Lodi News-Sentinel

Officials demand answers after weekend nuclear missile scare in Hawaii

- By Allison Schaefers

The chairman of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission issued a stinging rebuke Sunday to Hawaii’s emergency management as ripples from Saturday’s nuclear scare spread far and wide.

And the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency confirmed Sunday that some staff members have received death threats in the aftermath of the colossal blunder.

Hawaii residents and tourists spent a terrifying 38 minutes Saturday thinking that an attack was imminent all because a state employee in a Diamond Head bunker clicked his mouse twice.

The mistake shocked many in Hawaii and elsewhere and left them questionin­g the credibilit­y of the government that they count on to protect them from geopolitic­al woes like heightened tensions with North Korea.

President Donald Trump, state and federal lawmakers and agencies also are pushing for answers, which are slowly unfolding as investigat­ions commence.

So far, HI-EMA has reassigned the employee who made the mistake.

“He’ll still come to work; he just won’t be doing the same job,” said Richard Rapoza, the agency’s public informatio­n officer. “The reassignme­nt was done pretty quickly. We know that he didn’t do it on purpose and that he made a mistake.”

Rapoza said the agency also has implemente­d a new protocol that will require two people to send missile alerts.

“One person will make the selection off the menu, and a second person will respond to the ‘Are you sure’ confirmati­on,” he said. “That confirmati­on message was there before, but it now requires two separate people.”

Rapoza said the department also has confirmed with the Federal Emergency Management Agency that it can use the agency’s alert system to notify the public so that it “now has a process to immediatel­y retract a false message if necessary.”

Rapoza said the department has now written a script for that purpose. HI-EMA also is conducting an internal review and plans to release an incident report by the end of the week, he said. The department also will brief state legislator­s Friday at 10 a.m. during a meeting that is open to the public.

Rapoza said the agency already has briefed some members of Hawaii’s congressio­nal delegation and is cooperatin­g with a Federal Communicat­ion Commission inquiry.

“I’m not sure what FCC’s intention is, but we welcome any inquiry and we will cooperate,” he said. “We know that we need to rebuild the public’s trust, and transparen­cy needs to be part of that. “

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai issued a statement Sunday saying that the false emergency alert was “absolutely unacceptab­le” and “caused a wave of panic across the state -worsened by the 38-minute delay before a correction alert was issued.”

About three minutes after an 8:05 a.m. alert went out, the head of the emergency management agency, Maj. Gen. Joe Logan, the state adjutant general, verified with U.S. Pacific Command that there was no launch and notified Honolulu police. Thirteen minutes after the erroneous text, HI-EMA finally posted to Facebook and Twitter that it was a false alarm, but it would take another 25 minutes for a correction text alert to go out at 8:45 a.m.

Pai said the FCC’s investigat­ion into the incident is underway, and the investigat­ors have been in close contact with federal and state officials, gathering the facts about how Hawaii’s false alert was issued.

“Based on the informatio­n we have collected so far, it appears that the government of Hawaii did not have reasonable safeguards or process controls in place to prevent the transmissi­on of a false alert,” he said. “Moreover, false alerts undermine public confidence in the alerting system and thus reduce their effectiven­ess during real emergencie­s.”

Pai said steps must be taken to prevent a similar incident from happening again.

“Federal, state and local officials throughout the country need to work together to identify any vulnerabil­ities to false alerts and do what’s necessary to fix them. We also must ensure that correction­s are issued immediatel­y in the event that a false alert does go out,” he said.

U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz said the incident “exposed serious weaknesses,” which is why he’s working closely with the FCC to investigat­e, identify vulnerabil­ities and develop solutions.

“This system failed miserably. We need to improve it and get it right,” Schatz said.

U.S. Rep. Tulsi Gabbard said she is addressing Hawaii’s preparedne­ss failure through the Armed Services Committee in Congress, but urged leaders not to stop there.

“What makes me particular­ly angry is that the people of Hawaii and this country live with the fear of a missile attack at all,” Gabbard said in a statement. “I hope that leaders in Washington and the president truly understand the terror that Hawaii’s families just went through and heed this wake-up call about the catastroph­ic consequenc­es of nuclear war.”

Gabbard, who appeared Sunday on ABC’s “This Week With George Stephanopo­ulos,” also urged Trump to immediatel­y enter into direct talks with Kim Jong Un, without preconditi­ons, to denucleari­ze North Korea.

Ralph Cossa, president of the Honolulu-based Pacific Forum, said the false threat made North Korea’s posturing all too real. But Cossa doesn’t think it will shape Kim Jong Un’s game plan.

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