Edmonton Journal

Nuclear missile unit fails safety inspection

- ROBERT BURNS

WASHINGTON — A U.S. air force unit that operates one-third of the United States’ land-based nuclear missiles has failed a safety and security inspection, marking the second major setback this year for a force charged with the military’s most sensitive mission, the general in charge of the nuclear air force said in an interview Tuesday.

Lt. Gen. James M. Kowalski, commander of Air Force Global Strike Command, said a team of “relatively low ranking” airmen failed one exercise as part of a broader inspection, which began last week and ended Tuesday. He said that for security reasons he could not be specific about the team or the exercise.

“This unit fumbled on this exercise,” Kowalski said by telephone from his headquarte­rs in Louisiana, adding that this did not call into question the safety or control of nuclear weapons at Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana.

“The team did not demonstrat­e the right procedures,” he said, and as a result was rated a failure. To elaborate “could reveal a potential vulnerabil­ity” in the force, Kowalski said.

In a written statement on its website, Kowalski’s command said there had been “tactical-level errors” in the snap exercise, revealing “discrepanc­ies.”

Without more details it is difficult to reliably judge the severity of the problem uncovered at Malmstrom, home of the 341st Missile Wing, which is one of three nuclear missile wings. Each wing operates 150 Minuteman 3 interconti­nental ballistic missiles, or ICBMs, on alert for potential launch against targets around the globe.

Asked whether the air force intends to take disciplina­ry action against anyone for the inspection failure, Kowalski said the air force is “looking into it.” Overall, the 341st wing “did well,” he said, earning ratings of excellent or outstandin­g in the majority of the 13 areas in which it was graded by inspectors. Those areas include management, administra­tion, safety, security, emergency exercises, worker reliabilit­y and other facets of a mission that relies on teams of officers and enlisted personnel.

ICBM wings undergo two types of inspection­s. The one at Malmstrom was a “surety” inspection, which the Pentagon defines as “nuclear weapon system safety, security and control.” The point is to ensure that no nuclear weapon is accidental­ly, inadverten­tly or deliberate­ly armed or launched without presidenti­al authority.

Kowalski said his command’s inspector general has conducted 14 such inspection­s since early 2010 with just two failures — both involving the 341st wing. The first was in February 2010. The second was this week.

The 341st also failed a safety and security inspection in 2008.

A different type of inspection of the 91st Missile Wing at Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota, in March of this year led the deputy commander of the wing’s operations group to complain of “rot” in the force. Technicall­y, the wing passed that inspection but its missile crews earned the equivalent of a “D” grade when tested on their mastery of Minuteman 3 launch operations using a simulator. The following month the 91st temporaril­y removed 17 officers from launch control duty.

In June, the commander in charge of training and proficienc­y of missile crews at Minot, Lt. Col. Randy Olson, was relieved of duty, citing a “loss of confidence” in his leadership.

Launch operations were not part of the Malmstrom inspection failure, Kowalski said.

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