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Take Charge and Move Out: The Founding Fathers of TACAMO: True Believers and the Rise of Navy Strategic Communications [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 248 pages, kõrgus x laius: 228x152 mm, 20 photographs
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Apr-2022
  • Kirjastus: Casemate Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1636241549
  • ISBN-13: 9781636241548
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 248 pages, kõrgus x laius: 228x152 mm, 20 photographs
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Apr-2022
  • Kirjastus: Casemate Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1636241549
  • ISBN-13: 9781636241548
Teised raamatud teemal:
TACAMO, an unusual moniker meaning 'Take Charge and Move Out', is the Navy's well-known and respected leg of the nation's national strategic communications, a key element of the US nuclear deterrence posture. But TACAMO has not always been so recognized. For the junior officers in the early days of the 1960s and 1970s, TACAMO was a career-killing backwater, likely to put an end to their careers before they even got started. But in the 1970s, inspired by their commanding officer Bill Coyne, a handful of junior officers made the leap of faith to take a second tour in TACAMO, betting their careers that they could bring this community into existence. This is the story of eleven of those 'True Believers', told in their own words, how each came to make that leap of faith to bring the TACAMO community into existence against all odds, moulding it into what it is today. Out of this pioneering cadre came eleven future commanding officers and three commodores of a Wing yet twenty years in the future. And the 'True Believers' went on beyond TACAMO to make major contributions to all aspects of national strategic communications, some at the level of the White House.This is their story.

Arvustused

[ C]ontains a wealth of information on a mission which is essential to the well-being of the US. McIntyre fulfils his aim of telling the story the development of the Navys strategic communications mission through the eyes of the 'Fathers of TACAMO.' * The Journal of the Air Force Historical Foundation * McIntyres writing is accessible and he is to be commended for expanding the history of Naval aviation. * The National Maritime Historical Society *

Foreword v
Dedication vii
Introduction viii
Part One The Beginning, 1968--1975
1(66)
1 An Island Paradise on the Edge of the War
5(18)
2 The Seed is Planted
23(44)
Part Two TACAMO in Transition, 1975--1980
67(28)
3 The First Retreads
69(7)
4 A New Professionalism
76(19)
Part Three The ECX Comes to Life, 1980--1983
95(16)
5 Starting the Program
97(11)
6 A Rapid Acquisition
108(3)
Part Four TACAMO Comes of Age, 1980--1985
111(82)
7 TACAMO Joins the Navy
113(10)
8 From One Island Paradise to Another
123(13)
9 Continuing One Hundred Percent
136(6)
10 "True Believers" Take Command
142(12)
11 Preparing for the E-6
154(27)
12 The E-6A Arrives ... But Not on Time!
181(12)
Part Five The Wing Stands Up, 1990--2000
193(16)
13 The Inception
195(4)
14 Strategic Communications Wing One
199(10)
Epilogue 209(18)
List of Acronyms 227(1)
Index 228
Lewis McIntyre graduated from the Naval Academy in 1970, earning his wings as a Naval Flight Officer. He was assigned to TACAMO Squadron VQ-4 in 1972 flying EC-130 Hercules aircraft. He requested a second tour in VQ-3 in Guam after completing the Naval Postgraduate School in 1977. Throughout his naval career, he held various positions in test and evaluation, tactical and strategic command and control, retiring in 1990. Following his Naval retirement, he pursued a second career as an engineer in support of the other TACAMO mission, finally putting that aside to start a third career as a writer.