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Link preview Clear Space Force Station Clear Space Force Station - Wikipedia Jump to content Coordinates: 64°17′26″N 149°11′13″W / 64.29056°N 149.18694°W / 64.29056; -149.18694 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia US Space Force station in Alaska Not to be confused with the Shemya Island radar station at Eareckson Air Station, Alaska. Clear Space Force StationNear Anderson, Alaska in the United StatesAn aerial image of Clear SFS in 1999.Emblem of Space Base Delta 2Site informationTypeUS Space Force stationOwnerDepartment of DefenseOperatorUnited States Space ForceControlled bySpace Base Delta 2ConditionOperationalRadar typeAN/FPS-123LocationClear SFSLocation in the United StatesCoordinates64°17′26″N 149°11′13″W / 64.29056°N 149.18694°W / 64.29056; -149.18694Site historyBuilt1949 (1949) (as Clear Air Force Auxiliary Field)In use1949 – presentGarrison informationOccupants13th Space Warning Squadron213th Space Warning Squadron Clear Space Force Station is a United States Space Force radar station for detecting incoming ICBMs and submarine-launched ballistic missiles[1] to NORAD's command center and to provide Space Surveillance data to the United States Space Force. Clear's AN/FPS-123 Upgraded Early Warning Radar is part of the Solid State Phased Array Radar System (SSPARS) which also includes those at Beale AFB, Cape Cod Space Force Station, RAF Fylingdales and Thule Site J. The "historic property" was one of the Alaska World War II Army Airfields and later a Cold War BMEWS site providing NORAD data to Colorado's BMEWS Central Computer and Display Facility (CC&DF). In addition to the "original camp area" with buildings still in use today,[2] areas of the station include the airfield (ICAO: PACL), the "SSPARS Site"[3] the technical site (Utilador,[4] BMEWS reflectors, support buildings, power plant), and the composite site (two permanent dormitories, a mess hall, recreation area, and administrative area).[citation needed] In addition to the Air National Guard unit, Clear has active duty USSF, Royal Canadian Air Force, civilian, and contractor personnel. History[edit] PAVE PAWS and BMEWS coverage The site was purchased by the Department of the Interior in 1949 for use as a gunnery range for Ladd Field.[2] The site became Clear Air Force Auxiliary Field. In May 1958 total costs for the planned BMEWS Site I at Thule and BMEWS Site II at Clear were estimated at ~$800 million. In October 1958 they were both estimated to be completed in September 1960.[5] An additional 10-by-40-mile (16 km × 64 km) area[citation needed] was appropriated for the Clear site. Clear is served by a spur of the Alaska Railroad, being about 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) south of Nenana and the Mears Memorial Bridge over the Tanana River that flows past Clear.[6] This has transported coal for the power station and heavy equipment. Clear Missile Early Warning Station[edit] Clear Missile Early Warning Station construction began in August 1958 with 700 workers[7]—i.e., a "construction" camp was being erected in September 1958 by "Patti-McDonald and Morrison-Knudsen"[8] next to the railroad[citation needed] (for $1.7 million, 40,000 ft of railroad were moved by 1959.)[9] Groundbreaking for radar structures was May 1959[citation needed] ("Baker and Ford built a transmitter and computer building; a heat dissipation system; a radar transmitter building; wells and pumphouses; a fire station; and utilities")[9] and the AN/FPS-50 pedestals were complete by June 2, 1959.[10] In 1959[11] after the original White Alice Communications System contract, "the next segment of WACS... was series of TD-2 microwave installations to support... two routes [that] linked the Ballistic Missile Early Warning Site (BMEWS) at Clear AFB... one going down the southeast coast (the A route) to the Ketchikan-Seattle submarine cable*, and the other, going east to the Canada–US border (B Route) through Canada, down to the lower 48 which was Clear's Rearward Communications System to Murphy Dome (A Route) and the Gold King Creek AFS (B Route) with data for the Ent AFB CC&DF.[12] Three GE AN/FPS-50 Radar Sets were installed with antenna reflectors 165 by 400 feet (50 m × 122 m) that each weigh 1,000 short tons (910 t; 890 long tons). The "Building Two" middle transmitter building had the radar control room[verification needed] and room with the Sylvania AN/FSQ-28 Missile Impact Predictor Set.[13] The "Clear Msl Early Warning Stn, Nenana, AK" was assigned to Hanscom Field, Massachusetts, on April 1, 1961,[14] and BMEWS Site II was completed July 1, 1961[7] (the date of IOC--Full operational capability was declared three months later.)[citation needed] Clear transferred to Air Defense Command in November 1961.[citation needed] By mid-1962, BMEWS "quick fixes" for ECCM had been installed at Thule and Clear[15] and by June 30, 1962, Ent AFB integration of BMEWS and SPADATS data was completed.