The DEW Line became operational on August 13, 1957, with "
CINCNORAD...operational control of the
Cape Lisburne-
Cape Dyer" radar stations as with other air defense elements. On June 30, 1958, the eastern DEW Extension had four stations and there were four Designated Engineering Representatives (DERs) and four
airborne early warning and control (AEW&C) aircraft operating for the Atlantic Barrier and on July 19, 1958,
DYE 1 (Qaqqatoqaq) (
DYE 4 (
Kulusuk Island) on August 3) was begun by
Western Electric using helicopter-assisted
sealift at the coasts and airlift from
Sondrestrom Air Base for the interior stations. By October 1, 1958, DYE communications were linked to the
NORAD Combat Operations Center at
Ent Air Force Base via the
AT&T Denver Toll Test Center. From 1954, the
United States Air Force expected that the air defense radar network would have to extend across the North Atlantic to Europe or the
Azores, and by early 1956 studies to this effect were approved by the
Joint Chiefs of Staff. After successful completion of the DEW Line, in 1957 U.S.-Canadian attention turned to the implementation of plans to close the North Atlantic radar gap with physical stations to replace the radar early warning aircraft
EC-121 Warning Stars then patrolling the ocean.
Arctic veteran, Colonel
Bernt Balchen, preferred a line going north around Greenland's polar coast, and others suggested a coastal line south to
Cape Farewell, but eventually the service settled on a direct line across the ice cap to Iceland, the
Faroes, and the United Kingdom. An initial plan to place a main station at
Kangeq near Cape Farewell was abandoned before construction began. Negotiations with Denmark, concluding with an agreement on 20 March 1958, settled on four stations in Greenland, one on a mountain near Holsteinsborg (
Sisimiut), two innovative sites in central Greenland, and one at
Kulusuk on
Kulusuk Island near
Tasiilaq (formerly Angmagssalik) on
Ammassalik Island, not too far from the former
United States Army Air Forces airfield
Bluie East Two. The Danes raised objections to the Kulusuk site due to fear of undesirable fraternization with the inhabitants of a local
Inuit village. The result was that the DYE-4 site there was placed off-limits to locals, although this policy failed resoundingly. Legally, the DYE-1 through -4 were annexes of the
Sondrestrom joint Danish-American Defense Area under authority of the 1951 Greenland Bases Treaty. Unlike the case with the other United States bases in Greenland, Denmark took no interest in the DYE stations and, except for engineering operations, did not participate in their operation; and unlike other United States bases, they did not become a cause for domestic controversy. Since the stations were built at high elevations, surveys indicated that during normal propagation conditions they should essentially close the gaps across
Davis Strait and
Denmark Strait, the latter with the aid of a later radar station at
Ísafjörður at the northwestern corner of Iceland. Construction was influenced by mixed experience with two earlier
ice cap radar stations near
Thule Air Base, now Pituffik Space Base, (Site 1 and Site 2). The new design used pillars which would delay subsidence of the station into the ice. In this sense the stations were similar to the
Texas Towers that had been built for air defense radars in coastal waters off the United States, except that the "tripod" was anchored in the ice, and the legs were eight massive steel beams. Periodic re-alignment of the station could be accomplished by adjustment of the beam attachments. At the inland stations, the nearly horizontally pointing
tropospheric scatter (troposcatter)
parabolic antennae had to be enclosed as part of the superstructure. Snow accumulation of about per year caused subsidence which eventually necessitated a re-foundation. In 1977 and 1982,
Danish Arctic Contractors carried out a delicate re-pillaring of the two ice cap stations through a “jacking-up” procedure that also laterally moved the station. ==Description==