International

Military continues to track Santa

Military continues to track Santa

December 25, 2018 | 12:14 AM
In this photo released by the US Air Force, volunteers work in the 2018 NORAD Tracks Santa Operation Centre on Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado Springs, Colorado.
The US government shutdown may have dimmed Washington’s National Christmas Tree but never fear, Santa Claus is still comin’ to town – and the military is still tracking his path.Just as it has since the 1950s the Canadian and American defence agency NORAD (North American Aerospace Defence Command) is delivering live updates on the man in the red suit’s international gift delivery route.NORAD eased the fears of good little boys and girls concerned the tracker might be down, after US lawmakers failed agree on a budget, triggering a partial shutdown of federal services, including the maintenance of the Christmas tree outside the White House.“In the event of a government shutdown, NORAD will continue with its 63-year tradition of NORAD Tracks Santa on December 24,” the agency tweeted of the tracker, the Pentagon’s largest public outreach programme. “Military personnel who conduct NORAD Tracks Santa are supported by approximately 1,500 volunteers who make the programme possible each and every year.”The 3-D, interactive website at www.noradsanta.org showed Santa on his delivery route, allowing users to click and learn more about the various cities along the way.Just before 1500 GMT Father Christmas’s reindeer-powered sleigh was headed for Hong Kong, having already delivered more than 1.2bn gifts.In addition to tracking St Nick, volunteers donning military garb and Santa hats also respond to tens of thousands of calls and e-mails from eager children hoping to probe for details including their Christmas wish lists.The Santa tracker presented by NORAD dates to 1955, when a Colorado newspaper advertisement misprinted a phone number to connect children with Santa and mistakenly directed them to the military nerve centre hotline.To avoid disappointing the eager children, NORAD’s director of operations at the time, Colonel Harry Shoup, ordered his personnel to check the radar to see where Santa might be and update the children on his location.Decades later volunteers are armed with a 14-page playbook with talking points to respond to queries from excited children.The Defence Department is able to follow Santa’s journey thanks to satellites that pick up heat from lead reindeer Rudolph’s bright red nose, which “gives off an infrared signature similar to a missile launch”, according to Politico magazine.And for those kids sceptical of Santa’s existence? “Historical data and more than 60 years of NORAD tracking information lead us to believe Santa Claus is alive and well in the hearts of people throughout the world,” the Pentagon’s handbook reads.
December 25, 2018 | 12:14 AM