[16] On July 31, 1962, NORAD recommended a tracking radar at Clear to close the BMEWS gap with Thule for low-angle missiles (compared with those with the 15-65 degree angle for which BMEWS was designed)[15] (North Dakota's Cavalier AFS radar built in 1975 currently monitors for Hudson Bay launches.) Missile warning operations[edit] Detachment 2 of the 71st Missile Warning Wing was responsible for operations by civilian contractor personnel until 1964, when Air Force personnel began permanently manning the Tactical Operations Room (TOR).[citation needed] In 1964, the Good Friday earthquake struck, and Clear was unable to perform its mission for six minutes.[17] In 1966, the last of the five BMEWS tracking radars was installed, an RCA AN/FPS-92 Radar Set with an 84-foot (26 m) diameter antenna[citation needed] housed in a 42.7-meter (140 ft) diameter radome.[18][19][20] The FPS-92 was an improved AN/FPS-49 Radar Set variant with radome blocks having two high-density 1 millimeter thick skins that cover a 15 centimeter thick Kraft-paper core (total of 1,646 hexagonal and pentagonal blocks[21] (the hexagonal blocks were "66-inch panels".)[22] The completion of the FPS-92 raised the final construction price of the missile warning system at Clear to $300 million. $62 million of this figure had been spent by the Alaska District of the Corps of Engineers.)[9] Clear provided emergency shelter for 216 flood refugees during August 1967, the same year many "temporary" buildings were replaced. Personnel at the installation subsequently provided measurements for a University of Alaska experiment which injected sulfur hexafluoride into the upper atmosphere to see if the Aurora Borealis could be affected.[citation needed] Clear had Bomb Alarm System equipment installed by the time the BAS was accepted on 10 February 1961.[23] The BAS was deactivated in 1970.[5] In 1975, the Secretary of Defense told Congress that Clear Air Force Station would be closed when the Shemya Island and Beale AFB radars became operational.[24] After a Thule radome fire, Clear's FPS-92 radome was replaced in 1981 by first disassembling the tracker, constructing the new radome, and reconstructing the FPS-92.[25] Clear's 1st all-female crew pulled its 1st shift on February 28, 1986 (the 1st female, Lt. Anderson was assigned in 1973.) Beginning in 1987, ITT operated and maintained the Clear BMEWS under a USAF Space Command contract[21] and in the 1990s, the Southwest Research Institute upgraded Clear's pulse modulator for the transmitter final-stage power amplifier.[26] Phased array radar[edit] External images Dogsled near FPS-50 reflectors BMEWS radars after phased array was completed AN/FPS-132 Upgraded Early Warning Radar On April 16, 1998, groundbreaking for installing 1987 AN/FPS-115 PAVE PAWS components from Texas (e.g., the array elements) was held at Clear[27] for the more advanced Raytheon AN/FPS-120[27] with 2500 "solid state transmitter" modules.[28] On December 15, 2000, the FPS-50 and −92 transmissions ceased[citation needed] (all of the Arecibo Observatory's Litton L-5773 klystrons were obtained as surplus from Clear's decommissioned BMEWS transmitters.)[29] Clear's FPS-120 began 24-hour operations[citation needed] when Clear's SSPARS Site (separate from the BMEWS site) had Initial Operational Capability on January 31, 2001; the date the entire SSPARS became operational[30] (SSPARS sites were modified in the Early Warning Radar Service Life Extension Program.)[31] On August 30, 2006, after a transition that began in 2001, the ANG's 213th Space Warning Squadron took on the early warning/space surveillance mission.[clarification needed] BAE Systems began a 2007 contract for SSPARS maintenance,[32] and the Clear FPS-120 was subsequently upgraded to an AN/FPS-132 Upgraded Early Warning Radar (UEWR)[33] by Boeing Integrated Defense Systems[34] "featuring processor and software improvements to enhance capability."[20] On 15 June 2021 it was renamed from Clear Air Force Station to Clear Space Force Station.[35] Long Range Discrimination Radar was being tested at the base in 2022.[36] Based units[edit] The 11-story tall phased array buildingUnits based at Clear Space Force Station.[37][38] Those marked as GSU are Geographically Separate Units, which although based at Clear, are subordinate to a unit based at another location. United States Space Force[edit] Space Force Combat Forces Command Space Delta 4 13th Space Warning Squadron (GSU) United States Air Force[edit] Alaska Air National Guard 168th Wing 168th Operations Group 213th Space Warning Squadron (GSU) 268th Security Forces Squadron (GSU) Units to which assigned[edit] 2006: 213th Space Warning Squadron 1983: 1st Space Wing (Air Force Space Command) 1979: 15th Air Force (Strategic Air Command)[39] 1971: Fourteenth Aerospace Force (Aerospace Defense Command) 1967: 13th Missile Warning Squadron (Outstanding Unit Award in 1970 and 1973[citation needed]) 1961: Detachment 2, 71st Missile Warning Wing[citation needed] 1961: Electronic Systems Division[citation needed] 1949: Alaskan Air Command Amateur radio restrictions[ed… en.wikipedia.org · lcweb2.loc.gov
Clear Space Force Station - Wikipedia

