| Until 1983, the Tonopah
Test Range was a fairly small facility that was used
to test rockets and nuclear weapons.
When the F-117 Stealth Fighter was set to become operational,
the Air Force expanded the facility into a major operating
location, building over 70 hangars at Tonopah to accomodate
the growing squadrons of stealth fighters. The F-117
trained in secrecy between the years of 1983 and 1988,
flying only at night and conducting exercises that included
the faux-targeting of people's houses in surrounding
states.
In December of 1989, six stealth fighters emerged flew
from Tonopah to Panama in order to drop some of the
first bombs in the U.S. invasion of that country.
Although the stealth fighters moved to Holloman AFB,
NM in 1992, the base still remains active. It is unclear
what kinds of activities are currently undertaken at
Tonopah.
The Tonopah Test Range is jointly operated
by Sandia National Laboratories, the Air Force, and
the Department of Energy. |
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