crete o wee ore cae ye a REDT meee NE . eeeregE ego re MOATaE ey PN Rm epee WR erg ae Or amespeng cn nea? Sr rn ie cee ic A Cecm Wore a“ the project officers in overseas operational and logistic problems .nd to obtain more complete information from them for planning purposes. Fortunately a few fell by the wayside; few later expans{ons grams, summarized By April 1955, f the shakier projects discussed at that meeting but ihe bulk of them, augmented by a compavitively and additions, became the Redwing experimesttl proin Chapter 2. the ready date for the first shot had been changed to April 15, 1956, and by June it had beenjdelayed until May 1, 1936. In duly it was decided to fire the 1-point shots. in Nevada in the late fall and winter of 1955, and to delete them from the Redwing program. In order to make the maximum use of the limited land available and of instrument stations already in existence, three shots were sceduled on the Eheriru complex plus one of Rujoru, three on Runit and one in the air above Runit, and six on barges near the Yurochi complex. When weather for large shots proved more favorable at Eniwetok than Bikini, and comple- tion of the Bikini program lagged, thet barges were shifted to the Mike crater at Eniwetok, Because of ‘the s\%e off the fact that it had to be fired early inthe program, them " Runit towers were not~built until after . : La pad “Was detonated. — 2 3.4.2 Determination of Requirements As shown in the preceding section, a list of probable Redwing shots prepared in December 1954 indicated an opeyation similar in scope to Castle, greliminary estimates of military support requirements submitted at thc’ tine were based accordingly. Unfortunately, the DOD system for planning the support of cverseas nuclear tests entails estimates of requirements long ‘before the shot schedule (which governs all of the planning of the Svientific Task Group) is in any way firm. The resuit is that preliminary estimates of requirements must be based to a degree on the preceding operation, and change substantially as planning progresses, Except for motor vehicles, Table 3.3 lists the principal items of military support of both direct and indirect interest to TG 7.1, and shows how requirements changed during the planning phase of the operation. Nu dis- tinction is drawn in the table between items of direct interest to TG 7.1, such as a command and firing ship, and effects ships and aircraft, and items resulting from TG 7.1’s requirements for services such as base facilities, transportation, and communications, which generate material requirements in the task groups which have to provide those services. Preliminary estimates of Redwing motor vehicle requirements, made in January 1955, were based on experience gained during Castle and totaled - 75 - e

Select target paragraph3