Peacekeeper Rail Garrison Car | |
---|---|
In service | 1990–1991 |
Manufacturer | Rockwell International |
Number built | 2 |
Number preserved | 1 |
Fleet numbers | WECX 1001-1002 |
Capacity | One LGM-118A ICBM |
Operators | United States Air Force |
Specifications | |
Car body construction | St. Louis Refrigerator Car Company |
Car length | 87 ft (26.52 m) |
Width | 10 ft 4 in (3.15 m) |
Height | 15 ft 9 in (4.80 m) |
Weight | 550,000 lb (250,000 kg) or 275 short tons (246 long tons; 249 t) |
Bogies | 4 x 4-wheel |
Coupling system | H Tightlock |
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge |
The Peacekeeper Rail Garrison was a railcar-launched ICBM that was developed by the United States Air Force during the 1980s as part of a plan to place fifty MGM-118A Peacekeeper intercontinental ballistic missiles on the rail network of the United States. [1] The railcars were intended, in case of increased threat of nuclear war, to be deployed onto the nation's rail network to avoid being destroyed by a first strike counterforce attack by the Soviet Union. However, the plan was canceled as part of defense cutbacks following the end of the Cold War, and the Peacekeeper missiles were installed in silo launchers as LGM-118s instead.
On December 19, 1986, the White House announced that U.S. President Ronald Reagan had given approval to a plan for the development of a railroad-based system for basing part of the planned LGM-118 Peacekeeper – originally referred to as MX for "Missile, Experimental" – intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) force. [2] : 223 [3] Intended to increase the survivability of the force in the event of a counterforce nuclear attack by the Soviet Union, the 50 train-based missile launchers, fitted two to each of twenty-five trains, would supplement a force of 50 silo-based missiles that would replace existing Minuteman missiles. [3] [N 1]
Each train was planned to consist of two locomotives (appeared to be EMD GP40-2 in unclassified diagrams [4] ), two cars for housing security forces (using a modified box car), two launchers each holding a single missile (using a modified box car), a launch control car (using a modified Westinghouse box car), a fuel car, and a maintenance car (using a modified box car). [3] Each launching car would carry one missile in a tube that, upon the receipt of an authenticated firing command, would elevate to fire the missile from the bed of the car. The launch cars were 87 feet (26.52 m) long, and when loaded with a missile weighed over 550,000 pounds (250,000 kg) or 275 short tons (246 long tons; 249 t). [3] A crew of 42 people—including the train commander, four launch control officers, four railroad engineers, one medic, six maintenance personnel, and 26 security police—could live in the launch control and security cars for up to one month. [5]
Following testing in 1989 at Hudson, CO, two ex-CSX locomotives, an EMD GP40-2 and an EMD GP38-2, were sent to Precision National in Mount Vernon, IL for modification to GP40-2DE (Dynamic braking, Extended range) with bulletproof glass in the cab windows. The trains were expected to be in service within about two years. Strategic Air Command wanted the first trains stationed at F. E. Warren Air Force Base near the Union Pacific mainline at Cheyenne, WY. The expected in-service date was December 1992. Rail Garrisons would resemble small freight yards with four spurs leading to slant-sided steel and earthen hardened shelters to house the trains.
Two hi-cube boxcars were constructed by St Louis Refrigerator Car Company. They were modified at Westinghouse, receiving bogie trucks, distributing their 550,000 pounds (250,000 kg) of weight over 8 axles. Low-slung beams were added to the underside to level the car against the track during launch. 80-foot (24.38 m) roof panels were designed to fall off when the missile was erected. The Air Force sought US$2.16 billion in fiscal year 1991 to purchase the first seven MX trains.
