out as well as they did. Could have been real bad.
BTW, EOD, it is Wiesbaden and the Baader-Meinhof/Red Army Faction made its bombing attempt on the Wiesbaden Community Center, about a block away from the Kurhaus/Casino in downtown Wiesbaden. This was about 1979, IIRC.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.