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AFNWC interns check out bombers and ICBM in Arizona

By Leah Bryant, Air Force Nuclear Weapons Center–

Several civilian interns recently traveled to Arizona to get a personal look at the many nuclear weapons systems their efforts support.

Under the Air Force Civilian Intern Program, interns are hired for a two- or three-year program of on-the-job training, professional and personal development, and service opportunities at the Air Force Nuclear Weapons Center.

“Our goal was to help our multi-discipline interns make connections between the program names and acquisition terms they use every day with the real nuclear-capable aircraft and missiles in full size,” said Jeff Sorensen, AFNWC deputy director of contracting.

Intern at nuclear Console

Last month, 11 AFNWC interns and other members toured the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group at Davis-Monthan AFB, Arizona. The one-of-a-kind facility in Tucson stores more than 3,200 aircraft and aerospace vehicles owned by the Air Force, Navy, Marines, Army, Coast Guard and other government agencies, including NASA.

In addition, the group visited the nearby Pima Air and Space Museum, which has nearly 360 aircraft on its campus of 127 acres. At the museum, interns were able to put their hands on an early version of a B-61 nuclear gravity bomb, which is still under contract at the center today.

The Pima museum also offers tours of Air Force Materiel Command’s 2,600-acre AMARG facility.

“At AMARG, we saw acres of chopped B-52 bombers,” Sorensen said.

In the early 90s, 365 B-52 Stratofortress bombers were sent to AMARG and dismantled into five pieces each, in accordance with the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty. AMARG’s current inventory of 95 B-52G and 13 B-52H-model aircraft is a resource for parts supporting the fleet.

Several AFNWC experts manage contracts and programs related to the B-52s still in service and the nuclear weapons the aircraft can deliver worldwide, as well as contracts and programs related to ICBMs.

To learn more about ICBMs, the group also visited the Titan Missile Museum. A National Historic Landmark, it is a fully preserved Titan II ICBM silo complex in Green Valley, south of Tucson.

“At the missile museum, we entered a decommissioned ICBM launch control center and a launch facility with its denuclearized missile still in place, as if on alert,” Sorensen said.

Headquartered at Kirtland AFB, AFNWC is responsible for synchronizing all aspects of nuclear materiel management on behalf of Air Force Materiel Command, in direct support of Air Force Global Strike Command. The center has about 1,300 personnel, both military and civilian, assigned to 18 locations worldwide.

This article originally appeared here.