The US has one ICBM left—the Minuteman III—and it’s the job of the missile maintainers at Hill AFB, Utah, to see that the Cold War icons remain ready. The base receives the missiles—minus warheads but otherwise in tact—from operational ICBM sites, then the technicians of the 309th Missile Maintenance Group disassemble them, repair the components as needed, test the components, and then reassemble everything. Just the reassembly takes about seven days. The 526th ICBM Systems Wing at Hill provides technical assistance along the way and, once the ICBM is back together, reviews the testing documentation. Base officials say the wing and group managed to cut the maintenance time in half and have returned ICBMs on time for more than a year.
Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall doesn’t see great value in trying to break the Sentinel ICBM program off as a separate budget item the way the Navy has with its ballistic-missile submarine program, saying such a move wouldn’t create any new money for the Air Force to spend on other…