Norad ready to track Santa, and everyone can follow along
CTV
As children around the world eagerly await Santa’s arrival on Christmas, the North American Aerospace Defense Command (Norad) in Colorado keeps a close watch on Santa and his sleigh from the moment he leaves the North Pole.
As children around the world eagerly await Santa’s arrival on Christmas, the U.S. and Canadian militaries are ready to track him and see if he’s using any new technology.
Armed with radars, sensors and aircraft, the North American Aerospace Defense Command (Norad) in Colorado keeps a close watch on Santa and his sleigh from the moment he leaves the North Pole. And it once again will share all those details so everyone can follow along as Santa travels the globe beginning Christmas Eve.
Norad, the joint military command that is responsible for protecting North American airspace, has launched its noradsanta.org website, social media sites and mobile app, loaded with games, movies, books and music. And there’s a countdown clock showing when the official tracking of the sleigh will start.
The military will track Santa with, “the same technology we use every single day to keep North America safe,” said U.S. Air Force Col. Elizabeth Mathias, Norad's chief spokesperson. “We’re able to follow the light from Rudolph’s red nose.”
Mathias says while Norad has a good intelligence assessment of his sleigh’s capabilities, Santa does not file a flight plan and may have some high-tech secrets up his red sleeve this year to help guide his travels — maybe even artificial intelligence.
“I don’t know yet if he’s using AI," said Mathias. "I’ll be curious to see if our assessment of his flight this year shows us some advanced capabilities.”
The tracking Santa tradition began in 1955, when Air Force Col. Harry Shoup — the commander on duty at the Norad's predecessor, the Continental Air Defense Command — fielded a call from a child who dialed a misprinted telephone number in a newspaper department store ad, thinking she was calling Santa.