Denver Air Defense Sector


The Denver Air Defense Sector was a United States Air Force geographic area designated during the Cold War for both air defense and air traffic control, as well as the name of the planned military unit for conducting radar surveillance and fighter-interceptor operations in the sector area. The Denver ADS spanned the entire state of Colorado, nearly all of Utah, most of Wyoming and western Nebraska, and small parts of Kansas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arizona, and Nevada. Potential targets in the sector included the military/industrial facilities and urban civilian populations of the metropolitan areas at Salt Lake City, Cheyenne, Denver, and Colorado Springs..
Along with the adjacent Reno Air Defense Sector, the Denver ADS was intended to be in the 27th Air Division between August 1 and December 31, 1958, under NORAD's July 25, 1958, SAGE Geographic Reorganization Plan for the orderly transition and phasing from the manual to the" SAGE Defense System of radar stations, interceptor bases, and a new computer and communications network creating a Semi-Automatic Ground Environment.
After 10 Super Combat Center in underground bunkers were designated by the "USAF ADC Plan" approved by NORAD on December 20, 1958, additional Air Defense Command planning designated an SCC was to be constructed for command and control. The Denver SCC/DC was planned to become operational by May 1964.

Geography

The area of the Denver Air Defense Sector was an irregular pentagon from the Great Basin's northerneastern corner through the Central Rocky Mountains to the East border in the Great Plains. Formed primarily from the southern portion of the pre-SAGE 29th Air Division, smaller additional areas of the 25th & 28th Air Divisions were included to the West, the 25th & 34th ADs to the South, and to the East the 31st, 20th, & 33rd ADs. After the USAF had proposed Lowry AFB in 1958 for a new NORAD facility, the bunker for both the sector headquarters and the SCC/DC at the Denver Metropolitan Area was published in the January–June 1959 NORAD Historical Summary.

Austere SAGE area

In June 1959, in conjunction with SecDef approval for an "Improved SAGE environment" near coasts of the US and the Canada–US border—plus 1 sector in Canada, an "Austere SAGE environment" was also planned. A military region in the "south-central and central area" of the US in 6 sectors defined in the July 1, 1959, SAGE Implementation Schedule:
was constituted by NORAD on October 7, 1959, as the new "austere SAGE area" to have limited gap filler coverage and no advanced radars.
Previously planned bunkers for the SCC/DCs at Denver and San Antonio plus an above-ground AN/FSQ-32 at Albuquerque were reconsidered for the austere SAGE area to instead have "three Super Combat Centers in soft configuration". NORAD, USAF, and ADC agreed on a "new radar program" with the austere conditions, and on December 9, 1959, HQ USAF deferred construction of the underground "Denver" bunker for the SCC "because of budget considerations for FY 1961". Plans for the Rocky Mountain Division were discontinued by January 15, 1960, and coordination of interceptors for the general area was instead controlled by the 29th and 34th Air Divisions.
The Denver SCC/DC was entirely cancelled with all Super Combat Centers on March 18, 1960, after an Office of the Secretary of Defense evaluation and, :File:Seattle-ADS-map.png|the military region with the NORAD headquarters at Ent Air Force Base in Colorado Springs was the only CONUS area not an Air Defense Sector.