- Some History
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- Barksdale Missile Number Six deserves
far more public attention than it's received to date.
Missile Number Six is potentially the major story of at
least this year.
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- Until 1968 under the Airborne Alert
Program, informally called Operation Chrome Dome, the Air
Force routinely kept about a dozen strategic bombers with
nuclear weapons flying at all times.
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- One predictable result was crashes and
incidents. In 1968 the Department of Defense published a
list of 13 serious nuclear weapons accidents that occurred
between 1950 and 1968. In 1980 the list was revised to
include 32 incidents through that year.
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- Notably, the Pentagon has not
acknowledged any accidents since 1980. This alone highlights
the importance the Pentagon is placing on the recent
transportation of nuclear weapons from North Dakota to
Louisiana.
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- Through 1968, several reported incidents
involved plane crashes or malfunctions, beginning with the
crash of a B-29 near Fairfield, California in August 1950.
The resulting blast was felt 30 miles away.
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- In July 1950 a B-50 crashed near
Lebanon, Ohio. The high-explosive trigger for the nuclear
weapon detonated on impact. The blast was felt over 25 miles
away.
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- In May 1957 a nuclear weapon fell from
the bomb bay of a B-36 near Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Parachutes malfunctioned and the weapon was destroyed on
impact.
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- In October 1957 near Homestead, Florida
a B-47 crashed. The nuclear weapon was burned.
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- In March 1958 a B-47 accidentally
dropped a nuclear weapon near Florence, South Carolina. The
high-explosive trigger detonated on impact.
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- In November 1958 a B-47 crashed near
Abilene, Texas. The trigger of the nuclear weapon exploded
upon impact.
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- In July 1959 a C-124 crashed near
Bossier City, Louisiana. Both plane and nuclear weapon were
destroyed.
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- In October 1959 a B-52 with two nuclear
weapons was involved in a mid-air collision near
Hardinsburg, Kentucky. One weapon partially burned.
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- In January 1961 a B-52 broke apart in
mid-air near Goldsboro, North Carolina. Two nuclear weapons
were released. The parachute on one weapon malfunctioned,
and contamination was spread over a wide area. The uranium
core was never recovered. Daniel Ellsberg reported that
detonation was a very real risk because five of six safety
devices failed.
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- In that month near Monticello, Idaho a
B-52 carrying nuclear weapons exploded in mid-air. No
information was made available as to the weapons.
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- In March 1961 a B-52 with two nuclear
weapons crashed near Yuba City, California.
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- In January 1964 a B-52 carrying two
nuclear weapons crashed near Cumberland, Maryland.
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- In January 1966 a B-52 carrying four
hydrogen bombs crashed after a mid-air collision near
Palomares, Spain. Two weapons exploded on impact, with
resulting plutonium contamination. A months-long program was
undertaken to locate and extract the other two weapons from
the ocean. Major policy changes were taken under
consideration.
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- In January 1968 a B-52 carrying four
hydrogen weapons crashed and burned near Thule AFB in
Greenland. Explosives in one bomb detonated, spreading
plutonium contamination. Apparently, the other three weapons
have never been accounted for.
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- Following large public protests Denmark,
which owns Greenland and prohibits nuclear weapons on or
over its territory, filed a strong protest. A few days later
the Secretary of Defense ordered the removal of nuclear
weapons from planes. After that order was issued, all
aircraft armed with nuclear weapons were grounded but kept
in a constant state of alert.
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- In 1991 by Presidential order, nuclear
weapons were removed from all aircraft. Bomber nuclear
ground alerts, during which nuclear weapons are loaded onto
bombers during test and training exercises, were halted.
After that time, all nuclear weapons to be delivered by
plane were permanently maintained in secure storage
facilities.
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- August 30, 2007
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- All of which makes the transport of
nuclear weapons in combat position on a combat plane so
newsworthy.
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- On August 30, for the first time since
1968, nuclear warheads in combat position were carried by an
American bomber. Numerous international treaty provisions
were violated in the process.
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- That Thursday, a B-52H Stratofortress
flew from Minot AFB in North Dakota to Barksdale AFB in
Louisiana while carrying twelve cruise missiles. Either five
or six of those missiles were armed with nuclear warheads.
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- Cruise Missiles
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- The missiles on the B-52 were AGM-129
Advanced Cruise Missile units, specifically designed to be
launched from wing pods of B-52H planes.
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- A total of 460 units were manufactured
by Raytheon. A total of 394 units are currently maintained
by the Air Force. Apparently, 38 are to be modernized and
upgraded in Fiscal Year 2008 and the other 356 are to be
decommissioned pursuant to the 2002 Moscow treaty.
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- Raytheon has publicly announced the
AGM-129 missiles are to be modified to accomplish a
"classified cruise missile mission". This has widely been
interpreted to mean conversion to bunker-busters, most
likely for use in Iran. This widely accepted explanation is
being used to explain why armed cruise missiles are being
flown in American airspace.
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- Nuclear Warheads
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- The AGM-129 was specifically designed to
deliver a W-80 nuclear warhead. The W-80 weapon has a
variable yield capability, of 5 to 150 kilotons. For
comparison purposes, the bomb used on Hiroshima was 13 to 15
kilotons, or equivalent to 13,000 to 15,000 tons of TNT
explosive.
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- News Stories and Flawed Explanations
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- The story of the B-52 flight was first
reported by Army Times, owned by Gannett, on Wednesday
September 5. Gannett relied on information provided by
"anonymous officers". The story was picked up by Yahoo
Wednesday morning, published by USA Today and The Washington
Pos, and then quickly spread.
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- In response, the Pentagon quickly spread
an official explanation.
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- The Air Force admitted to an inadvertent
error: The intent was to transport ACMs without weapons.
According to military officers, the nuclear warheads should
have been removed before the missiles were mounted on the
pylons under the wings of the bomber.
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- In the words of the Pentagon:
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- "There was an error which occurred
during a regularly scheduled transfer of weapons between two
bases. The weapons were safe and remained in Air Force
control and custody at all times."
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- For almost the first time in the history
of the nation, the military has publicly and promptly
admitted it "made a mistake". This in itself is truly
astounding.
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- To reinforce the military's claim that a
mistake was made, a system-wide stand-down was ordered for
September 14.
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- That official explanation was quickly
explained away. The mistake was made intentionally, so a
"deliberate leak" of a secret operation could occur.
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- The CIA and the Office of
Counter-Terrorism in the State Department explained that
Barksdale AFB is a "jumping off point" for re-supply of the
Middle East.
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- The "deliberate leak" was intended to
serve as a veiled warning to Iran. This deliberately
misleading explanation is evidently intended to lead the
public or Iran or both to logically conclude the missiles
are bound for Iran.
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- Bluntly, State and the CIA converted a
whistleblower leak by true American patriots into a
deliberate leak by official Washington, to scare Iran.
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- By this means Washington has led the
public to forget or overlook the real issue.
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- To begin, the multiple official
explanations reek to high heaven. They collectively read
suspiciously like flimsy cover stories concocted in hasty
desperation. And no amount of pretty lipstick will be able
to make the official explanations pretty.
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- Transportation Violations
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- More conflicting explanations followed.
These missiles are part of a group scheduled to be
decommissioned. This would explain why they were shipped out
of North Dakota.
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- But the missiles were not transported on
their way to decommissioning. Missiles are normally
decommissioned at Davis-Monthan AFB at Tucson. Nuclear
weapons are decommissioned at the Department of Energy's
Pantex facility near Amarillo, Texas, accessed through
Kirkland AFB in New Mexico.
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- And military policy requires
minimization of the number of flights made with nuclear
weapons aboard. So the weapons should not have been mounted
on the missiles, flown to Louisiana, un-mounted and flown to
New Mexico.
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- The mode of transportation is also a
major issue not defused by official explanations. Per
standard operating procedures, or SOPs, both missiles and
nuclear warheads are transported primarily by air, in
specially modified C-130s or C-17s. Under no peacetime
circumstances do military SOPs allow transport of nuclear
weapons mounted in cruise missiles mounted in combat
positions on combat planes.
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- Department of Defense Directive Number
4540.5, issued on February 4, 1998, regulates logistic
transportation of nuclear weapons.
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- By delegation of Commanders of Combatant
Commands, movement of nuclear weapons must be approved by
commanders of major service commands.
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- Commanders of Combat Commands or service
component commanders must evaluate, authorize and approve
transport modes and movement routes for nuclear weapons in
their custody.
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- The Air Force is required to maintain a
Prime Nuclear Airlift Force capability to conduct the
logistic transport of nuclear weapons.
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- Under SOPs, combat planes with
combat-ready nuclear weapons can only be flown on the
authority of the Commander in Chief, the Joint Chiefs of
Staff or the National Military Command Authority.
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- All of these transportation regulations
were flagrantly violated on August 30.
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- Handling Violations
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- Violations of regulations concerning
handling of the nuclear weapons in North Dakota are worse.
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- A sophisticated computerized tracking
system is used for nuclear weapons. Multiple sign-offs are
required to remove the weapons from their storage bunkers.
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- The AGM-129 Advanced Cruise Missile was
designed to carry nuclear weapons. No non-nuclear warhead is
available for this missile. So the only possible error could
have been loading nuclear warheads on the missiles instead
of practice dummies.
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- The practice warheads have standard blue
and yellow signs declaring "Inert, non-nuclear". The nuclear
warheads have at least three distinctive red warning signs.
This error is therefore highly improbable, absent tampering
with signage.
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- Nuclear weapons are transported from the
storage bunker to the aircraft in a caravan that routinely
includes vehicles with machine guns front and rear and
guards with M-16s. All steps in the process are done under
the watchful eyes of armed military police.
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- Rules require that at least two people
jointly control every step of the process. If one person
loses sight of the other, both are forced to the ground
face-down and temporarily "placed under arrest" by observant
security forces. All progress stops until inspections are
made to assure the weapons weren't tampered with.
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- All nuclear weapons are connected to
sophisticated alarm systems to prevent removal or tampering.
They could only be removed from the storage bunker by
turning the alarm off. And the squad commander clearly would
not have authority to turn off the alarm.
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- The Impossible Mistake
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- Bluntly, the mistake of loading nuclear
weapons on a combat aircraft in combat-ready position is
simply not possible to make. Safeguards are far too
stringent and far too many people would be involved.
Particularly given that the mounting was in violation of
policy that's been in place without exception for almost 40
years.
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- No discipline is expected to be meted
out. The New York Times tried to imply the commanding
general had been fired. Actually, the squad commander in
charge of munitions crews at Minot was "relieved of duty
pending an investigation". He has not been removed from his
position or disciplined. The crews involved have been
"temporarily decertified pending corrective actions or
additional training" but have not been disciplined. No
mention has been made of the wing commander.
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- Note carefully: These actions amount to
nothing at all. The wing and squad commanders are still in
place and the crews can easily be re-certified.
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- Successful Confusion
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- Washington's efforts to confuse the
public have been successful. Attention has shifted from the
crucial issue.
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- This news has already become non-news.
The August 14 stand-down will momentarily become news,
followed by announcements of more stringent restrictions,
improved safeguards and additional training. The public
always has been and always will be safe.
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- One of the major issues will be avoided:
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- Someone in an irregular chain of Air
Force command authorized loading and transport of nuclear
weapons.
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- And that would never have been done
without a reason. Given the magnitude of regulatory
violations involved, the reason must be extremely important.
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- The paramount issue will be avoided, if
necessary with repetition of the reassurance that the Air
Force was in control at all times. The weapons were only
missing during the 3.5-hour flight.
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- At Barksdale, the missiles were
considered to be unarmed items headed for modernization or
the scrap heap, and of no particular importance. They were
left unguarded for almost ten hours.
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- According to one report, almost ten
hours were required for airmen at Minot AFB to convince
superiors that the nuclear weapons had disappeared.
According to information provided to Congress, this time
lapsed before airmen at Barksdale "noticed" the weapons were
present. News reports will continue to overlook this fact
also.
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- Even here the focus is on time. The
number of missiles and warheads issue was overlooked.
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- Early news reports spoke of five nuclear
warheads loaded onto the bomber. Apparently, this
information was provided from Barksdale.
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- That number was later updated to six
weapons missing from Minot, apparently based on anonymous
tips provided to Military Times by people at Minot. This
information has also been forgotten.
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- Conclusion
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- Six nuclear weapons disappeared from
Minot AFB in North Dakota.
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- Five nuclear weapons were discovered at
Barksdale AFB in Louisiana.
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- Which leads to my chilling conclusion:
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- Someone, operating under a special chain
of command within the United States Air Force, just stole a
nuclear weapon.
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- What next?
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- The answer has been provided several
times, most recently by CIA Director and General Michael
Hayden. On September 7, dressed in full military uniform,
Hayden told assembled members of the Council of Foreign
Relations:
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- "Our analysts assess with high
confidence that al-Qaida's central leadership is planning
high-impact plots against the U. S. homeland."
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- "We assess with high confidence that al-Qaida
is focusing on targets that would produce mass casualties,
dramatic destruction and significant aftershocks."
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- An eye for an eye. Use of nukes will
justify use of nukes. A perfect excuse to wage nuclear war
against Iran.
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- I suspect Hayden is absolutely correct,
except for his mistaken identification of the "central
leadership" that is planning detonation of a nuclear weapon
on American soil.
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