Air University Review, March-April 1967
The United States Air Force spends more money yearly than any other government department or agency: some $20 billion to approximately $5 billion spent by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. In keeping with such great fiscal responsibility, the Air Force is both cost-conscious and economy-minded. Thus when faced with the massive disposal job resulting from obsolescence of early intercontinental ballistic missiles, it did a great deal of head scratching. So far, the Air Force has apparently scratched its head in the right places, for the money we are saving from salvage and sales is quite gratifying.
Our problem was (and still is): How do we dispose of all those expensive Atlas and Titan launch facilities now that they are surplus to the strategic inventory?
The phase-down of Atlas E and F and Titan I created one of the largest
disposal tasks the Air Force has undertaken since World War II. It is also the
first disposal job of its kind that we have faced. We had 149 operational Atlas
and Titan launchers, located on 113 separate pieces of real estate scattered
from the East Coast to the West Coast—specifically from Plattsburg AFB,
We had fewer complexes than missiles because the Titan I housed three missile silos per complex. Including all the stored operational test missiles, those still on manufacturers’ production lines, and the spare missiles owned by the operational units, a total of 216 missiles became surplus. The overall investment in the three weapon system programs, including R&D, had been $5.5 billion.
Even if we had had to spend that sum of money with no thought of financial recoupment, we would still have had to do it: national security demanded massive deterrence, and these first-generation missiles filled the void known as the “missile gap.” So it is an extra dividend that from our disposal program already nearly $1 billion worth of equipment (based on original cost) is scheduled for scientific, educational, and service reuse as well as reuse by other government agencies.
First it was decided that this total of 216 surplus missiles should be stored for use as suborbital boosters in subsequent R&D projects. For the next five years a total of 133 suborbital missions have been identified for these 216 boosters. The remaining 83 may eventually be committed to missions not now envisioned.
As far as economical use of these surplus missiles is concerned, this arrangement is good business. It costs $3.4 million to buy an Atlas missile and launch it for a Nike mission; but one of these surplus or outmoded missiles can be stored, overhauled, modified, and launched for less than $1.5 million. That means we can expect a saving on these 133 missions of more than $250 million in the next five years. This sum is not included in the $1 billion in equipment to be reused already mentioned.
retention of selected complexes
What to do with the expensive complexes from which these missiles were to have been launched? Which ones should be retained? How should they be stored in a preservation status? We settled on 44 complexes for Atlas F’s and 15 for Titan I’s, a total of 59 retained complexes. (Since there are three launchers in a Titan I complex, the 15 complexes contain 45 Titan I launchers.)
The retention of these 59 complexes provided the time necessary to
accomplish a sound evaluation of any possible future Air Force missions for
these facilities. Because of the attractions of hardness, self-sufficiency, and
dispersal of these complexes, a study was a prerequisite to any further
consideration of dismantling and disposal. Twenty-seven Atlas E launchers (nine
at each of three different bases) were considered too soft to be of future Air
Force value and were declared excess. Three Titan I complexes at Larson AFB,
A later study of the 59 retained sites showed that only a small number of complexes—estimated at less than 10 percent—would be needed for new Air Force missions. The actual number of complexes needed for new and presently envisioned missions was finally reduced to four:
(1) The Elizabeth Titan I complex at Lowry AFB, Colorado, as a data-processing center.—A hardened facility for storage of records and other data is essential, our study group believes, for future command and control requirements. A Titan I missile complex would not only provide adequate space, with a nuclear hardness protection factor, but would also accommodate a data-processing center. The Elizabeth Titan I complex at Lowry was selected as most suitable for the new mission. A study contract for $450,000 has been made available to prove or disprove the feasibility of this utilization.
(2 and 3) The Bennett Titan I complex at Lowry and the Oreana Titan I
complex at
(4) The Chico Titan I complex at Beale AFB,
Presentations have been made to the Air Staff requesting approval of the resources required to support these recommended missions. A final decision is pending.
Although all Atlas E and F and Titan I complexes (except Chico) were determined to be excess to known Air Force needs, we nevertheless retained withdrawal rights and authority should any of these complexes be needed for a new Air Force mission not yet known.
Assuming a cost of $24 million to duplicate the usable portions of one of these underground hardened buildings, the annual expense of storing it until utilized would amount to only .01 percent of its overall structural value—a nominal cost.
The Air Force has advertised the availability of the surplus complexes to
all commands, requested review by the commands, convened an all-ConUS-commands
symposium on the subject, and conducted cost-effectiveness studies in detail.
It therefore seems reasonable to state confidently that the remaining complexes
have been considered in depth for conversion to new missions and are indeed
surplus to Air Force needs. (General Services Administration will retain one
Titan I complex at Lowry for transfer to the City of
As an economy measure we determined that commercial power should be provided to all the surplus complexes. Although this switchover was initially expensive, the cost was amortized by August 1965, and 24-hour Air Force operation of diesel generators, requiring operators, parts, fuel, and maintenance, would have been more expensive during the 10 to 15 months required for disposal and some dismantling of the complexes.
disposal of equipment
A major part of our disposal job is the redistribution of surplus equipment. Normally, redistribution of assets and disposition of surplus equipment and real estate (to be sold by GSA) would take 15 months and cost an estimated $12 million. This schedule was shortened through joint screening and review of the lists of available equipment by GSA, Defense Supply Agency (DSA), the three services, and all other federal agencies.
Invitations for bids were advertised to all potential salvage contractors. Already more than $3.5 million has been realized from salvage contractors. Still to be realized are the proceeds from sale of all the real estate.
