A Service to the Community, and Nothing More

The following is a post from Capt. Jeff Davis, Director of NORAD and USNORTHCOM Public Affairs.

Usually, the NORAD Tracks Santa program is a hard place to find controversy.  It’s done by volunteers, it uses no taxpayer money, it’s supported by corporate partners who receive nothing in return, and it gives children around the world a little extra holiday cheer. 

But a couple of changes we made in the program this year have some people scratching their heads and wondering if there is something nefarious going on.  (Spoiler alert:  there’s not).

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NORAD Tracks Santa with the Help of Partners

The following is a post from Capt. Jeff Davis, Director of NORAD and USNORTHCOM Public Affairs.

It’s hard to believe it all started with a typo.

A program renowned the world over – one that brings in thousands of volunteers, prominent figures such as the First Lady of the United States, and one that has been going on for more than five decades – all started as a misprint.

That error ran in a local Colorado Springs newspaper back in 1955 after a local department store printed an advertisement with an incorrect phone number that children could use to “call Santa.” Except that someone goofed. Or someone mistook a three for an eight. Maybe elves broke into the newspaper and changed the number. We’ll never know.

But somehow, the number in the advertisement changed, and instead of reaching the “Santa” on call for the local department store, it rang at the desk of the Crew Commander on duty at the Continental Air Defense Command Operations Center, the organization that would one day become the North American Aerospace Defense Command, or “NORAD.”

And when the commander on duty, Col. Harry Shoup, first picked up the phone and heard kids asking for Santa, he could have told them they had a wrong number.

But he didn’t.

Instead, the kind-hearted colonel asked his crew to play along and find Santa’s location. Just like that, NORAD was in the Santa-tracking business.

Colonel Shoup probably had no way of knowing what he had started. Fast forward 57 years later, and NORAD is still tracking Santa, and with the help of technology and our generous contributors – including Microsoft, Analytical Graphics Inc., Verizon, Visionbox and more than 50 others – the ability for people around the world to follow Santa’s journey has grown in ways no one could have imagined back in 1955.

This year, nearly 25 million people around the world are expected to follow Santa’s journey in real-time on the Web, on their mobile devices, by e-mail and by phone. This combination of new and old technologies is essential to helping NORAD keep up with the incredible demand for Santa tracking that grows each year.

To put the program into perspective, last year the NORAD Tracks Santa Operations Center volunteers in Colorado Springs received more than 102,000 calls, 7,721 e-mails and reached nearly 20 million people in more than 220 countries around the world through the www.noradsanta.org website. With the help of a worldwide network of partners, military and civilian volunteers, and thanks to the special friendship between the U.S. and Canada, NORAD will be able to reach even more people this year.

Starting at 12 a.m. MST on Dec. 24, website visitors can watch Santa make the preparations for his flight. Then, at 4:00 a.m. MST (6:00 a.m. EST), trackers worldwide can speak with a live phone operator to inquire as to Santa’s whereabouts by dialing the toll-free number 1-877-Hi-NORAD (1-877-446-6723) or by sending an e-mail to noradtrackssanta@outlook.com. NORAD’s “Santa Cams” will also stream videos as Santa makes his way over various locations throughout the world.

It’s a big job, and we can’t do it alone, but the holidays have always been a time for bringing people together. With the help of our industry partners and friends in Canada, the tradition that started as a mistake will live on again this year.

If you would like to track Santa, visit www.noradsanta.org or visit us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/noradsanta.

Capt. Jeff Davis
Director, NORAD and USNORTHCOM Public Affairs

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This is what loyalty looks like

A sentry at the Tomb of the Unknowns.Take a look at this photo posted to the First Army Division East’s Facebook page. This Soldier is standing guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetary while Hurricane Sandy blows through. From the caption:

Spc. Brett Hyde, Tomb Sentinel, 3d U.S. Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard), keeps guard over the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier during Hurricane Sandy at Arlington National Cemetery, Va., Oct. 29, 2012. Hyde lives by the Sentinel’s Creed which in part says “Through the years of diligence and praise and the discomfort of the elements, I will walk my tour in humble reverence to the best of my ability”. (U.S. Army Photo by Sgt. Jose A. Torres Jr.) — with Kim Wade Midlam.

The Tomb has been guarded continuously since 1948. Something tells me this isn’t the year where that changes.

