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Lots of copyediting. Proofreading wouldn't hurt y'know! :-)
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The Strategic Air Command is the branch of the [[United States Air Force]] that is in charge of America's non-submarine-based nuclear arsenal. Established in March 1946, with headquarters Offutt AFB, Nebraska, with its bomber force, symbolized the cornerstone of national strategic policy: deterrence -- deterrence against the growing nuclear arsenal of the Soviet Union.
The <b>Strategic Air Command</b> is the branch of the [[United States Air Force]] that is in charge of America's non-submarine-based nuclear arsenal. Established in March 1946, with headquarters at [[Offutt Air Force Base]], [[Nebraska]], with its bomber force. The Strategic Air Command symbolized the cornerstone of American national strategic policy, namely, [[deterrence]]--deterrence in order to prevent any use of the growing nuclear arsenal of the [[Soviet Union]].


I was renamed the U.S. Stragetic Command in 1992 after the fall of the [[Berlin wall]], and now incorporates the Naval nuclear forces as weel as those of the [[Air Force]].




It was renamed the [[U.S. Strategic Command]] in 1992 after the fall of the [[Berlin wall]], and now incorporates the Naval nuclear forces as well as those of the [[United States Air Force]].



external link: [http://www.stratcom.af.mil/ stratcom]

Links:

* [http://www.stratcom.af.mil/ Stratcom]



Revision as of 21:52, 12 September 2001

The Strategic Air Command is the branch of the United States Air Force that is in charge of America's non-submarine-based nuclear arsenal. Established in March 1946, with headquarters at Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska, with its bomber force. The Strategic Air Command symbolized the cornerstone of American national strategic policy, namely, deterrence--deterrence in order to prevent any use of the growing nuclear arsenal of the Soviet Union.


It was renamed the U.S. Strategic Command in 1992 after the fall of the Berlin wall, and now incorporates the Naval nuclear forces as well as those of the United States Air Force.


Links: