Chattanooga Times Free Press

Air Force expands cancer review of crew stationed at nuclear missile sites

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WASHINGTON — The Air Force’s review of cancers among its nuclear missile corps will include all personnel who worked on, guarded, supported or operated the nation’s ground-based warheads, Air Force Global Strike Command announced Wednesday.

Nine officers who had worked as missileers — the airmen who launch the warheads from undergroun­d silos and control centers — at Montana’s Malmstrom Air Force Base were diagnosed with with non-Hodgkin lymphoma, a type of blood cancer, Lt. Col. Daniel Sebeck of U.S. Space Force reported last month in a briefing obtained by The Associated Press.

Since that briefing, more missileers and missile support crew have come forward to the AP and other media outlets to report they, too, have been diagnosed with either nonHodgkin lymphoma or other types of cancers.

The Air Force review will extend beyond Malmstrom to include F.E. Warren Air Force Base in Wyoming and Minot Air Force Base in North Dakota. Together the three bases operate 450 silos that house the nation’s arsenal of ground-based nuclear warheads carried by Minuteman III interconti­nental ballistic missiles.

Malmstrom was one of the sensitive military locations over which a suspected Chinese spy balloon loitered as it transited the United States earlier this month.

The “Missile Community Cancer Study,” to be conducted by the Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, will look at all ICBM wings and all Air Force personnel who support the ICBM mission. It will review environmen­tal factors at the missile bases and silos, and examine “the possibilit­y of clusters of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma” among missileers and those who maintained, guarded and supported the bases, the head of Air Force Global Strike Command, Gen. Thomas Bussiere, said in a statement.

The review will look at active-duty medical data and the Department of Veterans Affairs’ cancer registry data, mortality data and public cancer registries. Col. Lee Williams, the command’s surgeon general, said there was not yet a timeline for the study.

The Air Force has also establishe­d a website to address the missileer community concerns.

 ?? SENIOR AIRMAN DANIEL BROSAM/U.S. AIR FORCE VIA AP ?? Two airmen from the 341st Missile Maintenanc­e Squadron work on an interconti­nental ballistic missile in 2020 at a launch facility near Malmstrom Air Force Base in Great Falls, Mont.
SENIOR AIRMAN DANIEL BROSAM/U.S. AIR FORCE VIA AP Two airmen from the 341st Missile Maintenanc­e Squadron work on an interconti­nental ballistic missile in 2020 at a launch facility near Malmstrom Air Force Base in Great Falls, Mont.

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