From the Los Angeles Times
Air Force's nuclear focus has dimmed, studies find
The two independent reviews were ordered
after a B-52 bomber unknowingly carried nuclear warheads across the
country last year.
By Peter Spiegel
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 13, 2008
WASHINGTON —
The U.S. military has lost focus on its nuclear-weapons mission and has
suffered a sharp decline in nuclear expertise, factors that may have
contributed to a mishap last year in which a B-52 bomber unknowingly
carried six nuclear warheads across the country, according to two new
independent reviews.
Both
studies found that levels of nuclear training and alertness at the Air
Force slipped after the end of the Cold War. But one of the reports was
much more critical, saying accidents far worse than the errant B-52
flight could occur without immediate changes in nuclear procedures.
"The
task force and several of the senior [Defense Department] people
interviewed believe that the decline in focus has been more pronounced
than realized and too extreme to be acceptable," said the report
compiled by an outside panel chaired by retired Air Force Gen. Larry D.
Welch.
Both reviews were ordered after the August bomber flight,
in which Air Force weapons officers accidentally loaded the B-52 in
North Dakota with nuclear weapons.
The bombs were flown to an air base in Louisiana the following day,
where they were eventually discovered and belatedly secured.
Dozens
of officers have been either disciplined or relieved of command, but
the Welch report's findings raise new questions about whether failures
within the Air Force were more systemic than originally believed. The
first Air Force investigation into the incident, completed in October,
pinned much of the blame on individual officers at Minot Air Force Base
in North Dakota.
Neither Welch's study nor an internal Air Force
review, conducted by Maj. Gen. Polly A. Peyer, found any failures in
the security of U.S. nuclear weapons. But at a Capitol Hill hearing,
Welch testified that the military units responsible for handling the
bombs are not properly inspected and, as a result, may not be ready to
perform their missions.
"We have uncovered no safety issues,"
Welch said. "If you look at all the areas and all the ways that we have
to store and handle these weapons in order to perform the mission, it
just requires, we believe, more resources and more attention than
they're getting."
Both studies could put new pressure on Gen. T.
Michael Moseley, the Air Force chief of staff, to reorganize the
service's nuclear forces.
After the Cold War, the once-vaunted
Strategic Air Command, which controlled all Air Force nuclear weapons,
was dismantled. The military's nuclear missiles were assigned to a
division responsible for operations in space, and its nuclear bombers
were moved to Air Combat Command, which also includes nonnuclear
fighters and reconnaissance aircraft.
Although the internal Air
Force review has not been made public, a copy of its executive summary
obtained by The Times asserts that the split organization has led to
fragmentation of policies and accountability, without a single
commander responsible for nuclear missions.
In an interview,
Peyer, who headed the 30-person internal review, said that her report
does not specifically recommend re-creating the Strategic Air Command,
and she warned against attempting to go back to Cold War polices with a
nuclear force that is now much smaller than in the 1980s.
"We can't go back to where we were in 1991," Peyer said. "We don't live
in the same world. It's not the same environment."
However,
the Welch report is highly critical of the split commands. The report
concludes that combining nuclear forces with nonnuclear organizations
has led to "markedly reduced levels of leadership whose daily focus is
the nuclear enterprise and a general devaluation of the nuclear mission
and those who perform the mission."
Welch's report was completed
at the request of Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, who has already
raised concerns with Air Force officials that the original
investigation into the B-52 incident may have unfairly limited blame to
midlevel officers. The internal Air Force investigation was ordered by
Moseley.
Air Force officials said they are already
implementing many of the recommendations in both reports but insisted
that existing regulations governing nuclear procedures were adequate.
Testifying
alongside Welch, Lt. Gen. Daniel J. Darnell, the Air Force's head of
operations, said that while Peyer's blue-ribbon commission showed that
the service could improve its nuclear programs, the underlying policies
and procedures were validated.
"The Air Force portion of the
nuclear deterrent is sound, and we will take every measure necessary to
provide safe, secure, reliable nuclear surety to the American public,"
Darnell said.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times