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Why was a nuclear-armed bomber allowed to fly over the US?
By Bill Van Auken
7 September 2007
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Wednesdays revelation that a US Air Force B-52 bomber
flew over the length of the United States armed with six cruise
missiles carrying nuclear warheads has attracted amazingly little
media attention.
The story, first broken by the Military Times web site
based on tips from military officers, was relegated to the bottom
of page 16 in Thursdays New York Times and to page
10 of the Washington Post.
Featured prominently in both newspapers and generally in media
coverage were reassurances from a spokesman for the Air Force
that it represented an isolated mistake and that at
no time was there a threat to public safety.
This incident, however, has immense and ominous significance.
Describing it as an isolated mistake begs the obvious
questions of how a nuclear-armed B-52 was allowed to become airborneostensibly
without the approval of senior officialsand who ordered
this extraordinary flight, and why.
The B-52 took off from Minot Air Force Base in North Dakota
and flew to Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana on August 30
after six nuclear-tipped Advanced Cruise Missiles were mounted
on the pylons under its wings. Each of the warheads carried a
yield of up to 150 kilotons, more than ten times as powerful as
the US bomb that leveled Hiroshima at the close of the Second
World War.
As far as is known, the incident marked the first time that
a US plane has taken off armed with nuclear weapons in nearly
40 years. While bombers were kept in the air in the 1960s as part
of the nuclear brinksmanship with the USSR, the practice was halted
in 1968 after a series of accidents involving nuclear-armed B-52s.
After that, bombers loaded with nuclear weapons were kept on alert
at the end of runways for rapid takeoff until 1991, when this
practice was halted as well.
A Pentagon spokesman said that the incident prompted an emergency
call by the Air Force chief of staff, Gen. Michael Buzz
Mosley, to Defense Secretary Robert Gates, adding that it
was important enough that President Bush was notified of it.
In response to the episode, the Pentagon has announced that
a munitions squadron commander at Minot has been relieved of his
duties and several airmen have been decertified for handling nuclear
weapons. It also reported that an investigation is continuing.
The Air Force announced in March that the Advanced Cruise Missile
(ACM) is being phased out under a nuclear reduction treaty signed
with Moscow in 2002, and it has been suggested that the weapons
were being transported between the two bases as part of this process.
The transport of weapons from one base to another, however, is
normally carried out in the holds of C-17 and C-130 cargo planes,
not fixed to the wings of combat bombers.
Someone had to give the order to mount the missiles on the
plane. The question is whether it was a local Air Force commandereither
by mistake or deliberatelyor whether the order came from
higher up.
The first scenario recalls nothing so much as the 1964 black
comedy produced by filmmaker Stanley Kubrick, Dr. Strangelove.
The films plot centered on the unilateral order given by
a delusional air force commander, Gen. Jack D. Ripper, for an
air wing to carry out an unprovoked nuclear first strike against
the Soviet Union. The US president is shocked to find out that
supposed failsafe systems barring any such strike without his
direct order have been overridden.
Given the Pentagons claim that the incident represented
a mistake, the Minot-Barksdale flight indicates that
the present failsafe systemseither deliberately or inadvertentlydo
not prevent a single commander from deploying nuclear weapons.
Experts on nuclear weapons have described the episode as shocking
and inexplicable. It seems so fantastic that so many points,
checks can dysfunction, said Hans Kristensen, the Federation
of American Scientists chief researcher on US nuclear forces.
Thats perhaps what is most worrisome about this particular
incidentthat apparently an individual who had command authority
about moving these weapons around decided to do so.
Representative Edward Markey, a ranking Democrat on the House
Homeland Security Committee, issued a statement declaring it absolutely
inexcusable that the Air Force lost track of these ... warheads,
even for a short period of time.
Markey added, Nothing like this has ever been reported
before and we have been assured for decades that it was impossible.
The implication is that the threat of a nuclear holocaust is
even greater today than at the height of the Cold War against
the Soviet Union.
The US maintains a nuclear stockpile estimated at 9,900 warheads,
nearly half of which are operationally deployed. It is estimated
that the US and Russia have more than 1,000 warheads each on high
alert, with the ability to launch them with ten minutes notice.
There have been persistent reports that the nuclear command
and control system in the former Soviet Union has deteriorated
significantly for lack of investment, prompting fears that an
accidental launch has become more likely.
Meanwhile, the US, in the wake of the Soviet Unions collapse,
has elaborated a doctrine of preventive warwars
of aggressionwhich it has implemented in countries on or
near Russias borders, from the former Yugoslavia to Afghanistan
and Iraq. The Bush administration has also repeatedly floated
plans for the unilateral use of nuclear weapons in war.
There is another tactical consideration that makes the supposed
mix-up at Minot Air Base even more chilling. The Air Force, as
well as the Navy, is increasingly making dual use of its cruise
missiles, changing nuclear warheads for conventional ones. Conventional
Air Launched Cruise Missiles have been used extensively in recent
US military interventions. If such a mistake is possible
in a flight between two US air bases, presumably it is equally
possible in a wartime situation, with the potential of a B-52
launching a nuclear strike against a target that was meant to
be hit with a conventional weapon.
The second possibilitythat the flight was authorized
at a higher levelposes an even more immediate threat.
B-52s from Barksdale have been used repeatedly to strike targets
in Iraq, firing cruise missiles at Iraqi targets in 1996 and 1998,
and in the shock and awe campaign that preceded the
2003 invasion, carrying out some 150 bombing runs that devastated
much of the southern half of the country.
Moreover, the weapon that was fixed to the wings of the B-52
flying from Minot air base was designed for use against hardened
targets, such as underground bunkers.
Given the ratcheting up of the threats against Iran and the
previous reports of plans for the use of tactical
nuclear weapons against Iranian nuclear installations, there is
a very real possibility that the flight to Barksdale was part
of covert preparations for a nuclear strike against Iran.
If this is indeed the case, the claims about a mistake
by a munitions officer and a few airmen in North Dakota may well
be merely a cover story aimed at concealing the fact that the
government in Washington is preparing a criminal act of world
historic proportions by orderingwithout provocationthe
first use of nuclear weapons since the bombings of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki more than sixty years ago.
See Also:
US threats against
Iran--the specter of nuclear barbarism
[13 April 2006]
US plans widespread
use of nuclear weapons in war
[11 March 2002]
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