After exploring and researching the abandoned Cold War-era missile silo in the Saranac valley I posted about on Monday, the one big question I still had was: how do you actually fire the missile? I speculated that this device might be a part of it…
Turns out, I was right. A reader by the name of Bob wrote a very detailed, informative, and absolutely chilling comment about how exactly a missile launch (read: Armageddon) would go down, and I wanted to share it with those who might be curious. Take it away, Bob!
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The first step once a message was received and authenticated was to remove two keys from a lock box. Â The silo had two operators who sat about 15-20 feet across from each other. Both were officers and one was the commander.
Keys were inserted into the keyhole next to the phone. Â At this point a series of buttons and switches were flipped/turned, pressed to enter the information. Â The phone would ring at the secondary officers station for final verification and the keys would be turned and the missle committed.
It would go something like this:
***Warble************
(over speaker)
Message Follows: Â AABTY872V9……
A (Commander): I have a valid launch message
B (Secondary): I concur.
A: Remove Key.
**each officer would then open a lock on the key box and take out their respective key*****
Now they would start entering information from a manual that was also kept under lock and key. Â They would read from the manual step by step to arm, program, and launch:
A: Unstable the missle.
B: Check.
A: Â Program in-flight switch enable.
B: Check.
B: Program online codes inserted.
A: Roger.
A: Enable Switch enabled.
B: Roger.
–at this point one of the two phones would ring with a final authorization call———-
A: Key turn on my mark
5….4…3…2…1
The key was turned and the missle launch was committed. The doors would fly open – literally – and the missle would launch.
The silo crew, now having done its mission, gets to kick back and wait to die.






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