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Politics : 2000:The Make-or-Break Election -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Fangorn who wrote (256)6/15/2000 5:42:00 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 1013
 
Well, here's something that should make every citizen in the US, and for that matter the peaceloving countries of the world concerned......

latimes.com

Back to story



Thursday, June 15, 2000

Other Nations' Arms Data on Drives
Security: Missing Los Alamos storage devices had secret details on the
nuclear arsenals of France, China and Russia, U.S. discloses. Congress is
up in arms.

By BOB DROGIN, NICK ANDERSON, Times Staff Writers

WASHINGTON--Two computer hard drives missing from the Los
Alamos National Laboratory contain highly sensitive data about the nuclear
arsenals of France, China and Russia, in addition to secrets about
American nuclear weapons, U.S. officials disclosed Wednesday.
The information, classified as "secret restricted data," includes diagrams
and assessments of how various foreign nuclear warheads and bombs may
be designed, the officials said. The data include key military intelligence
about what the United States knows about other nations' nuclear
forces--and what it doesn't.
Moreover, the missing hard drives are designed to be "plug and play,"
so they can be utilized in virtually any laptop computer without secret
passwords or other sophisticated barriers, the officials said.
The potential intelligence loss has sounded alarms in the White House
and on Capitol Hill, where a series of emotionally charged public and
closed-door congressional hearings was dominated by blistering attacks on
the Energy Department and its rocky stewardship of the Los Alamos lab.
"We're missing military plans that are so important to the safety of
nations that their loss amounts to a security threat I don't think that we've
faced since the Soviets moved nuclear-tipped missiles into Cuba years
ago," Sen. Ben Night-horse Campbell (R-Colo.) told a joint hearing of the
Senate Select Intelligence Committee and the Senate Energy and Natural
Resources Committee.
"What's missing, and may well have been stolen, is information about
how to disarm our nuclear weapons and those of perhaps some other
countries whose nuclear weapons could be stolen and used by terrorists,"
said Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.). He said terrorists could use the information to
"booby trap" a nuclear device to prevent it from being disarmed.
In a sign of the mounting concern, the FBI formally took the lead in
what had been a joint investigation with the Energy Department. The CIA
is heading a U.S. intelligence community effort to assess the damage of the
potential loss at the New Mexico lab.
The computer hard drives were used by the lab's Nuclear Emergency
Security Team, a group that assists the FBI in the event of a terrorist threat
or accident involving a nuclear device. The NEST team is trained to rush to
the scene with computer laptops, diagnostic equipment and other tools to
help them identify, disarm or disable nuclear weapons from around the
world.
"Our scientists have to know how to render safe any type of nuclear
weapon," said Darwin Morgan, a spokesman for NEST at the group's
headquarters in Las Vegas.
No evidence has yet surfaced to indicate the hard drives were stolen,
rather than misplaced or mistakenly destroyed during a fierce wildfire that
forced lab personnel to evacuate for two weeks last month. "But we have
no choice but to assume the worst," a senior U.S. official said.
In a vivid illustration of congressional anger over the scandal, the Senate
voted, 97 to 0, to confirm CIA Deputy Director John A. Gordon as
director of the semiautonomous National Nuclear Security Administration.
Congress created the NNSA eight months ago, at the height of a
scandal over alleged Chinese espionage at Los Alamos, to oversee the
Energy Department's nuclear weapon complex. Gordon will have the
portfolio of undersecretary of Energy for nuclear security.
Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan, the top Democrat on the Senate Armed
Services Committee, called Gordon "an excellent choice" for "one of the
most challenging assignments in the federal government."
Republicans cheered Gordon's confirmation and said it was long
overdue. They insisted it had been blocked by Democrats trying to help the
Clinton administration delay implementation of congressionally mandated
reforms. But the latest security breach smashed the legislative logjam.
"Today, the squeaky wheel got some grease," said Sen. Frank H.
Murkowski (R-Alaska), chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural
Resources Committee.
Energy Secretary Bill Richardson told reporters that he has asked
Gordon, a retired four-star Air Force general, to immediately conduct a
"top-to-bottom" review of the Los Alamos, Sandia and Lawrence
Livermore national laboratories.
Richardson said he would testify Wednesday before the Senate Armed
Services Committee. Republican senators sharply criticized Richardson
earlier Wednesday for declining to appear at the joint hearing. Some
openly suggested he consider resigning.
"I think Bill Richardson should consider that he has failed at the job,"
Sen. Larry E. Craig (R-Idaho), a member of the Senate leadership, said
during a break. "People who fail at their job tend to want to leave it."
Sen. Richard C. Shelby (R-Ala.), chairman of the intelligence panel,
noted that he had kept an empty chair for Richardson at the witness table.
"What is he doing today that's more important than dealing with the
problems of national security, the possible loss of some of our most vital
secrets?" he demanded.
Like his colleagues, Shelby aggressively grilled and chastised
Richardson's replacements--three senior Energy Department officials and
John Browne, director of the Los Alamos lab--in a
sometimes-melodramatic display of high political theater.
"Well it's sad," Shelby said at one point, shaking his head. "It's a sad
day for security--a sad, sad day."
Not all the attacks were partisan. During a separate hearing before the
House Armed Services Committee, Rep. Ike Skelton of Missouri, the
ranking Democrat, said he was "incensed" at a breach that put at risk some
of "the crown jewels of American scientific achievement."
Another member, Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-El Cajon), interrogated
officials on what happens when the custodian of the vault where the hard
drives were stored--Hunter called her "the vault lady"--takes a lunch
break. Officials responded that the vault is then closed and locked.
The hard drives disappeared from a NEST bag inside a vault in the lab's
X Division, where nuclear weapons are designed. Browne, the lab director,
said 83 people were approved to enter the vault, including 26 who could
go inside without an escort. But no one is required to record when
classified material is removed from the vault.
Sen. Pete V. Domenici (R-N.M.), a longtime supporter of the national
weapon labs, appeared stunned. "You don't need a genius to figure out you
can't have 26 people walking in and out, no matter how great they are,
without signing in and out," he said. "That's got to be fixed."
Browne said his mood has shifted from shock to anger to frustration
since he learned on May 31 that the hard drives had been missing since at
least May 7, and perhaps weeks earlier.
He said that on June 1, "I ordered the laboratory turned upside down. I
said: 'Search everywhere. . . . Let's have several people check every safe,
every office. We believe these things are just missing, so let's find them.'
And we literally checked every classified area that we could think of, and
then we did it again. . . . We interviewed. We did over 200 interviews of
86 people who potentially could have accessed this information."
At that point, he said, he asked the Department of Energy to take over
the investigation "because we had run out of ideas at Los Alamos. We had
hit a brick wall. We needed help."
Copyright 2000 Los Angeles Times



To: Fangorn who wrote (256)6/16/2000 1:48:00 PM
From: Father Terrence  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1013
 
Want constructive criticism?

First, eliminate the IRS and replace it with what httP;//www.cats.org advocates.

Next, eliminate the DEA, reduce the size of the Justice Department, phase out all the "Deal" programs of this century: the New Deal, Fair Deal and "Raw Deal" ( LBJ's Great Society fiascoes), and privatize the educational system.

Then outlaw all lobbies, both foreign and domestic.

Finally, limit sessions of Congress to the first three months of each year. Each piece of legislation must have a sunset provision. Congress shall only meet (other than the first three months of each year) in times of a declared national emergency.

That's for starters... I have a lot more.

Where are Bush and Gore on these issues?