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Coordinates: 64°17′26″N 149°11′13″W / 64.29056°N 149.18694°W / 64.29056; -149.18694

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

US Space Force station in Alaska
Not to be confused with the Shemya Island radar station at Eareckson Air Station, Alaska.

Clear Space Force StationNear Anderson, Alaska in the United StatesAn aerial image of Clear SFS in 1999.Emblem of Space Base Delta 2Site informationTypeUS Space Force stationOwnerDepartment of DefenseOperatorUnited States Space ForceControlled bySpace Base Delta 2ConditionOperationalRadar typeAN/FPS-123LocationClear SFSLocation in the United StatesCoordinates64°17′26″N 149°11′13″W / 64.29056°N 149.18694°W / 64.29056; -149.18694Site historyBuilt1949 (1949) (as Clear Air Force Auxiliary Field)In use1949 – presentGarrison informationOccupants13th Space Warning Squadron213th Space Warning Squadron
Clear Space Force Station is a United States Space Force radar station for detecting incoming ICBMs and submarine-launched ballistic missiles[1] to NORAD's command center and to provide Space Surveillance data to the United States Space Force. Clear's AN/FPS-123 Upgraded Early Warning Radar is part of the Solid State Phased Array Radar System (SSPARS) which also includes those at Beale AFB, Cape Cod Space Force Station, RAF Fylingdales and Thule Site J. The "historic property" was one of the Alaska World War II Army Airfields and later a Cold War BMEWS site providing NORAD data to Colorado's BMEWS Central Computer and Display Facility (CC&DF).
In addition to the "original camp area" with buildings still in use today,[2] areas of the station include the airfield (ICAO: PACL), the "SSPARS Site"[3] the technical site (Utilador,[4] BMEWS reflectors, support buildings, power plant), and the composite site (two permanent dormitories, a mess hall, recreation area, and administrative area).[citation needed] In addition to the Air National Guard unit, Clear has active duty USSF, Royal Canadian Air Force, civilian, and contractor personnel.

History[edit]
PAVE PAWS and BMEWS coverage
The site was purchased by the Department of the Interior in 1949 for use as a gunnery range for Ladd Field.[2] The site became Clear Air Force Auxiliary Field.
In May 1958 total costs for the planned BMEWS Site I at Thule and BMEWS Site II at Clear were estimated at ~$800 million. In October 1958 they were both estimated to be completed in September 1960.[5] An additional 10-by-40-mile (16 km × 64 km) area[citation needed] was appropriated for the Clear site.
Clear is served by a spur of the Alaska Railroad, being about 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) south of Nenana and the Mears Memorial Bridge over the Tanana River that flows past Clear.[6] This has transported coal for the power station and heavy equipment.

