All stateside Air Force fighter, bomber flights to be halted September
14
Plane was moving missiles whose warheads were supposed to be removed
Nuclear warheads were accidentally left on the missiles, military
officials say
Public was never in danger; nukes could not have detonated, spokesman
says
From Barbara Starr
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Six nuclear warheads on cruise missiles were
mistakenly carried on a flight from North Dakota to Louisiana last
week, prompting a major investigation, military officials have
confirmed.
The plane took the cruise missiles from Minot Air Force Base to
Barksdale Air Force Base for decommissioning Thursday, the Air Force
said.
"This is a major gaffe, and it's going to cause some heads to roll down
the line," said Don Shepperd, a retired Air Force major general and
military analyst for CNN.
Shepperd said the United States had agreed in a Cold War-era treaty not
to fly nuclear weapons. "It appears that what happened was this treaty
agreement was violated," he said.
The warheads should have been removed from the missiles before they
were attached to the B-52 bomber, according to military officials.
Watch the report on the military's investigation »
The crew was unaware that the plane was carrying nuclear weapons, the
officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the
extraordinary sensitivity and security surrounding the case.
The mistake was discovered after the plane's flight to Louisiana.
Minot Air Force Base is in north central North Dakota, and Barksdale
Air Force Base is in northwest Louisiana near the Texas border.
Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell made clear that concerns about
the "error" had escalated to the highest levels.
"Secretary [of Defense Robert] Gates was quickly informed of this
incident ... and he has been receiving daily briefings from Gen. Buzz
Moseley, the Air Force chief of staff, on actions that the Air Force is
taking and the progress of their investigation," Morrell told reporters
Wednesday.
"I can also tell you that it's important enough that President Bush was
notified of it."
Democratic Rep. Ike Skelton, head of the House Armed Services
Committee, called the revelation "deeply disturbing." He said Wednesday
that the committee will press the military to "strengthen controls"
after the incident.
Military officials told CNN that the incident was a major breach of
security rules surrounding nuclear weapons. One official said that he
could not recall anything similar happening.
The Air Force announced that all flights of fighters and bombers in the
United States will be halted on September 14 to allow for a review of
procedures.
Once the mistake was discovered, the Air Force immediately began an
inventory of all of its nuclear weapons, a military official said.
Maj. Gen. Douglas Raaberg, director of Air and Space Operations at the
Air Combat Command in Langley, Virginia, has been ordered to
investigate how the nuclear-tipped missiles were flown across the
country without anyone knowing, officials said.
The squad commander responsible for the munitions has been relieved of
duty, and several others have been "decertified" from handling nuclear
weapons, officials said.
A military official told CNN there was no nuclear risk to public safety
because the weapons were not armed. Officials believe that if the plane
had crashed or the missiles somehow had fallen off the wings, the
warheads would have remained inert and there would have been no nuclear
detonation, though conventional explosive material in the warhead could
have detonated.
Military officials also say the missiles could not have been launched
because of multiple security procedures required to be enacted before
any launch would have been authorized.
Shepperd agreed with military officials that the situation could not
have caused a nuclear detonation.
But he added, "Any time you have nuclear material on board, if the
airplane crashes, nuclear material can be spread in the immediate area
of the crash, so you get radioactivity in the immediate area of the
crash."
"This is serious business, but it was not dangerous business," Shepperd
said.
The story was first reported by the Military Times, a group of
privately published
Original
Source
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