Post-Attack Command and Control System: Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|Former US nuclear communications network}}
[[File:PACCS peacetime orbit areas 1972.PNG|thumb|rightupright=1.35|Peacetime orbits of PACCS aircraft (c. {{ca|1972}})]]
The '''Post Attack Command and Control System''' ('''PACCS''') was a network of communication sites (both ground and airborne) for use before, during and after a [[Nuclear warfare|nuclear attack]] on the United States. PACCS was designed to ensure that [[National Command Authority (United States)|National Command Authority]] would retain exclusive and complete control over US [[nuclear weapon]]s. Among other components, it included [[Strategic Air Command]] assets such as the [[Operation Looking Glass|Looking Glass]] aircraft and mission, and various hardened [[command and control]] facilities.<ref name=PACCShistory>{{cite web |url=http://www.sac-acca.org/paccs.htm |last1=Ogletree|first1=Greg|title=A History of the Post Attack Command and Control System (PACCS)|date=n.d.|publisher= |archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20120910090836/http://www.sac-acca.org/paccs.htm |archivedate=September 10, 2012 |accessdate=May 14, 2014}}</ref>
 
The belief by the [[Soviet Union]] in the reliability of PACCS was a crucial component of the US [[mutual assured destruction]] doctrine, ensuring a long-term [[stalemate]].
 
[[File:PACCS peacetime orbit areas 1972.PNG|thumb|right|Peacetime orbits of PACCS aircraft (c. 1972)]]
 
==History==