(Another) Air Force scandal: cheating by nuclear launch officers
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| WASHINGTON
The US Air Force officers who hold the keys to America鈥檚 nuclear arsenal have another scandal on their hands 鈥 one that has the service on the defensive as it fields questions about whether the world鈥檚 most destructive weapons are indeed in the hands of competent professionals.
This one involves 16 nuclear launch officers that are accused of getting answers to a monthly missile launch test via text message, 17 that knew their colleagues were cheating but failing to report it, and one who gave them the answers.
In another unhappy twist for the Air Force, the cheating scandal 鈥 the biggest one ever uncovered among the military鈥檚 nuclear officers, according to Pentagon officials 鈥 was discovered while investigators were digging into allegations of narcotics possession by troops in the Air Force Global Strike Command.
It turns out that two of the nuclear officers accused of cheating were found to be in possession of illegal drugs as well.
This all comes on the heels of a top Air Force officer, Maj. Gen. Michael Carey, getting drunk in Moscow bars and, according to an internal Air Force report, talking 鈥渓oudly about the importance of his position as commander of the only operational nuclear force in the world and that he saves the world from war every day.鈥
Major General Carey was removed from his post as head of US land-based nuclear missiles in October but remains in the military.聽
Air Force officials insist that these lapses are no reflection on the overall fitness of the US nuclear force.聽
鈥淚 am profoundly disappointed in the airmen that were involved in this,鈥 Deborah Lee James, the new Secretary of the Air Force, told Pentagon reporters Wednesday, in her first briefing on the job.
That said, 鈥淏ased on everything I know today, I have great confidence in the security and effectiveness of our ICBM [intercontinental ballistic missile] force,鈥 she added. 鈥淭his was a failure of some of our airmen. It was not a failure of the nuclear mission.鈥
But doesn鈥檛 a failure of the airmen within the mission amount to a failure of the mission itself?
It does not, Ms. James argued. 鈥淚 have learned that the nuclear system is full of checks and balances,鈥 she assured reporters.
These include 鈥渙utside inspections that take place on a regular basis鈥 and 鈥渕ultiple tests involved in the system.鈥
On this point, Gen. Mark Welsh, the Air Force鈥檚 top officer, who was also at the briefing, quickly concurred.
True, troops from a wing at Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana, where the cheating scandal took place, failed a nuclear security inspection last August. That failure, however, had 鈥渘othing to do with air crew operational procedures鈥 but rather had to do 鈥渨ith a problem in a security scenario,鈥 General Welsh said.聽
These forces were given a retest in October, 鈥渁nd they scored the highest possible grade. In November, they had a nuclear operations readiness inspection and scored excellent.鈥澛
This week, the head of Global Strike Command ordered a proficiency test administered to all missile crew members.聽
So far, 100 people 鈥 or 20 percent of the missile crew force 鈥 had taken the test, and 97 of them passed it. 鈥淭hat 97 percent pass rate matches our historical averages,鈥 Welsh said.
Those implicated in the cheating have been decertified and restricted from missile crew duty, with their security clearances suspended.
There will also be other inspections and investigations, he promised. 鈥淭he integrity issue, clearly, has got to be a concern with this kind of activity at this level. And we鈥檙e going to look into this with every means at our disposal.鈥澛
鈥淚鈥檓 confident about the mission 鈥 not about the integrity of these particular airmen,鈥 James added. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the part that鈥檚 so disappointing.鈥澛