Sunday, May 29, 2022

Is Now The Time To Replace The Pentagon’s 1970s-Era Doomsday Planes?

An Air Force E-4B Nightwatch takes off from Lincoln Airport in Nebraska April 26. The airport in Lincoln is being used while repairs are made to Offutt Air Force Base following a March 2019 flood. (Daniel Woolfolk/Staff)  

Politico: Time is ticking to replace the Pentagon’s 1970s-era Doomsday planes  

Built to survive a nuclear attack, these Air Force aircraft are expected to fly well past their 50th birthday. 

ABOARD AN E-4B DOOMSDAY PLANE — Inside a military aircraft designed to survive a nuclear war, an area once used as a first class lounge now contains six blue passenger seats next to two sleeping bunks. 

Maj. Ted DeBonis, maintenance squadron commander, says it’s a break area for the 12 aircraft mechanics who accompany the plane on every hop, waiting to fix it anywhere in the world. 

It’s an unusual setup for a military aircraft. But a flying maintenance hangar is the kind of thing you need when you’re operating a plane that’s been around since the Carter administration.  

Read more ....  

WNU Editor: Are these planes necessary? .... Does America need its ‘Doomsday plane’? (Air Force Times).

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