By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Jan. 15, 2014 – Thirty-four intercontinental
ballistic missile launch officers at Malmstrom Air Force Base, Mont., have been
implicated in cheating on the ICBM launch officer proficiency test, Air Force
Secretary Deborah Lee James said today.
The revelations emerged during an investigation into alleged
illegal drug possession, James said. The officers range in rank from second
lieutenants to captains, and the alleged cheating occurred in the August and
September timeframe.
James and Gen. Mark A. Welsh III, Air Force chief of staff,
clearly were disturbed by the allegation as they briefed Pentagon reporters on
the matter, but said they are confident the nuclear mission itself was not
compromised by the incident.
“This was a failure of some of our airmen. It was not a
failure of the nuclear mission,” James said.
Welsh reiterated that confidence. The nuclear mission
requires airmen to meet the highest of standards, the general said, and most of
the missileers do. “There’s absolutely no excuse for the breach of integrity,”
he said.
Air Force Office of Special Investigations officials were
examining allegations of illegal drug possession when evidence surfaced that a
missile launch officer at the 341st Missile Wing electronically shared the
answers to monthly missile launch officer proficiency tests with 16 other
officers. Air Force officials subsequently approached the entire missile crew
force at Malmstrom, and 17 other officers admitted to at least being aware of material
that had been shared.
“We don't yet know how or if each of those officers used
that material, but we do know that none of them reported the incident to their
leadership,” Welsh said.
“Cheating or tolerating others who cheat runs counter to
everything we believe in as a service,” the general added. “People at every
level will be held accountable if and where appropriate.”
All 34 officers have been decertified and restricted from
missile crew duty. The Air Force has suspended their security clearances, and
the investigation continues. Two of the officers involved in the cheating
scandal also are implicated in the illegal drug possession case.
“Every missile crew member in our other two missile wings
will be questioned about involvement in or knowledge of sharing test material,”
Welsh said.
James ordered that all the members of the ICBM force be
retested by close of business tomorrow.
“As of an hour ago, 100 people had completed that test --
that's about 20 percent of our missile crew force. Ninety-seven percent of them
passed the test, and there were three failures,” Welsh said. “That 97 percent
pass rate matches our historical averages.”
Air Force Global Strike Command will conduct a limited
nuclear surety inspection focused on operation crew procedures in the near
future. James and Welsh will visit all missile bases next week to ensure that
airmen have no question about their expectations.
Welsh called the cheating “a violation of that first core
principle of ‘integrity first.’”
“Our actions as we move forward will be about making sure
that every member of our Air Force understands that we will not accept or allow
that type of behavior, that there is nothing more important to the nation than
the integrity and the trustworthiness of the people who defend it and that
anyone who doesn't understand that should find another line of work,” he added.
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