• 29 September 1961 – HQ USAF issues Specific Operational Requirement (SOR) 192, for ERCS (designated Program 279) • 27 December 1961 – Interim configuration finalized of three rockets with 1 KW transmitters, stationed around
Omaha,
Nebraska; four sites with three rockets each • 5 April 1962 – Amendment to SOR 192 to include two east coast ERCS complexes, based on
CHROME DOME routes and
SAC elements in
Europe • 21 September 1962 –
SAC study recommends use of
Minuteman missile, to eliminate Program 279 and its proposed expansion • 7 June 1962 –
SAC proposes changes to SOR 192, such as using six
Minuteman missiles selected from among the flights of an operational wing; this was envisioned not to impair the alternative capability of substituting nuclear warheads should future circumstances warrant. • 11 July 1962 – Program 279 attains Initial Operating Capability (IOC); UHF transmitter payloads attached to three
MER-6A Blue Scout rockets at three sites near
Wisner,
West Point, and
Tekamah,
Nebraska • 13 December 1966 – A Minuteman II launched from Vandenberg AFB, Calif. carried the first Minuteman ERCS payload into space for testing and evaluation • 17 April 1967 – Third, and last, test of the ERCS using a Minuteman booster; Emergency Action Message was inserted into the transmitter from an
ALCS aircraft. • 15 August 1967 – First Program 494L payload arrives at
Whiteman AFB,
Missouri • 10 October 1967 – First two Program 494L ERCS payloads put on alert at
Whiteman AFB,
Missouri; IOC obtained for Program 494L ERCS • 27 September 1991 – President
George H. W. Bush terminated
SAC's alert force operations, which included taking
Minuteman II ICBMs (including ERCS sorties) off-alert. ==In popular culture==