Clear Missile Early Warning Station[edit]
Clear Missile Early Warning Station construction began in August 1958 with 700 workers[7]—i.e., a "construction" camp was being erected in September 1958 by "Patti-McDonald and Morrison-Knudsen"[8] next to the railroad[citation needed] (for $1.7 million, 40,000 ft of railroad were moved by 1959.)[9] Groundbreaking for radar structures was May 1959[citation needed] ("Baker and Ford built a transmitter and computer building; a heat dissipation system; a radar transmitter building; wells and pumphouses; a fire station; and utilities")[9] and the AN/FPS-50 pedestals were complete by June 2, 1959.[10] In 1959[11] after the original White Alice Communications System contract, "the next segment of WACS... was series of TD-2 microwave installations to support... two routes [that] linked the Ballistic Missile Early Warning Site (BMEWS) at Clear AFB... one going down the southeast coast (the A route) to the Ketchikan-Seattle submarine cable*, and the other, going east to the Canada–US border (B Route) through Canada, down to the lower 48 which was Clear's Rearward Communications System to Murphy Dome (A Route) and the Gold King Creek AFS (B Route) with data for the Ent AFB CC&DF.[12]
Three GE AN/FPS-50 Radar Sets were installed with antenna reflectors 165 by 400 feet (50 m × 122 m) that each weigh 1,000 short tons (910 t; 890 long tons). The "Building Two" middle transmitter building had the radar control room[verification needed] and room with the Sylvania AN/FSQ-28 Missile Impact Predictor Set.[13]
The "Clear Msl Early Warning Stn, Nenana, AK" was assigned to Hanscom Field, Massachusetts, on April 1, 1961,[14] and BMEWS Site II was completed July 1, 1961[7] (the date of IOC--Full operational capability was declared three months later.)[citation needed]
Clear transferred to Air Defense Command in November 1961.[citation needed] By mid-1962, BMEWS "quick fixes" for ECCM had been installed at Thule and Clear[15] and by June 30, 1962, Ent AFB integration of BMEWS and SPADATS data was completed.[16] On July 31, 1962, NORAD recommended a tracking radar at Clear to close the BMEWS gap with Thule for low-angle missiles (compared with those with the 15-65 degree angle for which BMEWS was designed)[15] (North Dakota's Cavalier AFS radar built in 1975 currently monitors for Hudson Bay launches.)

Missile warning operations[edit]
Detachment 2 of the 71st Missile Warning Wing was responsible for operations by civilian contractor personnel until 1964, when Air Force personnel began permanently manning the Tactical Operations Room (TOR).[citation needed]
In 1964, the Good Friday earthquake struck, and Clear was unable to perform its mission for six minutes.[17]
In 1966, the last of the five BMEWS tracking radars was installed, an RCA AN/FPS-92 Radar Set with an 84-foot (26 m) diameter antenna[citation needed] housed in a 42.7-meter (140 ft) diameter radome.[18][19][20] The FPS-92 was an improved AN/FPS-49 Radar Set variant with radome blocks having two high-density 1 millimeter thick skins that cover a 15 centimeter thick Kraft-paper core (total of 1,646 hexagonal and pentagonal blocks[21] (the hexagonal blocks were "66-inch panels".)[22] The completion of the FPS-92 raised the final construction price of the missile warning system at Clear to $300 million. $62 million of this figure had been spent by the Alaska District of the Corps of Engineers.)[9]
Clear provided emergency shelter for 216 flood refugees during August 1967, the same year many "temporary" buildings were replaced. Personnel at the installation subsequently provided measurements for a University of Alaska experiment which injected sulfur hexafluoride into the upper atmosphere to see if the Aurora Borealis could be affected.[citation needed] Clear had Bomb Alarm System equipment installed by the time the BAS was accepted on 10 February 1961.[23] The BAS was deactivated in 1970.[5] In 1975, the Secretary of Defense told Congress that Clear Air Force Station would be closed when the Shemya Island and Beale AFB radars became operational.[24] After a Thule radome fire, Clear's FPS-92 radome was replaced in 1981 by first disassembling the tracker, constructing the new radome, and reconstructing the FPS-92.[25] Clear's 1st all-female crew pulled its 1st shift on February 28, 1986 (the 1st female, Lt. Anderson was assigned in 1973.)
Beginning in 1987, ITT operated and maintained the Clear BMEWS
under a USAF Space Command contract[21] and in the 1990s, the Southwest Research Institute upgraded Clear's pulse modulator for the transmitter final-stage power amplifier.[26]

