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・ Operation Safeguard
・ Operation Safehaven
・ Operation Safehaven (1944–48)
・ Operation Safety Net
・ Operation Safraan
・ Operation Sahayogi Haat
・ Operation Sail
・ Operation Sailor Hat
・ Operation Salam
・ Operation Samen-ol-A'emeh
・ Operation Samwest
・ Operation San Antonio
・ Operation Sana
・ Operation Sand Flea
・ Operation Sandblast
Operation Sandcastle
・ Operation Sandshaker
・ Operation Sandstone
・ Operation Sandwedge
・ Operation Sangaris
・ Operation Sankat Mochan
・ Operation Santa Claus
・ Operation Sassoon
・ Operation Savanna
・ Operation Savannah (Angola)
・ Operation Save America
・ Operation Sawdust
・ Operation Saxifrage
・ Operation Sayeed
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Operation Sandcastle : ウィキペディア英語版
Operation Sandcastle

Operation Sandcastle was a United Kingdom non-combat military operation conducted between 1955-1956. Its purpose was to dispose of chemical weapons by dumping them in the Irish Sea.
The British possessed almost 71,000 air-dropped bombs of 250 kilograms in weight, each of which was filled with tabun. These had been seized from German ammunition dumps during the final months of World War II. A total of 250,000 tons of German chemical weapons had been discovered, the majority of which were destroyed because they comprised warfare agents which the allies already possessed in great abundance e.g. mustard gas. However, the stocks of tabun and sarin were considered more valuable because the allies did not possess nerve agent technology at that time. As a result, captured stocks of German nerve agents were divided between Britain and the United States after discussion, with the Americans taking the sarin. The British transferred their 14,000 tons of ordnance containg tabun in October 1945, via Hamburg and Newport, to temporary storage at the RAF strategic reserve ammunition store at Llanberis. Longer term facilities were prepared at RAF Llandwrog where the bombs were to be stored in stacks, out in the open, on the runways of the disused airfield. The intention was that any leaks of nerve agent would be carried out to sea by prevailing winds. The bombs were transported to Llandwrog by truck from August 1946 to July 1947.
In July 1947 it was discovered that the bombs were fuzed and a number of them were leaking nerve agent. The fact that the bombs had fuzes inserted meant that they were inherently unsafe: to reduce the risk of accidental detonation, standard practice is to avoid installing the fuze in any air-dropped bomb until shortly before it is loaded onto an aircraft to be used in combat. For similar reasons bomb fuzes are always stored separately, well away from bombs. Unfortunately, this was not the case with the 250 kilogram tabun bombs at RAF Landwrog. Not only had the bombs been left with fuzes inserted for a considerable amount of time (possibly years), but they were also left exposed to the elements creating a corrosion risk, together with the inevitable temperature fluctuations which resulted from changing weather. None of these factors were accepted practice regarding the safe, long-term storage of bomb fuzes or explosive ordnance in general.
At a rate of 500 bombs a week they were defuzed and individually coated in a waxy preservative to seal them. Seventy-two irreparable devices were neutralised on-site by being drained into individual pits filled with caustic soda crystals. Despite being given a preservative covering the bombs continued to suffer in the damp Welsh climate and in 1951 twenty-one 'Bellman' hangars were erected on the site to store the bombs. Finally in June 1954 it was decided to dispose of the entire stock because by then it was recognised that not only did the weapons have no military value but they had actually become a liability, which could only become worse as time passed.
==Logistics==
Operation Sandcastle was divided into two sections, a sea voyage to Cairnryan and then a transfer to suitable hulks there for later sinking north-west of Ireland beyond the continental shelf. It was intended to process 16,000 bombs in the first attempt in mid-1955.
The work began with the construction of a road between Llandwrog and the nearby port of Fort Belan where six LCTs were assembled. Loading trials in June indicated only 400 bombs could be loaded on each craft, less than hoped. It was then decided to remove the tail-fins from the bombs to reduce their length, and to pack them in new boxes. This work increased each LCT's load to 800 bombs and by mid-July all 16,000 devices had been safely carried to Cairnryan.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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