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Edited by Christian Lowe | Contact

A New (old) Kind of Battle Art...

blast-door-art.jpg

Some things you just can't change.

Remember when the Pentagon got all up in arms after pictures of custom nose-cone art filtered into the mainstream media during the invasion of Iraq (and some in Afghanistan)?

God forbid the troops have a little fun with the idea of putting warheads on the foreheads of the "butchers of Baghdad"...wouldn't want to offend anyone, huh?

Well, here's a similar little piece on a far more, shall we say, "lethal" nose cone...or blast door...or...oh, come on, you get the picture:

At the back of what looks like an enclosed porch of an unpretentious ranch house near Wall, South Dakota, a steel-runged ladder leads down a 30-foot concrete access shaft. At the bottom, a massive, eight-ton steel-and-concrete door is painted the red, white and blue image of a Domino’s Pizza box, with a slightly altered phrasing of the chain’s familiar promise: “World-wide Delivery in 30 Minutes or Less; Or Your Next One is Free.” But in this case the “Next One” is a Minuteman II intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). For almost three decades, the house was the “Delta One” Launch Control Facility (LCF) for ten Minuteman missiles armed with nuclear warheads. The massive blast door was designed to ensure that the underground launch control center survived a nuclear attack.
Welcome to the mordant, jingoistic and occasionally crude — but rarely before seen world — of “blast-door art.”

Like the garish and cheeky illustrations etched across the noses of World War II aircraft, these images in launch control centers across the United States testify to the bravado of the men (and, from the mid-1980s onward, women) of what has been called “America’s Underground Air Force.” But they also reflect the sometimes surreal pressures faced by two-person missile crews on 24-hour duty alerts, waiting for a call to turn their missile launch keys and perhaps end civilization as we know it. “You’re sitting there waiting for the message you hope never comes,” says Tony Gatlin, who painted the Domino’s homage as a young deputy flight commander at Delta One in 1989. “That’s a pretty screwed up way of looking at the world.”

Now an Air Force major and deputy director of staff with the 100th Air Refueling Wing, based at the Royal Air Force’s Mildenhall Base, in England, Gatlin was struck by the similarity of Domino’s delivery time and that of his missiles. “One went with the other kind of well,” he deadpans. Gatlin’s painting is one of only a few the public can see, following the transformation in 1999 of the Delta One control facility and the nearby Delta Nine missile silo into an historic site by the National Park Service (NPS). Under the terms of the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty between the then-Soviet Union and the United States, many Minuteman missile sites have been deactivated or destroyed.

(Thanks to CM for the gouge)

-- Christian

Comments

nice to meet you

Posted by: wowpowerleveling at April 14, 2008 11:55 PM


By the way, the photographer who took the blast door photographs is Bob Lyon of Lafayette, Colorado - great photographer, history teacher, and an old buddy.

Posted by: Ponto at April 7, 2008 03:13 PM


LOVE IT!! Now,... SOMEBODY make "T" Shirts with this on the back and a missile insignia on the front!
Where do I send my check to get a couple?
JD

Posted by: Jeff Dulin at April 5, 2008 10:56 AM


Man the army wouldn't let us do this in Pershing 2 they argument was the German public wouldn't stand for it. "Nuke um till they glow" was the all time fav.

Posted by: G Boss at April 5, 2008 02:13 AM


This should have been kept for the DefenseTech Sunday version.

Posted by: pedestrian at April 4, 2008 11:08 PM


Then, from the silent service, "Sixteen empty tubes and a muchroom cloud. It's Miller time!"

Posted by: CTR1(SW) at April 4, 2008 06:15 PM


My favorite was at Delta LCC at Minot - "Death from Max." Max was the town that is next to the LCF.

Posted by: Pan at April 4, 2008 01:24 PM


Garish, jingoistic?

Man, I bet this cat is a modern art fan.

Posted by: Vercingetorix at April 4, 2008 12:14 PM


Spent eleven years in the FBM Strategic Weapon program - worked the missile control center.

Never saw anything like that on ours or any other boat, .... bet it would have gone over well.

I'll keep chuckling over this one !!!!

Posted by: Robert Carl at April 4, 2008 07:52 AM


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