Phased array radar[edit]
External images Dogsled near FPS-50 reflectors BMEWS radars after phased array was completed AN/FPS-132 Upgraded Early Warning Radar
On April 16, 1998, groundbreaking for installing 1987 AN/FPS-115 PAVE PAWS components from Texas (e.g., the array elements) was held at Clear[27] for the more advanced Raytheon AN/FPS-120[27] with 2500 "solid state transmitter" modules.[28] On December 15, 2000, the FPS-50 and −92 transmissions ceased[citation needed] (all of the Arecibo Observatory's Litton L-5773 klystrons were obtained as surplus from Clear's decommissioned BMEWS transmitters.)[29] Clear's FPS-120 began 24-hour operations[citation needed] when Clear's SSPARS Site (separate from the BMEWS site) had Initial Operational Capability on January 31, 2001; the date the entire SSPARS became operational[30] (SSPARS sites were modified in the Early Warning Radar Service Life Extension Program.)[31]
On August 30, 2006, after a transition that began in 2001, the ANG's 213th Space Warning Squadron took on the early warning/space surveillance mission.[clarification needed] BAE Systems began a 2007 contract for SSPARS maintenance,[32] and the Clear FPS-120 was subsequently upgraded to an AN/FPS-132 Upgraded Early Warning Radar (UEWR)[33] by Boeing Integrated Defense Systems[34] "featuring processor and software improvements to enhance capability."[20]
On 15 June 2021 it was renamed from Clear Air Force Station to Clear Space Force Station.[35]
Long Range Discrimination Radar was being tested at the base in 2022.[36]

Based units[edit]
The 11-story tall phased array buildingUnits based at Clear Space Force Station.[37][38]
Those marked as GSU are Geographically Separate Units, which although based at Clear, are subordinate to a unit based at another location.

United States Space Force[edit]
Space Force Combat Forces Command

Space Delta 4
13th Space Warning Squadron (GSU)
United States Air Force[edit]
Alaska Air National Guard

168th Wing
168th Operations Group
213th Space Warning Squadron (GSU)
268th Security Forces Squadron (GSU)
Units to which assigned[edit]
2006: 213th Space Warning Squadron
1983: 1st Space Wing (Air Force Space Command)
1979: 15th Air Force (Strategic Air Command)[39]
1971: Fourteenth Aerospace Force (Aerospace Defense Command)
1967: 13th Missile Warning Squadron (Outstanding Unit Award in 1970 and 1973[citation needed])
1961: Detachment 2, 71st Missile Warning Wing[citation needed]
1961: Electronic Systems Division[citation needed]
1949: Alaskan Air Command
Amateur radio restrictions[edit]
The US Code of Federal Regulations specifies that amateur radio operators within 160 kilometers of Clear must not transmit with more than 50 watts of power on the 70-centimeter band.[40]

References[edit]

^ "Clear AFS". GlobalSecurity.org. 2005-04-27. Retrieved 2009-11-04.

^ a b Cold War Historic Properties of the 21st Space Wing Air Force Space Command (PDF) (Report). OSTI.gov. Retrieved 2008-11-04.

^ "Clear Air Force Station, Alaska". Airforce-technology.com. Retrieved 23 July 2022.

^ "Clear "Utilador"". Lcweb2.loc.gov. Retrieved 23 July 2022.

^ a b Wainstein, L. (June 1975). The Evolution of U.S. Strategic Command and Control and Warning: Part One (1945-1953) (PDF) (Report). Vol. Study S-467. Institute for Defense Analyses. pp. 1–138. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 11, 2014. Retrieved 2014-03-09.

