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Article posted Jan 18 2006, 9:07 AM Category: History Source: Historychannel Print

H-BOMB LOST IN SPAIN: January 17, 1966


On this day, a B-52 bomber collides with KC-135 jet tanker over Spain's Mediterranean coast, dropping three 70-kiloton hydrogen bombs near the town of Palomares and one in the sea. It was not the first or last accident involving American nuclear bombs.

As a means of maintaining first-strike capability during the Cold War, U.S. bombers laden with nuclear weapons circled the earth ceaselessly for decades. In a military operation of this magnitude, it was inevitable that accidents would occur. The Pentagon admits to more than three-dozen accidents in which bombers either crashed or caught fire on the runway, resulting in nuclear contamination from a damaged or destroyed bomb and/or the loss of a nuclear weapon. One of the only "Broken Arrows" to receive widespread publicity occurred on January 17, 1966, when a B-52 bomber crashed into a KC-135 jet tanker over Spain.

The bomber was returning to its North Carolina base following a routine airborne alert mission along the southern route of the Strategic Air Command when it attempted to refuel with a jet tanker. The B-52 collided with the fueling boom of the tanker, ripping the bomber open and igniting the fuel. The KC-135 exploded, killing all four of its crew members, but four members of the seven-man B-52 crew managed to parachute to safety. None of the bombs were armed, but explosive material in two of the bombs that fell to earth exploded upon impact, forming craters and scattering radioactive plutonium over the fields of Palomares. A third bomb landed in a dry riverbed and was recovered relatively intact. The fourth bomb fell into the sea at an unknown location.

Palomares, a remote fishing and farming community, was soon filled with nearly 2,000 U.S. military personnel and Spanish civil guards who rushed to clean up the debris and decontaminate the area. The U.S. personnel took precautions to prevent overexposure to the radiation, but the Spanish workers, who lived in a country that lacked experience with nuclear technology, did not. Eventually some 1,400 tons of radioactive soil and vegetation were shipped to the United States for disposal.

Meanwhile, at sea, 33 U.S. Navy vessels were involved in the search for the lost hydrogen bomb. Using an IBM computer, experts tried to calculate where the bomb might have landed, but the impact area was still too large for an effective search. Finally, an eyewitness account by a Spanish fisherman led the investigators to a one-mile area. On March 15, a submarine spotted the bomb, and on April 7 it was recovered. It was damaged but intact.

Studies on the effects of the nuclear accident on the people of Palomares was limited, but the United States eventually settled some 500 claims by residents whose health was adversely affected. Because the accident happened in a foreign country, it received far more publicity than did the dozen or so similar crashes that occurred within U.S. borders. As a security measure, U.S. authorities do not announce nuclear weapons accidents, and some American citizens may have unknowingly been exposed to radiation that resulted from aircraft crashes and emergency bomb jettisons. Today, two hydrogen bombs and a uranium core lie in yet undetermined locations in the Wassaw Sound off Georgia, in the Puget Sound off Washington, and in swamplands near Goldsboro, North Carolina.





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Comments 21 - 24 of 24 Add Comment < Page of 2
JOHN PINEO

Posted: Jan 31 2013, 8:58 AM

Link
98217 I WAS IN THE SHIPFITTER SHOP. WE MADE UP A DUMMY BOMB THAT WAS DUE TO BE PUT DOWN IN THE OCEAN FOR A SONAR PING INFO BUT THEY FOUND THE BOMB BEFORE THAT HAPPENED. THE SHIPFITTER SHOP MADE THE THREE PRONG HOOK THAT WAS ATTACHED TO THE "ALVIN" AND THAT IS HOW THEY GOT THE BOMB UP.
Jspgasman@aol.com
WE ALSO LOADED UP THE DAMAGE PLANS ON A BARGE AND DUMPED THEM IN THE OCEAN.
JOHN PINEO

Posted: Jan 31 2013, 9:01 AM

Link
98217 MY SHIPS NAME WAS USS CASCADE AD16.
PLEASE ADD TO THE INFO ABOVE 98217
Louis M. Mata

Posted: Feb 08 2013, 5:46 PM

Link
7517 I was there during project recovery. From Day one to the last day. I was on the CBR (Chemical Biologica Radiological) Team. We were stationed at Torrejon AB, Spain. We were all trying to find any and all parts, and taking radiological reading of area of Palomares.
Anonymous

Posted: May 21 2013, 9:31 PM

Link
74128 UPDATE; The BOMB is now at the National Museum of Nuclear
science and History in Albuquerque, NM,
Address: 601 Eubank SE.
Phone: 505-245-2137


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