Theyre still up there
in the frozen north, some of them. They rise abruptly
from the icy wilderness, a jumble of buildings and
platforms topped with giant white domes. They look
like relics from another time, which, in a way, they
are. When they were built, the United States primary
adversary was communism, not terrorism. The US militarys
greatest fear was of a sneak attack by Soviet bombers,
flying undetected over the North Pole.
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Five decades ago this year,
the US and Canada launched one of the most ambitious
construction projects everthe
Distant Early Warning, or DEW Line, a series of radar
early warning stations from Greenland to Alaska.
Over the next two-and-a-half years, thousands of
people
and some 460,000 tons of material would be shipped,
hauled, and airlifted some 200 miles north of the
Arctic Circle, up to a line running roughly along
the 69th
parallel. When the crash project was over, North
America had something that, for the era, was a technical
marvel.
It had also gained a crucial few hours extra
time to respond to any incursion by aircraft carrying
nuclear bombs.
That strike never came, of course. Yet year after
year, the radar technicians, radio operators, pilots,
cooks,
metal workers, and military commanders who constituted
the isolated DEW Line population braved cold and
boredom to keep watch for the West. Today, their
mission may
be largely forgotten. Any traveler happening upon
the abandoned stations might wonder what on earth
they
were for.
Watching, Waiting
To that, I must answer that, for a brief while,
we stood on guard, writes former DEW worker Rick
Ranson in his book Working North. Like
ancient guards in a lonely outpost on the Great
Wall of China
or Hadrians Wall, we watched, we waited,
and we slowly went nuts.
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| Out There. At a DEW Line
outpost, radar antennae probe the skies. Like ancient guards, USAF
radar technicians, radiomen, and support personnel
stood lonely watch in the desolate Arctic. |
Some civilian technicians bought snowmobiles
and went out hunting in their free time. Some
hung
around station
bars, playing cards and swapping tall tales.
Some immersed themselves in solitary hobbies
like photography.
Some couldnt take it and fled when their
contracts were up. Others loved it and today
remember their time
on the line with fondness.
You had a lot of time to think, says Ranson,
who still works as a boilermaker, in Winnipeg,
Canada.
For centuries, the United States depended on broad
oceans and peaceful neighbors to protect its
people and home-based forces from military attack.
From
the beginning of the age of flight, however,
visionaries realized this geographic isolation
might no longer
serve as an effective buffer. As early as 1916,
Alexander Graham Bell worried that airships
might be able to
float over the waves and bomb US cities.
During World War II, the continental US remained
virtually untouched, despite West Coast fears
about Japanese
aircraft. Japanese troops and aircraft did
gain a foothold in the western Aleutian Islands
early
in
the war, but
withdrew by the middle of 1943. After the war,
the threat to the US homeland seemed minimal,
and air
defense budgets crumbled accordingly.
In the late 1940s, however, Soviet acquisition
of atomic weapons, plus Moscows development
of a long-range bomber force, quickly changed
the situation. In 1947,
the US Air Force proposed a $600 million radar
fence composed of 411 radar stations and 18
control systems.
The cost seemed high to Defense Department
officials, who sent USAF back to the drawing
board. By 1950, the
Air Force erected an interim system named Lashup,
which consisted of 44 World War II-vintage
radars located
near major US metropolitan areas. Lashup may
have been better than nothing, but its old
radars did not have
much range, and it would have provided little
advance warning of attack. Air Force officials
wanted something
moredistant warning of attack.
Canada was worried as well. Without its own
nuclear deterrent, Ottawa saw air defense as
its best
protection against Soviet attack. In the early
1950s, the
US and Canada began joint construction of the
Pinetree Line,
a series of some 30 radars that ran roughly
along the line of the USCanadian border.
This system was fully operational in 1954,
with the US paying
two-thirds
of its cost.
