341st Missile Wing fails nuke inspection
Posted : Tuesday Nov 11, 2008 20:31:10 EST
The 341st Missile Wing at Malmstrom Air Force Base, Mont., failed its nuclear surety inspection after inspectors found problems with the wing’s Maintenance Group and its personnel reliability program, which monitors who can work with nuclear weapons, an Air Force official said.
Gen. Robert Kehler, head of Air Force Space Command, allowed the wing to keep its certification to handle nuclear weapons, and Space Command inspectors are scheduled to return in 90 days to reinspect the areas where they found deficiencies, according to a statement from Space Command.
“No one likes to fall short,” said Col. Michael Fortney, 341st Missile Wing commander. “The folks are disappointed here but they are already working hard to beef up those areas the inspectors scrutinized us on and we’ll be ready when they come back.”
The 341st is one of three Air Force wings that maintain the nation’s Minuteman III nuclear intercontinental ballistic missiles.
An NSI takes place every 18 months and measures a unit’s readiness to execute nuclear operations. The two-week inspection, which was held at the same time as an operational readiness exercise, ended Nov. 10.
Inspectors found minor deficiencies with the way security forces protected the weapons storage area during the inspection, said an Air Force officer briefed on the inspection results who asked to remain anonymous.
The 341st passed the missile operations portion of the inspection, the officer said, but standards call for failure if critical errors are found in any portion.
Air Force Space Command leaders do not plan on firing any members of the 341st command.
According to a Space Command press release, “Air Force Space Command leadership believes that the right leadership is in place at the 341st Missile Wing to put the essential corrective actions in place.”
Task forces charged with critiquing the Air Force’s nuclear enterprise — including one led by former Defense Secretary James Schlesinger — have consistently faulted the service’s nuclear inspection regime.
“Over the past 10 years, inspection pass rates point to anomalies that indicate a systemic problem in the inspection regime,” according to the Schlesinger report.
Nuclear bases moved to no notice inspections in June, though the 341st knew about this NSI because it had been scheduled previously.
Inspectors have become much more rigid with the increased scrutiny of the Air Force nuclear community — making it even harder to pass the challenging test, the Air Force officer said.
The 90th Missile Wing at F.E. Warren Air Force Base, Wyo., will be the next wing to receive an NSI. It begins Dec. 3.
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