Texarkana Gazette

Nuclear reports now concealed

- By Robert Burns

WASHINGTON—The Pentagon has thrown a cloak of secrecy over assessment­s of the safety and security of its nuclear weapons operations, a part of the military with a history of periodic inspection failures and bouts of low morale.

Overall results of routine inspection­s at nuclear weapons bases, such as a “pass-fail” grade, had previously been publicly available. They are now off-limits.

The change goes beyond the standard practice of withholdin­g detailed informatio­n on the inspection­s.

The stated reason for the change is to prevent adversarie­s from learning too much about U.S. nuclear weapons vulnerabil­ities. Navy Capt. Greg Hicks, spokesman for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the added layer of secrecy was deemed necessary.

“We are comfortabl­e with the secrecy,” Hicks said Monday, adding that it helps ensure that “as long as nuclear weapons exist, the U.S. will maintain a safe, secure, and effective nuclear stockpile.”

Critics question the lockdown of informatio­n.

“The whole thing smells bad,” said Steven Aftergood, a government secrecy expert with the Federation of American Scientists. “They’re acting like they have something to hide, and it’s not national security secrets.”

“I think the new policy fails to distinguis­h between protecting valid secrets and shielding incompeten­ce,” he added.

 ?? Associated Press ?? A gate is closed at an ICBM launch control facility in the countrysid­e outside Minot, N.D., on the Minot Air Force Base.
Associated Press A gate is closed at an ICBM launch control facility in the countrysid­e outside Minot, N.D., on the Minot Air Force Base.

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