Says Incidents Revealed Lack Of Proper Oversight
As ANN reported Thursday,
Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced the resignations of Air
Force Secretary Michael W. Wynne and Chief of Staff Gen. T. Michael
Moseley. Gates says he took this action following an investigation
revealing a decline in the Air Force's nuclear program focus,
performance and effective leadership.

Gates announced the resignations in the wake of a report
detailing the accidental shipment of four non-nuclear ballistic
missile nose-cone assembly components rather than the intended
helicopter batteries to Taiwan in August 2006. The report, prepared
by Navy Adm. Kirkland H. Donald, director of naval nuclear
propulsion, detailed what Gates called a shift of the Air Force
leadership's focus from, and degraded performance related to, its
most sensitive mission.
Air Force leaders focused on the problem only after two
internationally sensitive incidents -- one involving Taiwan and
another in which an Air Force B-52 bomber flew across the
United States carrying six armed nuclear cruise
missiles, Gates said.
Both incidents could have been prevented if the Air Force had
applied proper inspection and oversight, he said. He blamed a "lack
of a critical self-assessment culture" within the Air Force nuclear
program that might have identified and fixed systemic
weaknesses.
Gates noted that he had to intervene personally to ensure a
thorough investigation of what went wrong and how. In the nose-cone
incident, the secretary blamed the Air Force and Defense Logistics
Agency for using supply system procedures designed to move large
amounts of low-value material for shipping the sensitive classified
parts.
"The specific cause of this event was the Air Force and Defense
Logistics Agency's sole reliance on, and lack of compliance with,
existing supply system procedures to provide positive control of
the four forward-section assemblies," he said.

But Gates said the incident signals far deeper problems. "During
the course of the investigation, other issued indicating a decline
in the Air Force's nuclear mission focus and performance became
apparent," he said. "Rather than an isolated occurrence, the
shipment... was a symptom of a degradation of the authority,
standards of excellence and technical competence within the
nation's ICBM (intercontinental ballistic missile) force."
At a broader level, Gates cited declining expertise in the
entire Air Force nuclear program -- the result, he said, of lack of
top-level focus and emphasis.
None of these problems happened overnight and some have root
problems dating back a decade, he said. But Gates cited
"contemporary failures and lack of effective oversight."
In addition to removal of the top Air Force leadership, Gates
announced a senior-level task force to recommend improvements
needed to ensure accountability and control of nuclear weapons,
delivery vehicles and components.
James Schlesinger, a former Defense Department and Energy
Department secretary and CIA director, will lead the task force,
Gates said. The task force will recommend organizational,
procedural and policy changes needed within 60 days. Within 120
days, it will address defense-wide management and oversight of
nuclear weapons and related materials and systems.
Gates said he plans to recommend a new Air Force secretary and
chief of staff soon. Once they are confirmed, he said he will leave
it to them to determine proper disciplinary actions for others
identified in the Donald report.

The secretary expressed personal sadness about today's decision,
calling Wynne "a dedicated and honorable public servant" and noting
Moseley's decades of "courageous and devoted service."
"They both deserve their gratitude for their service," he said.
"I have enjoyed serving with them and deeply regret that the issues
before us require the actions I have taken."