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View Full Version : Former US commander calls for nuclear missiles to be taken off high alert



Teh One Who Knocks
04-30-2015, 10:43 AM
FOX News and The Associated Press


http://i.imgur.com/CsqDYcv.jpg

A former commander of U.S. nuclear forces says taking U.S. and Russian missiles off high alert might keep a possible cyberattack from starting a nuclear war, although neither country appears willing to increase the lead-time to prepare the weapons for launch.

Retired Gen. James Cartwright said in an interview that “de-alerting” nuclear arsenals could foil hackers by reducing the chance of firing a weapon in response to a false warning of an attack.

Adding a longer fuse can be done without eroding the weapons’ deterrent value, Cartwright said. Cartwright headed Strategic Command from 2004 to 2007 and was vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff before retiring in 2011.

The Obama administration had previously rejected the idea of taking nuclear missiles off high alert. There appears to be little near-term chance that Moscow would agree to pursue this or any other kind of nuclear arms control measure, given the deteriorating U.S.-Russian relations after Russia’s intervention in eastern Ukraine.

The two countries are at odds over a U.S. accusation that Moscow is violating a treaty banning medium-range missiles.

Robert Scher, the Pentagon's top nuclear policy official, told Congress this month that "it did not make any great sense to de-alert forces" because the administration believes the missiles "needed to be ready and effective and able to prosecute the mission at any point in time."

An example of the high alert level of U.S. nuclear weapons is the land-based nuclear force. These are the 450 Minuteman 3 missiles that are kept ready, 24/7, to launch from underground silos within minutes after receiving a presidential order.

A study led by Cartwright proposes to adjust the missile command and control system so that it would take 24 hours to 72 hours to get the missiles ready for launch.

Cartwright said cyberthreats to the systems that command and control U.S. nuclear weapons demand greater attention. While the main worry was once a hacker acting alone, today it is a hostile nation-state, he said, that poses more of a threat even as the Pentagon improves its cyberdefenses.

"The sophistication of the cyberthreat has increased exponentially" over the past decade, he said Tuesday. "It is reasonable to believe that that threat has extended itself" into nuclear command and control systems. "Have they been penetrated? I don't know. Is it reasonable technically to assume they could be? Yes."

Cyberthreats are numerous and not fully understood, officials say.

Defense officials are tight-lipped about countering certain cyber threats.

Last week the No. 2 official at the National Nuclear Security Administration, Madelyn Creedon, was asked at a Senate hearing about progress against this threat to nuclear command and control. She said the government is "doing better," but she declined to publicly discuss details.

Two years ago the Pentagon's Defense Science Board, an advisory group, reported that "most of the systems" in the U.S. nuclear arsenal had not been fully assessed to understand possible weak spots in the event of an all-out cyberattack.

Cartwright is the lead author of a report published Wednesday by the Global Zero Commission, an international group co-founded by a former Air Force nuclear missile launch control officer, Bruce Blair, now a research scholar at Princeton. The report calls for a phased approach to taking U.S. and Russian missiles off high alert, with 20 percent of them off launch-ready alert within one year and 100 percent within 10 years.

The report argues that lowering the alert levels should be preceded by both Russia and the U.S. eliminating a strategy known as a "launch on warning" — being prepared to launch nuclear missiles rapidly after early warning satellites and ground radar detect incoming warheads. It says this presents an unacceptable level of nuclear risk, and argues that vulnerability to cyberattack against the warning systems or the missile control systems is "a new wild card in the deck."

"At the brink of conflict, nuclear command and warning networks around the world may be besieged by electronic intruders whose onslaught degrades the coherence and rationality of nuclear decision-making," the report says.

Lisbeth Gronlund, co-Director of the Union of Concerned Scientists' global security program, said Wednesday her group, which favors abolishing nuclear weapons, endorses de-alerting.

"Keeping missiles on hair-trigger alert makes them more vulnerable to an unauthorized launch, including one resulting from a cyberattack," Gronlund said.

PorkChopSandwiches
04-30-2015, 03:44 PM
We're all dead, thanks anonymous

Goofy
04-30-2015, 04:21 PM
We're all dead, thanks anonymous

Dont you mean Skynet? :-k

Muddy
04-30-2015, 04:29 PM
If he's a "former commander" who the fuck is he "calling" for anything? :lol:

deebakes
05-01-2015, 01:57 AM
:fbd:

FBD
05-01-2015, 07:49 PM
We're all dead, thanks anonymous

:lol: except anonymous wouldnt do something that would cause the harm and suffering of thousands if not millions



if "they get hacked" you know damn well it will be internally ;)

Teh One Who Knocks
05-02-2015, 10:59 AM
I thought that I have read in many places before that the systems in the nuclear bunkers are so old that they are basically beyond hacking...at least from outside their intranet :-k

Hal-9000
05-02-2015, 05:03 PM
I thought that I have read in many places before that the systems in the nuclear bunkers are so old that they are basically beyond hacking...at least from outside their intranet :-k

Yep, one would like to think that it's still launch codes on paper in a briefcase and two guys with keys. I don't think they'd upgrade an existing missile system with more tech, just for that safety reason of possibly making the hardware more susceptible to a breach :-k

best firewall on the planet is unplugging a pc from the modem..

FBD
05-02-2015, 07:36 PM
to meet orange book classification, a device may not even be connected to the network. that alone is a security breach ;)

Hal-9000
05-03-2015, 06:20 AM
I connect to the darknet.........just for porn




8-[

FBD
05-03-2015, 03:40 PM
:lol: