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Action for a Nuclear Weapons Free World
Better Oversight Of Nuclear
Arms Urged
The Air Force chief of staff wants
the U.S. government to update how it keeps track of the arsenal.
By Julian E. Barnes
Los Angeles Times
November 26, 2008
BARKSDALE AIR FORCE BASE, LA. -- The U.S. government
must take steps to modernize how it keeps track of its nuclear weapons
to help prevent mistakes, Air Force Chief of Staff Norton A. Schwartz
said Tuesday on a visit to part of his service's nuclear force.
Schwartz visited Barksdale Air Force Base, one of the installations
housing the nation's nuclear-capable B-52 bombers, in a trip designed
to emphasize the importance of reforms in how weapons are handled.
Schwartz became the top uniformed Air Force officer in August with
a mandate to overhaul nuclear weapons procedures after a series
of problems involving oversight of the nuclear arsenal, including
the mistaken transfer of several warheads from North Dakota to Louisiana
last year.
The new Air Force chief praised airmen for passing surprise inspections
conducted at the base in recent months.
But he appeared disappointed when told that the Air Force still
used paper ledgers to keep track of nuclear weapons.
He later discussed with senior generals ways that the tracking process
could be improved.
"It seems to me there is a more modern way to maintain inventories
of weapons and nuclear materials," Schwartz said in an interview
after his visit to the base.
Schwartz said Pentagon and Energy Department officials were exploring
the use of bar codes on warheads and other parts to better track
them.
Also under consideration are proposals to use global positioning
systems to keep track of the locations of nuclear material.
Some officials voiced concern that such devices could compromise
security, but Schwartz said there should be a way to more accurately
and efficiently track the weapons.
"It is worth our while to explore other opportunities,"
he said.
After the recent mistakes, the Air Force started surprise inspections
and announced plans to establish a separate command with the job
of overseeing nuclear-capable bombers and missiles.
Schwartz also used his visit to emphasize the importance of nuclear
weapons. In meetings with senior officers and hundreds of airmen,
Schwartz said the nuclear deterrent remained a foundation of U.S.
power.
"We don't beat our chests and we don't talk about it openly,
but the truth is it has an effect," Schwartz told the senior
leaders.
He said the nation's nuclear arsenal had, in part, allowed the U.S.
to ferry Georgian troops from Iraq to the Georgian capital of Tbilisi
when that nation's conflict with Russia erupted last summer.
"It was unspoken but it was understood" by the Russians,
Schwartz told the airmen. "And to those who have argued deterrence
is a fading phenomenon, something from the Cold War that is no longer
applicable, they are full of [it]."
In the interview after the visit, Schwartz said the U.S. needed
nuclear weapons to deter other nations from developing them and
to underpin American military capabilities.
"I think we have not yet arrived at the moment where going
to zero will make sense," he said. "It underwrites a lot
of what we do." |