^ Cultural Resources Survey and Management Plan of the Clear Air Force Station (PDF) (Report). ORNL.gov. 1991. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-09-27. Retrieved 2008-11-04.

^ a b "Watchful eye of BMEWS turns toward Soviets" (Google news archive). Ellensburg Daily Record. June 18, 1961. Retrieved 2014-03-09.

^ page 269 "William A. Smith Contracting relocated a 40,000-foot length of the railroad.", Poa.usace.army.mil

^ a b c "VIII : Military Construction : Creating a Permanent Military Establishment in Alaska" (PDF). Poa.usace.army.mil. Retrieved 23 July 2022.

^ Rogers, Warren Jr. (June 2, 1960). "Summit Failure Speeds Up Development of BMEWS". Herald Tribune News Service. Retrieved 2014-03-09.

^ Installation Restoration Program Preliminary Assessment: Gold King Creek Radio Relay Station, Alaska (PDF) (Report). Hazardous Materials Technical Center. April 1989. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 16, 2014. Retrieved 2014-04-14. The RRS originally consisted of one radio relay building, one microwave tower enclosed by a chain link fence, and a 2,050-foot runway. These facilities total 30.32 acres. Two 14,000-gallon steel underground diesel fuel storage tanks are located west of the building. Figure 3 shows the original facilities at Gold King Creek RRS.

^ "Rabbit Creek White Alice Site" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-12. Retrieved 2014-04-15.

^ McManus, Gene (September 1996). "BMEWS - 51- Full Days". Bwcinet.com. Archived from the original on 2009-01-14. Retrieved 2014-03-19.

^ Mueller, Robert (1989). Air Force Bases (PDF) (Report). Vol. I: Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982. Office of Air Force History. p. 600. ISBN 0-912799-53-6. Retrieved 2013-08-15. Gold King Creek AFS (rdsgd Gold King Creek RR Site) (detchd instl), 45 mi NE of Fairbanks, AK, 16 Jul 1959 (dsgd)... Wideawake Fld (rdsgd Ascension Isl Aux Fid)... Ascension Isl, South Atlantic Ocean, 25 Jun 1956 (actvd)

^ a b 1962 NORAD/CONAD Historical Summary, July-December, Northcom.mil

^ Del Papa, Dr. E. Michael; Warner, Mary P (October 1987). A Historical Chronology of the Electronic Systems Division 1947-1986 (PDF) (Report). Archived (PDF) from the original on December 24, 2013. Retrieved 2014-03-08. 7 November [1984] Installation of [SSPARS] radar hardware at Site I, Thule, Greenland, for the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System (BMEWS) was begun.

^ McCann, Chris (24 March 2014). "50 YEARS since 1964 earthquake catastrophe: Military integral to recovery". Pacific Air Forces. Retrieved 12 May 2024.

^ "The Morning Record - Google News Archive Search". News.google.com. Retrieved 23 July 2022.

^ "Electronic Eye Watches For Sneak Missile Attack" (Google news archive). Herald-Journal. July 8, 1966. Retrieved 2014-03-09.

^ a b "[6.0] Miscellaneous Topics". Vectorsite.net. Archived from the original on February 6, 2007.

^ a b "Draft : The Coldest Front : Cold War Military Properties in Alska" (PDF). Nikesummit.net. Retrieved 23 July 2022.

^ "Reading Eagle - Google News Archive Search". News.google.com. Retrieved 23 July 2022.

^ Space and Missile Systems Organization: A Chronology, 1954-1979

^ "ALERT" (PDF). Dod.mil. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 November 2011. Retrieved 23 July 2022.

^ "Clear Air Force Station, Alaska". Themilitarystandard.com. Retrieved 23 July 2022.

^ Grimes, M. D.; Grothaus, M. G.; North, W. R.; Brittain, D.; Norander, R.; Kajonpong, D. (1 July 1995). "A new modulator design for the BMEWS transmitter". Digest of Technical Papers. Tenth IEEE International Pulsed Power Conference. Vol. 1. pp. 688–693 vol.1. doi:10.1109/PPC.1995.596791. ISBN 0-7803-2791-8. S2CID 109329176 – via IEEE Xplore.

^ a b Pike, John. "Clear AFS". Globalsecurity.org.