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| Lifeline. Isolated DEW Line sites were resupplied
by aircraft such as the ski-equipped C-47 at left
and the then-new C-124 at right. The flying was
dangerous work; 25 people died in aircraft accidents
in 1956 alone. |
At around the same time, with its own funds,
Canada began building another line farther
north, near
the 55th parallel. This Mid-Canada Line was
a simpler microwave warning device, prone to
false
alarms
set
off by geese
and other large birds. However, the fact that
Canadians were even attempting to build this
barrier, whatever
its limitations, intrigued some US defense
officials. If Canada could undertake a difficult
construction
task in the often-bitter weather of the 55th
parallel, why couldnt the US do the same
even farther north? A trip wire situated above
the Arctic Circle
would
provide hours of extra warning of bomber attack.
Top Air Force officials were not initially
enthusiastic. They thought that erecting and
maintaining a
string of high-tech radars in such weather
was not feasible
and that even trying would drain crucial funds
from the main mission of SAC. They favored
offensive nuclear
deterrence, but nevertheless agreed to provide
supplies and advisors for a February 1953 equipment
test on
Barter Island, off the northeast coast of Alaska.
Breakthrough
It was at this experimental outpost, with nothing
but the icy bleakness of the Arctic Ocean stretching
away
to the north, that personnel from MITs
Lincoln Laboratory and from Western Electric
achieved the breakthroughs
that made the DEW Line possible. Lincoln scientists
developed automated alarms that sounded when
radars picked up a target, so that operators
did not have
to stare at scopes for hours on end. They perfected
communications via radio waves bounced off
the troposphere, overcoming the difficult radiation
characteristics
of the far north. They hardened, for Arctic
use, two radarsthe AN/FPS-19, which had
a range of up to 65,000 feet and out 160 miles,
and
the AN/FPS-23,
which handled low-level detection through its
ability to pick up targets flying as low as
50 feet above
water.
So that neither would record flocks of migratory
birds, both were set to disregard objects flying slower
than
125 miles per houra feature the Mid-Canada
Line lacked, notes The Emerging Shield,
a 1991 publication of the Office of Air Force
History
about the evolution
of US continental air defense.
In July 1953, the US began building an 18-site
test line running across Alaska and northern
Canada. Working
from an old US Navy base in Barrow, Alaska,
workers towed prefabricated modules across
the tundra
to selected sites, then set them up. Air
Staff concerns
about the
difficulty of Arctic construction faded away.
In December 1954, the Pentagon awarded Western
Electric
the project.
The DEW Line was on.
The DEW Line was the largest construction
project ever undertaken in the Arctic and
one of the
most difficult
construction projects of any kind, ever.
Even today, the idea of constructing a string
of
habitable stations across trackless wilderness
would raise
major concerns.
And these stations were not just erected.
They were staffed with thousands of men who
slept,
ate,
worked,
played cards, did laundry, and generally
carried on a normal lifeas normal,
that is, as one could be in such frozen isolation.
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| Frozen in Time. Inside
a DEW Line site, personnel in an operations
room plot aircraft
movements on
radar screens and plexiglass boards. They might
not see all bombers, but getting just
one was worth it, said Gen. Earle Partridge. |
Site selectors went in first. They came in
overland by Caterpillar tractor trains in
the Alaskan portion and by ski plane in much
of the
Canadian portion.
With the help of parachute-dropped bulldozers,
they cleared airstrips, often on frozen lakes,
long enough
to handle C-124 cargo aircraft. Except during
two months in late summer, everything had
to come in
by air.
The basic unit of construction was a modular
building 28 feet long, 16 feet wide and 10
feet high. Made
of prefabricated panels, these modules were
combined into trains like
a string of blocks. Main stations had two
400-foot trains, connected by an overhead
bridge, forming
a giant H. The trains were laid on gravel
pads or mounted
on stilts to prevent thawing of the permafrost
beneath and were oriented with the prevailing
winds so as to
minimize snow drifts.
On the Greenland ice cap at the lines
eastern end, some three feet of snow and
ice piled up every
year. Some stations there were built on stilts
and equipped with hydraulic equipment so
they could jack
themselves higher every year. This ingenious
solution to the problem of ice buildup is
still used today
in polar research stations.
