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Swanny Note: I could only find this in an AP story. I am working hard to avoid all AP stories due to them sueing companies for using their images and it will only be a matter of time until the do that with stories.
The Air Force said Friday it would punish 70 airmen
involved in the accidental, cross-country flight of a nuclear-armed
B-52 bomber following an investigation that found widespread disregard
for the rules on handling such munitions.
"There has been an
erosion of adherence to weapons-handling standards at Minot Air Force
Base and Barksdale Air Force Base," said Maj. Gen. Richard Newton, the
Air Force deputy chief of staff for operations.
Newton was
announcing the results of a six-week probe into the Aug. 29-30 incident
in which the B-52 was inadvertently armed with six nuclear-tipped
cruise missiles and flown from Minot in North Dakota to Barksdale in
Louisiana without anyone noticing the mistake for more than a day.
The missiles were supposed to be taken to Louisiana, but the warheads were supposed to have been removed beforehand.
A
main reason for the error was that crews had decided not to follow a
complex schedule under which the status of the missiles is tracked
while they are disarmed, loaded, moved and so on, one official said on
condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on the
record.
The airmen replaced the schedule with their own
"informal" system, he said, though he didn't say why they did that nor
how long they had been doing it their own way.
"This was an
unacceptable mistake and a clear deviation from our exacting
standards," Air Force Secretary Michael W. Wynne said at a Pentagon
press conference with Newton. "We hold ourselves accountable to the
American people and want to ensure proper corrective action has been
taken."
Newton acknowledged that the Air Force needs to "restore
the confidence" lost among the American people after the August
incident, which raised questions about the safety of the country's
nuclear arsenal.
"We are making all appropriate changes to ensure this has a minimal chance of ever happening again," Wynne said.
Newton
said the flight in question resulted from an "unprecedented string of
procedural errors," beginning with a failure by airmen to conduct a
required inspection of the missiles before they were loaded aboard the
B-52 bomber at Minot. The crew flying the plane was unaware nuclear
warheads were on its wing, though it wasn't explained what role they
played in the mistake.
Highest among those to be punished are
four officers who were relieved this week of their commands, including
the 5th Bomb Wing commander at Minot — Col. Bruce Emig, who also has
been the base commander since June.
In addition, the wing has been "decertified from its wartime mission," Newton said.
Some
65 airmen have been decertified from handling nuclear weapons. The
certification process looks at a person's psychological profile, any
medications they are taking and other factors in determining a person's
reliability to handle weapons.
After it was loaded with the
missiles, the B-52 sat overnight at Minot, flew the next morning to
Louisiana, and then sat on a tarmac again for hours before anyone
noticed the nuclear warheads.
Newton avoided repeated questions
on what extra security would have been required if crews had known the
nuclear weapons were on the plane. But another official later said
privately that security was increased as soon as the nuclear warheads
were discovered.
The Air Combat Command ordered a command-wide
stand-down — instituted base by base and completed Sept. 14 — to set
aside time for personnel to review procedures, officials said.
The incident was so serious that it required President Bush and Defense Secretary Robert Gates to be quickly informed.
Wynne
prefaced his remarks about the B-52 incident by saying that, in
publicly confirming that nuclear weapons were involved, he had
authorized a one-time exception to U.S. policy, which states that the
location of nuclear weapons will never be confirmed publicly. He said
he made this exception because of the seriousness of the episode and
its importance to the nation.
The weapon involved was the
Advanced Cruise Missile, a "stealth" weapon developed in the 1980s with
the ability to evade detection by Soviet radar. The Air Force said in
March that it had decided to retire the Advanced Cruise Missile fleet
soon, and officials said after the breach that the missiles were being
flown to Barksdale for decommissioning.
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On the Net:
Air Combat Command: http://www.acc.af.mil
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