^ Skolnik, Merrill I (1990). Radar Handbook (PDF) (2nd ed.). McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-057913-2. Retrieved 2014-04-14.

^ "Arecibo 430 MHz Radar System Operation and Maintenance Manual" (PDF). Naic.edu. Retrieved 23 July 2022.

^ "Clear AFS, AK". GlobalSecurity.org. Retrieved 2014-03-05.

^ Chapman, Bert (2008). Space Warfare and Defense: A Historical Encyclopedia and Research Guide. p. 153. ISBN 978-1-59884-006-3. BMEWS was replaced by the Solid State Phased Array Radar System (SSPARS) in 2001. ... CINCAD (Command in Chief, Aerospace Defense Command)

^ "BAE Systems To Continue Maintaining SSPARS Radar Network for U.S. Air Force - SpaceNews.com". 3 March 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)

^ "U.S. to Sell Large Early Warning Radar to Qatar (August 7, 2013) (corrected February 10, 2014)". Mostlymissiledefense.com. 7 August 2013.

^ "Fylingdales". Raytheon.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2014-03-11. Retrieved 2014-03-08.

^ "Clear Air Force Station renamed as Clear Space Force Station". Buckley.spaceforce.mil.

^ "Long-range missile defense radar ready to 'plug in' at NORTHCOM within 'months'". 10 August 2022.

^ "Fact Sheet – Space Delta 4 - Missile Warning". Buckley Air Force Base. US Space Force. July 2020. Archived from the original on July 25, 2020. Retrieved 2 August 2020.

^ Mann, Senior Master Sgt. Paul (20 July 2018). "Clear welcomes a familiar face as new commander". DVIDS. US Department of Defense. Retrieved 2 August 2020.

^ compiled by Johnson, Mildred W. (31 December 1980) [Feb 1973 original by Cornett, Lloyd H. Jr.]. A Handbook of Aerospace Defense Organization 1946 - 1980 (PDF). Peterson AFB: Office of History, Aerospace Defense Center. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-02-13. Retrieved 2012-03-26.

^ "47 CFR §2.106 - Footnote US270". Retrieved 2023-04-26.

External links[edit]
Media related to Clear Space Force Station at Wikimedia Commons
Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. AK-30-A, "Clear Air Force Station, Ballistic Missile Early Warning System Site II, Anderson, Denali Borough, AK", 131 photos, 9 measured drawings, 80 data pages, 18 photo caption pages
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Clear
Coast GuardAir Station
Kodiak
Sitka
Base
Ketchikan
Kodiak
Station
Juneau
Ketchikan
Valdez
Sector
Anchorage
Juneau
Support CenterCordova
vte Space Operations CommandAir Forces
Fourteenth (Strategic)
Centers
Space and Missile Systems
Space Innovation and Development
614th Air and Space Operations
Bases
Buckley
Los Angeles
Patrick
Peterson
Schriever
Thule
Vandenberg
Stations
Cape Canaveral
Cape Cod
Cavalier
Cheyenne Mountain
Clear
Eldorado (closed)
Kaena Point
New Boston
Onizuka (closed)
Space wings
21st
30th
45th
50th
310th
460th
Air Base groups
61st
821st Air Base Group
SquadronsCommand and Control
1st
2d
3d
4th
55th Mobile
119th
153d
222d
721st Mobile
Space Control
1st
4th
16th
20th
25th
76th
380th
Space Launch
1st
2nd
3d Space Launch Squadron
4th
5th
Space Operations
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
5th
6th
7th
8th
9th
19th
21st
22d
23d
111th
148th
AFSPC
Space Warning
2nd
4th
5th
6th
7th
8th
9th
10th
11th
12th
13th
137th
213th
Others
26th Space Aggressor (AFRC)
527th Space Aggressor (ACC)
3d Space Communications
50th Space Communications
850th Space Communications
1st Space Development Squadron
2d Space Development Squadron
3d Space Development Squadron
3rd Space Experimentation
1st Space Surveillance
3d Space Surveillance
5th Space Surveillance
1st Air and Space Test
2d Test Operations Squadron
3d Space Test Squadron
4th Space Test Squadron
55th Space Weather

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Clear Space Force Station

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