"NORAD and the Soviet Nuclear Threat" is the history of the air
defence of Canada during the Cold War era. The reader is taken into
the Top Secret world of NORAD, the joint Canadian-American North
American Air Defence network. Ride along with the aircrew in their
cockpit as they fight an electronic joust in the skies. Go deep
underground to the Command Centre as the Air Weapons controllers
plot the air war on their radar screens. Visit the radar sites deep
in the Canadian bush as they struggle to provide the radar data for
an electronic air battle happening overhead.
An actual NORAD exercise on 10 May 1973, called Amalgam Mute, is
used as an example. This exercise tested that NORAD was honouring
its motto: Deter, Detect, Destroy, and was protecting North America
from aerial threat. There is an extensive explanation of the
aircraft, squadrons, weapons, radar, and radar sites involved.
Included are two personal accounts of the first interception of
a Soviet "Bear" bomber off the coast of Canada, and the first
Canadian fighter interceptor pilot to win the coveted United States
Air Force "Top Gun" award.
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