TSgt. T.J. Doscher

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NORAD’s role in the Cuban Missile Crisis

NORAD Forces in FloridaThis week marks the 50th anniversary of the Cuban Missile Crisis, an incident that nearly sparked World War III. It started when Soviet Premier Nikita Krushchev looked across the Black Sea at the missiles NATO was stationing in Turkey and decided that it was terribly unfair for NATO to have missiles in his backyard while he had nothing in the western hemisphere. Light bulbs went off, the Good Idea Fairy made a visit to the Kremlin and before long people in the White House were looking at surveillance photos and noting to one another how missiles that look like that shouldn’t be in Cuba.

There are tons of great works on the history of the Cuban Missile Crisis, the blockade and how the Strategic Air Command was preparing for an all out nuclear war. But what was NORAD doing this week 50 years ago?

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U.S. Northern Command celebrates 10 years

Gen. Charles H. JacobyBy Gen. Charles H. Jacoby
Commander, North American Aerospace Defense Command and U.S. Northern Command
 

This month marks the 10th anniversary of the founding of U.S. Northern Command (USNORTHCOM), based at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Since August of 2011, it has been my privilege to lead the dedicated men and women of this command, along with our partner unit for homeland defense, the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), the robust bi-national security command shared with Canada for more than 54 years. With memories of 9/11 still etched in America’s consciousness, and during this remarkable time of transition across the globe, it is fitting to mark this 10th anniversary for USNORTHCOM.  We do this not only with admiration and appreciation for the successes or all agencies responsible for the security of the nation over the past decade, but with reflective acknowledgement of the challenges that remain.

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Canadian NORAD member “double taps” marksman award

In a recent post, I poked a little fun at my Canadian brethren. In response, one of our Canadian officers showed me this story about Capt. Ken Barling winning the Queen’s Medal for Champion Shot for marksmanship two years in a row and subtly reminding me that there are Canadians in this building who could, if they wanted to, take me out from another zip code.

Well met, Sir. Well met.

The Canadian Forces Small Arms Concentration competition has been going on in one form or another since 1869, and the Queen’s Medal for Champion Shot is the highest prize awarded there. Two medals have been awarded since 1991, one to a regular CF member and the other to the reserves or the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Barling came home with:

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Americans and Canadians

A joint U.S. and Canadian color guardAirman 1st Class Omari Bernard from the Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson Public Affairs Office wrote a story about the special relationship between Canadians and Americans working together in Alaska. It’s a good read that talks a little about the NORAD mission in Alaska, but more about  what that relationship between our nations is about.  Bernard has a great quote from Royal Canadian Air Force Col. Daniel Constable, deputy commander of the Alaska NORAD Region about what that relationship means.

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CSAF: Air Force components must work together

 

Gen. Welsh

Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Jim Greenhill

Sgt. 1st Class Jim Greenhill of the Army National Guard covered Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh’s recent speech to Guardsmen in Reno, Nev. , where the CSAF talked about the importance of the active force, Reserves and Air National Guard working together.  One of the things he talked about was the Guard’s response to the 9/11 attacks.

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Running to Remember

Remembrance Run

NORAD and USNORTHCOM got a chance to be part of something really special today. The cadets up at the U.S. Air Force Academy are holding a Remembrance Run, commemorating the victims of the 9/11 attacks as well as U.S. personnel still missing in action who will be recognized on Sept. 21 for National POW/MIA Recognition Day. Five-person teams of cadets from each of the Academy’s 40 cadet squadrons plus Academy group and wing staffs are running a 45-mile relay through Colorado Springs today, and for the starting point for this run they chose the NORAD and USNORTHCOM 9/11 Memorial. At the end of the 45 miles, they’re going to run for another 39 hours. Why 39 hours? It’s one hour for every year since Operation Homecoming brought American POWs home from Vietnam.

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NORAD members recall Sept. 11 – Steve Armstrong

This entry is a repost from the NORAD official website. Last year, we asked some NORAD members who were here during the 9/11 attacks to talk about what they saw at NORAD on that day. This is the third of three interviews that were published as a result of that request.

PETERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Colo.Steve Armstrong was the Steve ArmstrongNORAD Chief of Plans and Forces on Sept. 11, 2001. He was in the Cheyenne Mountain command center during the attacks. Today he works in the NORAD Operations Directorate.

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