Steel towers were topped with the DEW Lines
distinctive geodesic radomes. Classified
electronic equipment was
kept in separate offices, which were theoretically
off-limits to all but cleared station staff.
The other trains contained sleeping quarters,
communications
rooms, shops, and the all-important dining
facilities, which often doubled as entertainment
centers and
bars.
Inside, airlifted diesel fuel kept life comfortable.
Outside, the temperature could fall to 65
degrees below zero. Every year the sun would
disappear
below the
horizon for two months.
The construction effort was like nothing
so much as the marshaling of troops and supplies
for
the D-Day
invasion, officials said at the time. In
1956
alone, air, sea, and water transport carried
167,183 short
tons of supplies to DEW sites. It was dangerous
work25
people died that year in aircraft accidents.
On July 31, 1957, responsibility for the
DEW Line
passed to
the Air Force, and, by the end of that year,
the first phase of stations was virtually
complete.
The military role of the DEW Line was to
detect the approach of Soviet bombers from
the north
in an actual
attack. While its radars and communications
could be jammed, that in itself would be
a signal that
something
major was afoot, officials noted at the time.
Theoretically Soviet aircraft could swing
wide and come in toward
the North American mainland from the Atlantic
or Pacific Oceans, but this was unlikely,
given the
range of the
USSRs bombers at the time. Navy ships,
early warning aircraft, and Texas Tower radar
platforms provided
some protection outside the DEW Lines
flanks.
If DEW radar blips turned out to be enemies,
US and Canadian interceptor squadrons could
be scrambled
to meet them. Meanwhile, forces in the United
States would
have gained valuable warning of four to six
hours to prepare for the attack. The Air
Force especially
liked
the fact that the DEW Line would aid in the
defense of US nuclear forces.
We believe that our primary mission in the
Air Defense Command is to defend the bases from which
the Strategic
Air Command is going to operate, said
Gen. Earle E. Partridge, commander of Air
Defense Command, at
the time. We believe also that we
have to provide a reasonable, an equitable,
protection
for the key
facilities, the population centers, and
our industry.
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| Just Like Home. This is Northside America, one
of the main radar stations. Amenities were few.
Keeping such places running entailed battles with
snow, ice, and the occasional polar bear. |
Duck Hunting
Even with the DEW Line standing guard,
some Soviet bombers would likely get through,
noted Partridge.
He compared the situation to duck hunting.
Some days, the hunter would be good and
the
conditions
right,
and most of the ducks would be shot. Other
days, the ducks would be more adept, the
conditions worse, and
many would get through, but getting even
one duck might make a tremendous difference.
If you shoot down a bomber coming inone
that was going to a big city like Washingtonyou
save billions of dollars and maybe a million lives,
by just
shooting down one bomber, Partridge
said in a lengthy 1957 interview with
US News and
World Report.
Aircraft did not have to be the size
of a Soviet bomber for the DEW Line to
pick
it
up, of course. Unknowns were
a problem for radar operators from the beginning.
Partridge said that the early warning system
as a whole, including
the lower Mid-Canada and Pinetree Lines,
picked up an average of 35 unknowns a day
in 1957.
Generally these turned out to be small aircraft
that had
neglected
to file flight plans.
We have a lot of unknowns in the system when
the fishing season starts up ... because those small
planes come
up and appear on the radar, said
Partridge.
DEW Line work was carried out mostly
by civilians. A scattering of Canadian
and
American military
officers provided supervision. The
civilians were at least
volunteers, in a sense. For those in
uniform, on the other hand,
a posting to the Arctic Circle was
not necessarily good news.
The work could be tedious. For radar
and radio operators, there was little
traffic
to handle,
save for B-52s
sent north on alert and the occasional
jetliner taking a polar route. Pay
was goodsuperior
to that most could earn Stateside.
Most sites got three first-run
movies a month and quantities of good
food. Mealtimes were the most important
times of
the day, and dishes
such as baked oysters or steak were
not uncommon.