The deployment plan called for the trains to be permanently based in shelters that would be constructed on Strategic Air Command bases throughout the United States, with the missile crews on continuous alert. [3] Ten bases were in the running; Fairchild Air Force Base (Spokane, WA), Malmstrom Air Force Base (Great Falls, MT), Minot Air Force Base (Minot, ND), Grand Forks Air Force Base (Grand Forks, ND), Dyess Air Force Base (Abilene, TX), Whiteman Air Force Base, (Knob Noster, MO), Blytheville Air Force Base (Blytheville, AR), Little Rock Air Force Base (Little Rock, AR), Barksdale Air Force Base (Shreveport, LA), and Wurtsmith Air Force Base (Oscoda, MI). Upon the receipt of a signal indicating an increase in alert level, the trains would be "flushed", dispersing onto the American railroad network, [6] : 281 thus making it difficult for an enemy to determine where the missiles were at any given time to target them. [3]
Major contractors for the rail garrison system were Boeing Aerospace Corporation, Westinghouse Marine Division and Rockwell International Autonetics. The proposed main garrison for the weapons deployment system was to be F.E. Warren Air Force Base in Wyoming, with each selected garrison hosting up to four trains. [7]
After several years of development, the prototype Rail Garrison Car was delivered to the U.S. Air Force on October 4, 1990. After undergoing initial evaluation at Vandenberg Air Force Base, the car was then sent to the Transportation Test Center in Pueblo, Colorado for further testing on the Association of American Railroads' test track. [8]
In 1991, with the end of the Cold War, the Peacekeeper rail garrison system was canceled. [3] [9] As a result, all operational Peacekeeper missiles produced were installed in former Minuteman silos. [10] Following termination, the prototype rail garrison car was delivered to the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, in 1994 for public display. [3]
Rail Garrison Assets at Vandenberg AFB | |||||
Car | Reporting Mark | VAFB Arrival | VAFB Departure | Gaining Agency | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Locomotive OM-1 | TBCX 4900 | 28 Aug 1991 | 8 Jan 1992 | U.S. Army, Ft Eustis, Virginia | |
Locomotive OM-2 | TBCX 4901 | 28 Aug 1991 | 8 Jan 1992 | U.S. Army, Ft Eustis, Virginia | |
Fuel Car EM-1 | TBCX 90001 | 16 Apr 1991 | ? | USAF, Eielson AFB, Alaska | |
Fuel Car OM-1 | TBCX 90002 | 21 Oct 1991 | 8 Jan 1992 | U.S. Army, Ft Eustis, Virginia | |
Maintenance Car EM-1 | TBCX 90050 | 16 Apr 1991 | ? | USAF, Eielson AFB, Alaska | |
Maintenance Car OM-1 | TBCX 90051 | 21 Oct 1991 | 8 Jan 1992 | U.S. Army, Ft Eustis, Virginia | |
Security Car EMS-1 | DAFX 0004 | 16 Apr 1991 | ? | USAF, Eielson AFB, Alaska | |
Security Car EMS-2 | DAFX 0003 | 16 Apr 1991 | ? | USAF, Eielson AFB, Alaska | |
Launch Control Car EMS-1 | HTCX 402, DAFX 0002 | 16 Apr 1991 | ? | Federal Railroad Administration, Transportation Test Center | |
Launch Control Car ESM-2 | RGX 100, DAFX 0001 | 13 Oct 1990 | ? | USAF, Eielson AFB, Alaska | |
Launch Control Car OM-2 | DAFX 0006 | 29 Oct 1991 | ? | USAF, Eielson AFB, Alaska | |
Launch Control Car OM-4 | HTCX 407, DAFX 0007 | 3 Jul 1991 | ? | Federal Railroad Administration, Transportation Test Center | |
Missile Launch Car EMS-1 | WECX 1003 | 25 Nov 1991 | ? | Federal Railroad Administration, Transportation Test Center | |
Missile Launch Car EM-1 | WECX 1002 | 21 Nov 1991 | ? | USAF Museum, Dayton Ohio | |
Missile Launch Car EM-2 | WECX 1001 | 31 May 1990 | ? | Federal Railroad Administration, Transportation Test Center | |
Flat Car | ? | 16 Oct 1990 | ? | Federal Railroad Administration, Transportation Test Center | |
Security Car | DAFX 0008 | n/a | n/a | ? | |
Security Car | DAFX 0009 | n/a | n/a | ? | |
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Notes
Citations
After more test launches in the following years, the first few LGM-118A missiles became operational in modified Minuteman silos in December 1986. Peacekeeper deployment was complete in December 1988, when 50 LGM-118As were in silos.
Of several options stuided, three have been considered by the USAF to show enough promise for further study and consideration: mobility within a buried trench, mobility among above-ground shelters, and containment in hardened capsules (perhaps to be covertly dispersed in fields of many more unhardened silos than there are missiles).
WASHINGTON — The Air Force, under pressure to reduce its budget, has proposed to cancel its plans to deploy MX missiles aboard rail cars and to slow development of Midgetman, a small single-warhead mobile missile, Pentagon sources said Monday. [...] Citing changes in the Soviet strategic threat as well as looming budget constraints, the Air Force's senior officials have urged Defense Secretary Dick Cheney to shift the weight of the nation's nuclear deterrent force instead to bombers and submarine-launched missiles, sources said.
In 1983 the US Air Force decided to use existing silos intended for Minuteman missiles, and to develop the Midgetman missile to replace the mobile capacity.
Further reading