Los Angeles Times

Scandal grows for Air Force

Nearly half the missile launch officers at one base are implicated in a cheating inquiry.

- By David S. Cloud david.cloud@latimes.com

Cheating points to “systemic problems” in nuclear force.

WASHINGTON — Nearly half of the officers responsibl­e for maintainin­g and operating nucleararm­ed missiles at a Montana base have been implicated in a widening cheating investigat­ion, a sign of deep cultural and command problems in the nuclear force, the leader of the Air Force said Thursday.

Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James said at a Pentagon news conference that 92 of 190 launch officers at Malmstrom Air Force Base had been suspended because of the investigat­ion into the sharing of answers on a proficienc­y test last year.

For the first time since the Air Force disclosed the cheating scandal this month, officials acknowledg­ed that the cheating stemmed from a climate of fear created by commanders, who decided which officers on launch crews would be promoted based on whether they scored perfectly on monthly tests.

“I believe that we do have systemic problems,” James said. “The need for perfection has created a climate of undue stress and fear.”

The number of implicated officers has nearly tripled since Jan. 15, when the Air Force announced that 16 had shared text messages with answers to a monthly missile proficienc­y test and that 17 others were aware of the suspected cheating but took no action.

Air Force officials continued to say they had no firm evidence that cheating went beyond the single test last year or that it had occurred at the two other Minuteman III missile bases, one in North Dakota and another in Wyoming. They acknowledg­e, however, that a climate of fear exists at all three installati­ons.

The 550 launch officers at the three bases take three written tests each month on missile safety, handling of launch codes and classified war plans. They also complete a monthly test in a simulator and an annual inspection, along with periodic unannounce­d inspection­s.

Eight times a month, a two-man crew completes a 24-hour shift in an undergroun­d launch center.

The cheating investigat­ion is focusing on a “core group” of about 40 officers at Malmstrom who are believed to have been most involved in sharing test answers, said Lt. Gen. Stephen Wilson, head of the Air Force Global Strike Command, which oversees missiles and long-range bombers that carry nuclear weapons.

The rest were aware of cheating but may not have used the answers, he said.

With all 92 officers under investigat­ion suspended from launch duty, the remaining crews at Malmstrom have been required to work more shifts, and senior officers have been moved back to launch duty to keep the base’s 150 missiles operationa­l, Wilson said.

Wilson said he had a “force improvemen­t program” to fix what were described as systemic problems that the interconti­nental ballistic missile force faces. He said commanders would be discipline­d if they were found to have contribute­d to those problems.

“We’re going to take this wherever it goes,” he said.

Some former launch officers say that cheating in various forms on the tests has been common for decades, though they say the pressure to achieve perfect scores has increased in recent years — ironically, as the importance of nuclear weapons to U.S. national security has declined with the end of the Cold War.

After a 2007 incident in which nuclear weapons were mishandled at Minot Air Force Base in North Dakota, the Air Force created Global Strike Command to reinforce the need for rigorous attention to the secure and reliable handling of the weapons.

The result was even more pressure on launch crews and more tests, said Bruce Blair, a former Minuteman launch officer and co-founder of Global Zero, which advocates worldwide eliminatio­n of nuclear weapons.

“Suddenly there were nothing but inspection­s going on constantly,” he said. “This new organizati­on [Global Strike Command] needed a mission, and it meant that testing took on a life of its own.”

 ?? Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images ?? AIR FORCE Secretary Deborah Lee James cited “a climate of undue stress and fear.”
Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images AIR FORCE Secretary Deborah Lee James cited “a climate of undue stress and fear.”

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