6th Space Warning Squadron

The 6th Space Warning Squadron, located at Cape Cod Space Force Station in Sagamore, Massachusetts, is a geographically separated unit of Space Delta 4, Buckley Space Force Base, Colorado. "Team 6" includes Department of the Air Force and Royal Canadian Air Force Airmen and Guardians, Department of Defense civilians, and InDyne employees. 
 
Mission 
To detect, track, and report missile launches and high-interest satellite passes while operating, maintaining, and protecting Cape Cod SFS. 
 
Vision 
Leaders and innovators in radar and installation operations. 
 
Motto 
Ever Aware 
 
The 6th SWS is located in Sagamore, Mass. on Cape Cod SFS and is part of Space Delta 4, a U.S. Space Force organization focused on missile warning operations at Buckley SFB, Colorado. The unit operates the Upgraded Early Warning Radar with the designation of AN/FPS-132. The 6th SWS has the distinction of being the first Pave PAWS installation in America. "Pave" is a program name for an electronics system. "PAWS" stands for phased array warning system. On Aug. 27th, 1973, the U. S. Air Force directed the construction of two sea-launched ballistic missile phased array radar systems. Then, on May 23, 1975, the Air Force announced that one site would be constructed on the east coast (Otis Air Force Base, Massachusetts) and the other on the west coast (Beale AFB, California) with the Raytheon Corporation earning the contract to build the facilities. Construction began on Oct. 26th, 1976, on Flatrock Hill, the second highest point on Cape Cod. The 6th Missile Warning Squadron and the 2165th Communications Squadron activated on Oct. 1, 1979. 
 
The 2165th CS was responsible for all communications and electronics maintenance. The facility was originally named Cape Cod Missile Early Warning Station and became operational on April 4, 1980. The lease for the land with the Commonwealth of Massachusetts was finalized in 1981. It granted approximately 87 acres for the site, 11.5 acres of access road, and two acres for utility lines until the year 2026 (100.5 total acres). The station’s name changed to Cape Cod Air Force Station on Jan. 5, 1982. The 2165th would exist as a tenant unit until 1986, when both squadrons merged into 6 SWS, formerly part of the 21st Space Wing at Peterson AFB, Colorado Springs, Colorado. The installation was redesignated Cape Cod Space Force Station on June 11, 2021, with the transfer of the unit and mission to the U.S. Space Force. 

There are approximately 130 members in "Team 6," including Guardians and Airmen from the USSF, USAF and Royal Canadian Air Force, DoD civilians, and InDyne employees. Six SWS has three missions: The unit provides accurate and timely missile warning data to U.S. and allied decision makers for the safety and security of North America. It is the only land-based east coast radar site in the United States with this mission. Next, 6 SWS provides mid-course interceptor guidance data to the Missile Defense Agency to eliminate intermediate and long-range ballistic missile threats. Lastly, 6 SWS tracks Earth-orbiting objects, including high interest items such as the International Space Station, any object that deviates from its known orbit, or any new satellite object. This critical tracking information is electronically transmitted to the 18th Space Defense Squadron at Vandenberg SFB, Calif., where it is used to maintain the satellite catalog, serving the essential roles of collision avoidance and space domain awareness. 
 
Equipment and Facilities 
The Pave PAWS radar uses 3,584 small active antenna elements coordinated by two computers. One computer is online at all times, while the second automatically takes control if the first fails. 
 
The computers control the distribution of energy to the antennas to form precise patterns, allowing the radar to detect objects moving at a very high speed since no mechanical parts limit the radar sweep. 
 
The radar can change its point of focus in milliseconds, while conventional radars may take up to a minute to mechanically swing from one area to another. The main building is shaped like a pyramid with a triangular base and 105 feet on each side. The two radiating faces, each with 1,792 active elements, are tilted back 20 degrees. Pave PAWS radar beams reach outward and upward for nearly 3,000 nautical miles in a 240-degree sweep. 

At its extreme range, it can detect an object the size of a small car. Smaller objects can be detected at closer range. 
 
History 
On Aug. 27, 1973, the U. S. Air Force directed the construction of two sea-launched ballistic missile phased array radar systems. On May 23, 1975, it was announced one site would be constructed on the east coast (Otis AFB, Mass.) and the other on the West Coast (Beale AFB, Calif). On May 23, 1975, the Raytheon Corporation was awarded the contract to build the facility. Construction began on Oct. 26, 1976, on Flatrock Hill, the second highest point on the Cape. 

Six SWS and the 2165th CS were activated Oct. 1, 1979. The 2165th was responsible for all communications and electronics maintenance. The facility was originally named Cape Cod Missile Early Warning Station and became operational April 4, 1980. 
 
The station's name changed to Cape Cod AFS on Jan. 5, 1982. The 2165th would exist as a tenant unit until 1986 when both squadrons merged into the 6th Space Warning Squadron, formerly part of the 21st Space Wing at Peterson AFB, Colorado Springs, Colo. 
 
The land, leased from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to the Department of the Army, was permitted on Sept. 2, 1981, for 25 years to the Department of the Air Force. The permit granted approximately 87 acres for the Pave PAWS site, 11.5 acres of access road, and two acres for utility lines (100.5 total acres). On Aug. 26, 2002, the Army extended the permit through Sept. 30, 2026. 

On Dec. 20, 2019, USSF was officially established and 6 SWS became a part of the newest branch of the U.S. DoD. On July 24, 2020, the 6 SWS was transferred to Space Delta 4, Buckley SFB, Colorado. 
 
(Current as of April 2024)