|
US mistakenly
sent nuke missile fuses to Taiwan
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—The Air Force mistakenly shipped to Taiwan four electrical
fuses designed for use on intercontinental ballistic missiles, the
Pentagon said Tuesday, but has since recovered them and launched an
investigation. The error is particularly disturbing because of its
indirect link to nuclear weaponry and because of the sensitivity of U.S.
arms sales to Taiwan, which China regularly denounces as provocative.
At a Pentagon news conference, Air Force Secretary Michael Wynne said
the misshipped items were four electrical fuses for nose cone assemblies
for ICBMs. He also said they were delivered to Taiwan in 2006 and had
been sent instead of helicopter batteries that had been ordered by
Taiwan. Wynne said the investigation is meant to sort out what happened
and how.
The fuses were manufactured for use on a Minuteman strategic nuclear
missile but contained no nuclear materials. It is the second
nuclear-related mistake involving the Air Force in recent months. Last
August an Air Force B-52 bomber was mistakenly armed with six
nuclear-tipped cruise missiles and flown from Minot Air Force Base,
N.D., to Barksdale Air Force Base, La. At the time, the pilot and crew
were unaware they had nuclear arms aboard.
Wynne emphasized that the mistaken shipment to Taiwan did not include
nuclear materials, although the fuses are linked to the triggering
mechanism in the nose cone of a Minuteman nuclear missile. “This could
not be construed as being nuclear material. It is a component for the
fuse in the nosecone for a nuclear system,” Wynne said. “We are very
concerned about it.”
Defense Secretary Robert Gates ordered the investigation, putting Navy
Adm. Kirkland H. Donald in charge and asking that he report an initial
assessment by April 15.
Wynne said that Taiwanese authorities notified U.S. officials of the
mistake, but it was not clear when the notification was made. He said
the fuses had been in four shipping containers sent in March 2005 from
F.E. Warren Air Force Base, Wyo., to a Defense Logisitics Agency
warehouse at Hill Air Force Base, Utah. It was then in the logistics
agency’s control and was shipped to Taiwan “on or around” August 2006,
according to a Gates memo ordering Donald to investigate.
The Chinese Embassy did not immediately respond to a request for
comment. A Taiwan official said Tuesday that the island’s diplomats in
Washington typically do not comment on Defense Department matters. Ryan
Henry, the No. 2 policy official in Gates’ office, said President Bush
was notified of the mistake and the actions to recover the items. Henry
called the mistake “disconcerting” and intolerable. He said the Chinese
government has been notified of the error. Henry said an examination of
the site in Taiwan where the components had been stored after delivery
indicated that they had not been tampered with. He said the components
were “quite dated,” as part of a system designed in the 1960s. Henry
said the exact sequence of events that led to the mistake and the
recovery of the items was unclear. U.S. arms sales to Taiwan are
especially sensitive because China vehemently objects to U.S. defense
assistance to the island that Beijing deems to be part of China.
Taiwan, which split from China amid civil war in 1949, potentially is
the most sensitive issue in U.S.-China relations. Beijing claims Taiwan
as its own and has threatened to attack should the self-governing island
make its de facto independence formal. Washington has hinted that it
would go to war to protect Taiwan. While Washington switched its
recognition from Taipei to Beijing in 1979, it remains the island’s most
important foreign backer, providing it with the means to defend itself
against a possible Chinese attack.
The U.S. military mistakenly shipped four fuses for nuclear missiles to
Taiwan in 2006, the Pentagon said on Tuesday, adding that the parts have
been returned to U.S. custody.
The military was supposed to ship helicopter batteries to Taiwan but
instead sent fuses used as part of the trigger mechanism on missiles.
No nuclear material was shipped to Taiwan, Pentagon officials said. The
United States has notified China, which maintains a state of war with
Taiwan and is modernizing its military to close the technology gap with
Taiwan’s mainly U.S. weapons.
The fuse shipment marks the second embarrassing misplacement of nuclear
or nuclear-related equipment announced by the Pentagon in the past year.
An Air Force bomber last year mistakenly flew over the United States
with nuclear warheads. The Defense Department has ordered the Navy and
Air Force to take inventory of all nuclear and nuclear-associated
equipment and material and U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates has
ordered an investigation into the fuse incident, said Ryan Henry,
principle deputy undersecretary of defense for policy. |