Fresh out of college in 1976, Fred
K. Teeter Jr. was offered a DEW job
because
his uncle
was president
of
Felec Services Inc., the company that
then had the contract for line maintenance
and
operations. He
took it because he had no other prospects.
He
had a rude
introduction to DEW life when the C-141
carrying him north from McGuire AFB,
N.J., suffered
a collapsed cockpit windshield and
made an emergency
landing
in
Labrador, Canada.
Hours were long12 hours on, seven days a week
for three months. With only 13 to 15
men at each station, everyone quickly learned everyone
elses
stories. But Teeter explored the Arctic
landscape, took
photos, and grew to love the experience.
I just remember having this wonderful freedom, says
Teeter, today a chamber of commerce
president in Washington County, Md. That seems
odd because you were stuck on the station,
but I had
this time
to think
and do
things on my own. It fit me perfectly.
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| Fog of Cold War. In the Aleutians, heavy fog
envelops a DEW Line station (left) and two antennae
of a later communications system, dubbed White
Alice. The Soviet bomber threat faded, and so did
the DEW Line. |
Rick Ranson took up writing to
while away long off-work hours.
His series
of letters
home,
detailing DEW
life, eventually grew into a section
of a book about the
travails of Arctic Circle life.
Hes
got a story about a seal that a
worker sneaked inside
so it could
luxuriate in a shower and an orphan
peregrine falcon chick, fattened
by months of table
scraps,
that
a friend freed from the top of
the station radio tower.
Says Ranson: Two hundred
and four feet, straight down. Never
opened
a wing.
A self-described city boy, Ranson
once got the job of guarding a
camp on Cape
Dyer,
Baffin Island,
Canada,
from a polar bear. Everyone else
nonessential was off clearing the
airstrip. The
bear was an aggressive
one,
looking for food. He had already
ripped open the airstrip weather
office and
cornered the weatherman
in a locked
storage area.
Bear crackersa cross between a firecracker
and a percussion grenadewere not driving the
bear off. So Ranson kneeled and shot, aiming just behind
the bears foreleg. The bear
charged.
When I shot him, he was a hundred paces away,
and when he died he was 10 paces from me, and I had
been running
away, says Ranson.
A Short Life
The DEW Line was a marvel for
its time. It pioneered construction
and air control
technology
still
in use today. But its heyday
was
not lengthy. Even
as it went
into operation, the Soviet Union
was perfecting intercontinental
ballistic missiles that
it could not detect and which
put the meaning of strategic
warning time in
a whole different perspective.
The US perception of the nuclear
threat began to change drastically.
By the
middle of the
1960s, most defense
officials felt that vulnerability
to Soviet bombers had little
relevance, given the
capabilities of
Soviet ICBMs. Defense Secretary
Robert S. McNamaras
embrace of mutual assured destruction
further eroded air defenses
position.
The Soviets, for their part,
never lost interest in their
own network
of radars
and early
warning communications.
Unlike the United States, the Soviet Union
did not consider air and missile defense two sides
of the same
issue, states the Office
of Air Force History in The
Emerging Shield.
In 1980, Air Defense Command
was inactivated. In 1985, the
DEW Line
became the North
Warning System,
with
many sites scrapped, more automatic
equipment, and many fewer personnel.
 |
| Paging Nanook. Construction
workers drill foundation piers for a DEW Line
building on Canadas
Baffin Island, north of the Arctic Circle. Temperatures
at such sites could hit 65 degrees below zero. |
Today a few of the remaining
DEW stations are rusting hulks,
filled
with old
office equipment,
cases
of Danish beer, and other supplies
too expensive to
ship out
when habitation was abandoned.
The existence of PCBs and other
toxins
at the sites
is a large environmental
issue in Canada, whose officials
have long pushed for the US
to pay more
for cleanup
work.
Yet in the US, the DEW Line
may be largely forgotten, despite
its lifetime
cost
of some $7 billion
in todays
dollars. Congress has considered
legislation that would establish
Cold War commemorative
sites; perhaps
one
day a DEW station and its dome
will be preserved for future generations.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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