1. American launcher carrying an American military payload.
It will be treated as a USAF rocket. The launch contracts so specify. Space X is no different from United Launch Alliance.
Not seeing where it mentions USAF other than they're assisting in the investigation, wrong link? And in any case, the point was that it would be using the same launch facilities & methods as the other Falcon 9 launches, just with additional security.
2. The same place that Space X originally did.
Several helium tanks, each pressurized to about 5,500 pounds per square inch, are mounted inside the rocket’s second stage liquid oxygen tank. The helium is routed through the second stage’s Merlin engine, where the helium warms up and injected into the rocket’s propellant tanks to pressurize the stage as the launcher burns fuel, keeping the tanks structurally sound
Telemetry logged from the June 28 launch showed a momentary drop in helium pressure, then a rise back to the system’s starting pressure, Musk said, initially puzzling investigators probing the mishap.
Circulatory pump (Elon Musk said this.) indicated until the balloon theory was tested.
Not sure what you're trying to say here, this is all within line of the helium tank rupture AFAIK.
Design may be all American but some of the parts are made by subcontractors in China. Elon Musk said that, too.
Then SpaceX would be in gross violations of ITAR, and the Govt's strict on ITAR. Doing a bit of research, SpaceX subcontracted the turbine manufacturing of the Merlin to Barber-Nichols, a US based company out of Colorado.
Apologies, I'd forgotten about upper level winds.
But still, that's way up, and wouldn't prevent defueling and pivoting to horizontal and roll back into the Integration Facility.
Indeed, not heard of much. I think it's due to it only being demated from the launch vehicle if the turn-around time in measured in days & weeks, not hours. Otherwise, they check out the payload while still mated.
As for loss of launch facilities,
Wallup took a lot of damage. (* Surprised me. I thought the place was ay least Minuteman rated.) after the Antares blew up in mid air. They are still doing some ground repairs this date.
It did take quite a bit of damage, but the really valuable stuff survived. Most of the delays in repairs stem from the insurance issue I mentioned, as well as the Commonwealth of Virginia getting upset over Orbital moving 2-3 payloads from Wallops to Vandenberg atop Atlas Vs. Orbital got quite a bit of assistance from Virginia with the promise of all their payloads into orbit launching from Wallops.
Also, fun fact, during the Gemini-Titan launches, they had to rebuilt the launch tower every time due to heat damage. Would never be accepted today
The N-2 (N-13) 'look' is probably the way that LF rockets would have looked in the 1950s, if Germans had not been involved. The one non-German influenced American rocket (Atlas) shares a surprising amount of structural similarity with the Russian R-7. I don't like the fluster cluck motor assembles either, but with the sphere oxidizer and doughnut propellant tanks, the natural conic shape makes sense given the weak engines they had. (Both the Americans and the Russians.) Not until the days of the mighty F-1s are you going to get away from the conic look.
Not structurally similar, but conceptually. Massive difference there
But yes, gotta do what you gotta do when faced with weak engines and overmassed payloads demanding to be shot into orbit.
What I am working on now is what would be the result if a space program developed 10,000 kNewton thrust solids for throwing a spaceplane into orbit.
Dead crew? The shaking would be horrendous...
Now then you would have your horizontal launch assembly and liftoff. Have you ever seen When Worlds Collide?
Uhh... you don't horizontally assemble Solids, too heavy. And one that has 10k kN thrust? Could the mega-block cranes HII uses for Carrier construction even lift that? Segmented sure, but not all-up integrated.
And if you mean the 50s movie, sadly no. Will attempt to correct this.