Radar picket

A radar picket is a radar-equipped ship, submarine, aircraft, or vehicle used to increase the radar detection range around a force to protect it from surprise attack. Often several detached radar units encircle a force to provide increased cover in all directions.

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World War II

Radar picket ships first came into being during World War II to aid in the Allied advance to Japan. As they were the nearest ships to the Japanese airfields, and hence the first seen, they were often heavily attacked by kamikaze aircraft.

From 1943 the German Navy (Kriegsmarine) operated several radar-equipped night fighter guide ships (Nachtjagdleitschiffe), including NJL Togo. which was equipped with a FuMG A1 Freya radar for early warning and Würzburg-Riese gun laying radar, plus night fighter communications equipment. From October 1943 the NJL Togo cruised the Baltic Sea under the operational control of the Luftwaffe. In March 1944, after the three great Soviet bombing raids on Helsinki, she arrived in the Gulf of Finland to provide night fighter cover for Tallinn and Helsinki.

Cold War

Formerly, the United States Navy employed radar picket ships converted from the former Boxed Aircraft Transport version of the Liberty ship to extend the DEW Line seaward. During the period between 1955 and 1965, sixteen Liberty ships converted into Radar Picket Ships were stationed on the East Coast and West Coast, eight stationed at Treasure Island, California and eight stationed at Davisville, Rhode Island. Ship names matched the mission: Outpost AGR 10, Guardian, Lookout, Skywatcher, Searcher, Scanner, Locator, Picket and the Interceptor on the East Coast and Investigator, Protector, Vigil, Interdictor, Interpreter, Tracer and Watchman on the West Coast. The designation of the ships was YAGR, later changed to AGR.

Picket stations were spotted about 400-500 miles out and provided an overlapping radar or electronic barrier against approaching aircraft. While on station, the ships shifted operational control from the Navy to the Air Force and NORAD. Each ship while on station stayed within a specific radius of its assigned Picket Station, reporting and tracking all aircraft contacts. Each ship carried qualified Air Controllers to direct intercept aircraft sent out to engage contacts. While on station other duties such as Search and Rescue, weather reporting, and miscellaneous duties were assigned. The National Marine Fisheries Service even provided fishing gear so that the crew could fish for tuna during season, and the ships sent daily reports of fish caught for research purposes.

The standard crew consisted of 13 Officers, eight Chief Petty Officers, and 125 enlisted. Typical station duty was about 30-45 days out and 15 days in port. By 1965, the development of Over-the-Horizon radar made the Radar Ships obsolete. Ground based systems then had the capability to see beyond their once state-of-the-art radar systems. The Gulf of Tonkin PIRAZ station expanded the radar picket role during the Vietnam War.

During the Cold War, the United States Navy advanced to radar picket submarines which had the option of diving when under attack. The radar equipment of these diesel submarines took the place of torpedoes and their tubes in the rear torpedo rooms. The largest, most capable, and most expensive of these submarines was the nuclear-powered USS Triton. With the introduction of lighter radar sets that required less power and could be carried aboard aircraft, the radar picket submarine became obsolete; the Triton serving in her design role as radar picket for only two years before being converted into an attack submarine.

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