Description

Book Synopsis
Assured Destruction: Building the Ballistic Missile Culture of the U.S. Air Force documents the rapid development of nuclear ballistic missiles in the United States and their equally swift demise after the Cuban Missile Crisis, revealing how these drastic changes negatively influenced both the Air Force and the missile community. The book contends that the creation of nuclear ballistic missiles threatened both the dominance of the United States during an intensifying Cold War and the strategic airpower mission of the newly created Air Force.

The response to these threats led to political infighting and interservice squabbles to control the new weapon before the Soviets could build their own version and annihilate the United States. This highly politicized and hurried process prevented the successful long-term operational integration of ballistic missiles into the U.S. Air Force.

The book reveals the strenuous efforts required to create and prepare a missile arsenal before the Cuban Missile Crisis, which occurred only five years after the first missile was declared operational. It uses the personal recollections of former missileers and the professional military education theses they wrote to highlight some of the concerns that have faced the missileers who operated and worked on these powerful weapons from 1957 to the present. The highlight of the book, however, is the personal stories of the missileers who served during the missile crisis, revealing the efforts that they went to in order to prepare these unique and untried weapons for what many thought might become the third world war.

Trade Review
David Bath has produced a useful contribution to the historiography of the Cold War and the USAF. He describes the development of the ICBM strategic deterrence force and illuminates the establishment of the missile crew force and the struggle to create a professional culture and a viable career path in the aviation—oriented Air Force." —Jerome V. Martin, Command Historian (retired), U.S. Strategic Command

"David W. Bath illuminates how military culture restrains innovations and limits capabilities. Bath demonstrates how bomber pilots limited the ICBM interloper's internal effects and suppressed rising 'missile generals.' In this, the new Air Force set a dangerous tendency to limit innovations by focusing on narrow elements of air operations." —Dr. Steven A. Pomeroy, Defense Analyst and author of An Untaken Road: Strategy, Technology, and the Hidden History of America's Mobile ICBMs

"David W. Bath's Assured Destruction is the compelling story of the rise of a missile culture in America after the launch of Sputnik in 1957; the interservice rivalry which followed; and the realization after the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1963, that, if used, ICBMs with atomic warheads would doom Mankind. Assured Destruction is a stunning achievement." —Terry H. Anderson, Professor of History, Texas A&M University, and author of Bush's Wars

Assured Destruction: Building the Ballistic

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A Hardback by David W. Bath

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    View other formats and editions of Assured Destruction: Building the Ballistic by David W. Bath

    Publisher: Naval Institute Press
    Publication Date: 28/02/2020
    ISBN13: 9781682474938, 978-1682474938
    ISBN10: 1682474933

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Assured Destruction: Building the Ballistic Missile Culture of the U.S. Air Force documents the rapid development of nuclear ballistic missiles in the United States and their equally swift demise after the Cuban Missile Crisis, revealing how these drastic changes negatively influenced both the Air Force and the missile community. The book contends that the creation of nuclear ballistic missiles threatened both the dominance of the United States during an intensifying Cold War and the strategic airpower mission of the newly created Air Force.

    The response to these threats led to political infighting and interservice squabbles to control the new weapon before the Soviets could build their own version and annihilate the United States. This highly politicized and hurried process prevented the successful long-term operational integration of ballistic missiles into the U.S. Air Force.

    The book reveals the strenuous efforts required to create and prepare a missile arsenal before the Cuban Missile Crisis, which occurred only five years after the first missile was declared operational. It uses the personal recollections of former missileers and the professional military education theses they wrote to highlight some of the concerns that have faced the missileers who operated and worked on these powerful weapons from 1957 to the present. The highlight of the book, however, is the personal stories of the missileers who served during the missile crisis, revealing the efforts that they went to in order to prepare these unique and untried weapons for what many thought might become the third world war.

    Trade Review
    David Bath has produced a useful contribution to the historiography of the Cold War and the USAF. He describes the development of the ICBM strategic deterrence force and illuminates the establishment of the missile crew force and the struggle to create a professional culture and a viable career path in the aviation—oriented Air Force." —Jerome V. Martin, Command Historian (retired), U.S. Strategic Command

    "David W. Bath illuminates how military culture restrains innovations and limits capabilities. Bath demonstrates how bomber pilots limited the ICBM interloper's internal effects and suppressed rising 'missile generals.' In this, the new Air Force set a dangerous tendency to limit innovations by focusing on narrow elements of air operations." —Dr. Steven A. Pomeroy, Defense Analyst and author of An Untaken Road: Strategy, Technology, and the Hidden History of America's Mobile ICBMs

    "David W. Bath's Assured Destruction is the compelling story of the rise of a missile culture in America after the launch of Sputnik in 1957; the interservice rivalry which followed; and the realization after the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1963, that, if used, ICBMs with atomic warheads would doom Mankind. Assured Destruction is a stunning achievement." —Terry H. Anderson, Professor of History, Texas A&M University, and author of Bush's Wars

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