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LTC Stephen F.
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Edited >1 y ago
Thank you my friend TSgt Joe C. for making us aware that on June 14, 1954 over 12 million Americans “died” in a simulated mock nuclear attack as a test of the civil defense drill organized and evaluated by the Civil Defense Administration,
In late 1950s and early 1960s we schoolchildren were taught to get under the wooden desks to take shelter from a nuclear blast.
I am not at liberty to talk about plans, etc. since I was formally debrief a couple times.

Background from theblackvault.com/documentarchive/operation-alert-civil-defense-drill/#
"Background
Special thanks to PBS for offering this descriptive note on Operation Alert. I use it here, with full credit to them, in order to properly explain the project. This is from their American Experience program, and offers a detailed account:

In 1954, the United States Federal Civil Defense Agency instituted an exercise called Operation Alert. It was a civil defense drill that took place on the same day in scores of major cities. Citizens in what were called the “target” areas were required to take cover for fifteen minutes. At the same time civil defense officials tested their readiness and their communications systems, and federal officials practiced evacuating from the capital. Even President Eisenhower left the White House for a tent city outside Washington. The following day newspapers routinely published reports of the fictitious attacks naming the number of bombs that were dropped in the mock alerts, the number of cities hit, and the number of casualties.

In 1955, New York State made the failure to take cover during an Operation Alert exercise punishable with a fine of up to $500 and a year in jail. A small group of pacifists that included Catholic Worker Dorothy Day reacted to this law by staging a protest in Manhattan’s City Hall Park. When the air raid sirens sounded, on June 15, 1955, the 27 protesters sat on park benches, surrounded by reporters. They explained that they were protesting the government’s pretense that citizens could be protected in the event of a full-scale nuclear attack. The protesters were arrested and given suspended sentences.

The pacifists held similar protests every year. But it wasn’t until a group of young mothers organized a much larger-scale demonstration in 1960 that the rest of New York took notice. The women managed to draw hundreds of protesters, including celebrities like Norman Mailer, to City Hall Park on May 3, the day of the 1960 Operation Alert. The organizers appealed to the political center; encouraged protesters to dress in their best clothes and to bring their children; and claimed to represent just one belief: “Peace is the only defense against nuclear war.”

There was one more Operation Alert in 1961. The young mothers managed to bring together two-and-a-half-thousand protesters. That year civil defense protests also took place in other states, and hundreds of college students staged demonstrations on several East Coast campuses. In 1962 Operation Alert was permanently canceled."


On June 14, 1954, cities across America stopped to practice civil defense drills in "Operation Alert," in preparation for a potential nuclear attack by the Soviet Union. Charles Osgood reports.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2zJQq4GrnKc

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Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
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Remember those drills well.
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Maj Marty Hogan
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Remember these drills- used to scare the shit out of me when I was little
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