An interesting aside relates to some “cross-fertilization.” DSA personnel includes Army, Navy, and Air Force members. During a discussion of DSA’s part in the Air Force disposal program, a Navy officer referred to the service salvage type of contract by which the Navy dismantles and disposes of surplus or outmoded battleships. A participating Air Force officer pricked up his ears at this reference, asked some pertinent questions, and the upshot was that the Air Force borrowed the Navy’s battleship method for disposition of its surplus missile equipment.
Briefly, the service-salvage type of contract works this way: “service” refers to the removal of equipment by the private contractor for reutilization by DOD and other federal departments and agencies. In this way the contractor pays for the privilege of obtaining the remainder of the equipment as salvage for himself. Any money received by DSA as contract manager is credited to the Department of Defense. The service-salvage contract is even more attractive to the government, since 150 to 200 SAC military personnel at each affected base have been performing dismantling tasks within their capability.
When the service-salvage contractor has stripped the silo, as a safety measure the metal doors will be welded in a closed position and the gate of the chain link fence locked. This will reduce Air Force caretaking expenses to practically nothing. The complex in this condition will go to GSA for sale as real estate.
If necessary, the complete complex could be released to GSA for dismantling and disposition as real estate, and any money received would revert directly to the U.S. Treasurer. Close cooperation with GSA and DSA will be continued throughout this period of service salvage contracts, which ends in April 1967. Turnover of 21 complexes to GSA for sale as real estate was accomplished in less time than normally required.
Two Atlas F missile sites at Plattsburg AFB were selected as pilot models
for awarding service-salvage contracts. Both these silos had a history of
excessive water leakage (more than 60 gallons an hour), and the estimated cost
to connect commercial power to one silo was more than $30,000. In addition to
these reasons for early removal from the inventory, the purpose of letting
contracts on these particular complexes was to test the market from a salvage
contractor’s viewpoint and later to measure the profit or loss to the
successful bidder.
GSA and DSA both have advertised, through national news media, the availability of the complexes as well as individual pieces of surplus equipment. We hope this advertising will not only promote broader interest in the surplus equipment and real estate but also attract more contractors interested in performing salvage or dismantling operations.
To interest and instruct customers in the equipment, an Atlas silo at Lincoln AFB was dismantled as a demonstration. The equipment was placed on display in a large hangar on the commercial side of the field. Signs on each piece of gear described its use, function, and original cost. The cost of this six-week demonstration was 8000 military man-hours and $18,000 for two cranes. This price was small compared with the gain already realized through obtaining equipment for DOD reutilization, and it is expected to be much smaller relatively when all the gain is counted.
disposal considerations
Some of the background of our disposal actions and proposed actions will indicate the great care that was exercised before conclusions, firm or tentative, were reached.
We extensively developed and expanded the ideas and suggestions made for disposal of the surplus launch complexes. The second report, “Atlas E and F and Titan I Facility Utilization Proposals,” dated 5 February 1965, recommended an engineering survey contract to include compatibility and cost effectiveness on the four most promising potential missions:
(1) Automatic Digital Information Network (AUTODIN), (2) command and control centers, (3) communications centers, and (4) Minuteman storage.
The RAND Corporation was requested to undertake a study and research project
to consider the practicality and feasibility of converting the surplus
facilities to new Air Force uses. RAND’S study, “On the Possibilities of Using
Titan I Complexes as Command and
This report contained mathematical formulas for cost computations and was used as the basis for several Air Force reviews. In general it provided the background for helping to persuade new users of the practicality, feasibility, and cost effectiveness of converting Titan I and Atlas facilities to new missions:
—as major USAF headquarters. A Titan I complex or series of complexes at
—as reconstitution team center. Extensive study was made by the Sacramento Air Materiel Area of the Chico Titan I complex at Beale AFB, for use by an emergency aircraft maintenance team and for storage of emergency hospital equipment. Many factors were considered in this evaluation. However, the annual cost of facility operation, including permanently assigned personnel, was too high in view of the relatively low priority of the mission. It was decided not to use a Titan I facility for this purpose.
—as storage for surplus Minuteman missiles. The Boeing Company had made a
preliminary review from an engineering standpoint of the feasibility of storing
surplus Minuteman missiles in Atlas F silos. It is possible to store about 18
missiles in an upright position in two layers in an Atlas F silo. Air
conditioning and quantity distance capabilities (the explosion separation
distance necessary for safety of personnel and equipment) were the attractive
characteristics. Because of wide dispersal across the nation and lack of
suitable roads or railroads, all Atlas F sites were eliminated from this
consideration except the three at Vandenberg AFB,
During the past two years many suggested uses have been studied and reviewed by the ConUS commands and the Air Staff to insure that no Air Force requirement has been overlooked prior to dismantling and disposing of these surplus complexes. Of the 59 complexes available, retention of the four Titan I complexes represents the total confirmed Air Force requirement, the other 55 being in our current disposal program.
Configurations of complexes for other federal agencies vary considerably as
a result of equipment removal. In some only the minimum environment equipment
remains; in a few, almost all equipment remains. All diesel generators and
associated gear will be removed for use in
Our disposal effort, necessary for economic reasons, has not yet ended, but
all known potential follow-on Air Force missions for the phased-out facilities
have been thoroughly reviewed to insure that they are not dismantled and
disposed of until there is no further
Hq United States Air Force
Colonel Edward M. Jacquet (B.E.,
Disclaimer
The conclusions and opinions expressed in this
document are those of the author cultivated in the freedom of expression,
academic environment of
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