http://www.australia.to/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=16957:global-strike-command-assumes-ballistic-missile-mission-&catid=116:breaking-news&Itemid=298


Australia.to
December 1, 2009


Global Strike Command Assumes Ballistic Missile Mission  
 
 
WASHINGTON: Air Force Global Strike Command assumes the U.S. Air Force's 
Intercontinental Ballistic Missile mission today. 
 
The transfer of the mission is part of a phased approach, which began in August 
with the activation of the Global Strike Command, to unify all Air Force 
nuclear-capable assets under one command, officials said. 

"We are well on our way to consolidating all of our Air Force assets in this 
critical mission area under a single command - one that will serve as a single 
major command voice to maintain the high standards necessary for stewardship of 
our nation's most powerful weapons," said Lt. Gen. Frank G. Klotz, commander of 
the Global Strike Command. 

The new command gains three missile wings, one each at F.E. Warren Air Force 
Base, Wyo.; Malmstrom Air Force Base, Mont.; and Minot Air Force Base, N.D., 
with the assumption of the entire 20th Air Force mission, including that 
organization's responsibility for all of the United States' 450 ICBMs. 

The 576th Flight Test Squadron at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., as well as 
the 625th Strategic Operations Squadron at Offutt Air Force Base, Neb., also 
now come under the Command's responsibility. Previously, all of those units 
were part of Air Force Space Command. 

"The creation of this new command reflects the Air Force's firm and unshakable 
conviction that nuclear deterrence and global strike operations are a special 
trust and responsibility — one that we take very seriously," Klotz said. 

On Feb. 1, Global Strike Command also will gain 8th Air Force, based at 
Barksdale, and along with it, 8th Air Force's nuclear-capable bombers. At that 
time, the command also will acquire the B-52 Stratofortress wings at Barksdale 
and Minot, and the B-2 Spirit wing at Whiteman Air Force Base, Mo. 

The Air Force Global Strike Command was established in an effort to boost 
security and reduce errors. 

In a 2007 incident, nuclear weapons were loaded aboard a B-52 bomber at Minot 
Air Force Base and flown to Barksdale before the mistake was discovered. In 
another incident, nuclear nose cones mistakenly were shipped to Taiwan. As a 
result, then-Air Force Secretary Michael Wynne and then-Air force Chief of 
Staff Gen. T. Michael Moseley resigned. Another 15 officers, including six 
generals, were disciplined. 

The new command is part of a roadmap to improving the Air Force's Stewardship 
of its nuclear program, Air Force Secretary Michael B. Donley said during an 
October 2008 Pentagon media roundtable to introduce the plan. 

"This is a critical milestone for us. It's a new starting point for 
reinvigoration of this enterprise," he said then. "The changes we make today 
will help us focus on this enterprise regardless of other changes in Air Force 
missions along the way, and regardless of how big or small the nuclear 
enterprise is."  
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http://www.ksla.com/Global/story.asp?S=11594648


KSLA-TV
November 30, 2009


KSLA News 12 visits Global Strike Command Headquarters


BARKSDALE AFB, LA: At midnight Monday night 10,000 airmen from around the 
country officially begin work under Barksdale's new Global Strike Command.

Monday morning KSLA News 12 was given a first-hand look at the Global Strike 
Command's new headquarters at Barksdale Air Force Base.

Lt. General Frank Klotz visited with us just moments before leaving to meet 
with airmen at bases in Montana, North Dakota and Wyoming.

The Global Stike Command gains those three missile wings and the responsibility 
of their intercontinental ballistic missile operations, or I.C.B.M's.

So outside Barksdale's gates, what should we expect?

"There should be no impact to the local community outside of the gates, other 
than the fact that people working in the headquarters will continue to move to 
the Shreveport-Bossier City area," says Lt. General Frank Klotz. "Therefore 
they'll be looking for houses, they'll be looking for apartments to rent, and 
they'll be placing children in local schools."

By the end of next summer, Lt. General Klotz says 23,000 will fall under Global 
Strike's command, with close to 900 new airmen calling Barksdale home.
....
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