REMEMBER LOS ALAMOS Richardson's lab defense all spin? Orders came 'right out of headquarters' to lower fences around nuke secrets By Paul Sperry © 2000 WorldNetDaily.com WASHINGTON -- When news broke last month that two laptop hard drives containing nuclear secrets were missing at Los Alamos, it was enormously embarrassing for Energy Secretary Bill Richardson. He'd just last year certified lab secrets safe and secure. But Richardson and his top advisers managed to blunt criticism from the Hill and the press with a four-pronged defense. First, they shifted some of the blame to the Bush administration by pointing out that it relaxed inventory rules for the kind of secret data on the hard drives. Lab contractors also should share some blame, they argued, because they've fostered an academic "culture" that kicks against gates, guns and guards. They even dragged the Defense Department into the fray by releasing a 1999 letter from the Pentagon shelving a plan to build higher fences around secret lab data. Reason: too costly. And Energy officials calmed nerves by leaking to the press that the drives, missing from a vault for six months, didn't store information on how to actually build or detonate a nuclear bomb. But the defense was pure spin, according to career government officials concerned with what they say is the Clinton administration's cavalier attitude towards national security. "They're lying," said one senior administration official who wished to go unnamed. *Bush administration. "You hear DOE (Department of Energy) now saying, well, the last administration downgraded the (accounting) requirements" for data classified "secret restricted," a Pentagon official said. "Well, that's not quite the truth." In 1992, the government standardized protection of classified information among the different agencies dealing with intelligence -- CIA, Energy and Defense -- to make programs more streamlined. In January 1993, just two weeks before the start of the Clinton administration, the new rules were made official and they affected government contractors, including the University of California, which runs Los Alamos. The Clinton administration adopted the new standards. "But the requirement to inventory 'secret' (information) did not go away completely," said the Pentagon official, who asked not to be named. "They (the labs) were still supposed to inventory all material moved in and out of secure areas. The new rules did not tell the Department of Energy to stop doing accounting." Yet Los Alamos did not require a system to sign out the secret drives from the vault. Investigators still don't know who had possession of the tapes or where they were kept for the six months they were gone. Energy spokesman Stuart Nagurka says the FBI still has a team of investigators in Los Alamos questioning people. "It's a criminal case," he said. "That's all I can say." *Lab culture. The notion that the labs and university should be taking the heat for the security breach is wrong, an Energy official says. It was Energy's headquarters in Washington that fought measures to tighten security. "During the Chinese espionage scare (which started in 1995), Los Alamos came to (Energy's) defense-programs headquarters with an upgraded security plan and a request for additional protective forces and additional alarm systems, which would have included cameras for places like the vault," the official said. But "defense-programs headquarters was telling the labs, 'Don't do this stuff,' " he said. "They wouldn't fund it." He added: "The labs will do what you tell them to do, as long as you pay them to do it." The Energy official, who requested anonymity, says the chief naysayer at Energy headquarters was Victor Reis, former assistant secretary of Energy for defense programs and the official overseeing the labs. Reis left the department in June 1999, a month after the bipartisan Cox committee released its alarming report of rampant Chinese espionage at the labs. "The guidance to minimize (security) was coming right out of headquarters, right out of Victor Reis' office," the official said. *Pentagon letter. Energy released a recent letter it received from the Pentagon advising against a plan called the "Higher Fences Initiative." The plan called for upgrading select nuclear weapons data to "top secret" to better protect them. Only, the Pentagon shelved it as too costly. Its Dec. 17, 1999, letter said the added costs of screening workers for the higher security clearance, combined with the costs of upgrading security for storage facilities and computer networks, would be "substantial." But Energy officials failed to mention that Energy's front office has also fought the plan -- since it was first proposed in 1995. (Energy resurrected the plan and asked Defense for its opinion only after receiving bad press in the wake of the Cox report.) Energy's security office in May 1995 issued a report recommending the data be upgraded to top secret. But then-Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary, as well as Reis, "didn't think it was an important issue," the Energy official said. The information recommended for upgrade was narrowly scoped and defined. Security officials went through the nuclear weapons classification guides line by line and identified some 137 out of more than 1,000 topics for upgrade to top secret to ensure adequate protection. Then, in January 1997, former Sandia National Laboratory President Albert Narath incorporated the upgrades as part of his own report recommending "higher fences around the most sensitive information." Ironically, O'Leary had tasked Narath with declassifying data as part of her "openness" policy. But in reviewing the data, he came to the conclusion that some information is still so radioactive -- literally -- that it deserves even greater protections than currently exist. He recommended upgrading 137 topics to top secret. Though he didn't list them all in the unclassified version of his report, Narath did single out for special protection nuclear coding called "Sigma 1 and 2" and "Sigma 14 and 15." Energy's front office -- on the 7th floor of the Forrestal Building in Washington -- turned down that part of Narath's proposal. "They didn't want to do this," the Energy official said. "I mean, this was counter to their move" to declassify atomic information. To his credit, "Narath held" and stood by his recommendations for upgrading protection for the 137 topics, the official said. Attempts to reach Narath for comment were unsuccessful. If they had upgraded the data from secret restricted to top secret, the official says, the hard drives more than likely would never have been so loosely handled. The lab vault would have had cameras in it and there would have been strict logout procedures and accountability for what was checked out, he says. What's more, those with access to the vault would have been subject to more rigorous vetting. "With top secret clearance you get a full background investigation, which means people go and knock on doors and they ask your neighbors and they go to your college and make sure you really went there," he said. In contrast, "with a secret investigation all they do is check with the police and the FBI and CIA and do a name check. That's it. Nothing more. If you're not a felon, it doesn't matter," he added. "So the difference between the two is tremendous." *Contents of hard drives. After WorldNetDaily broke the story about the Narath report in a June 19 article titled "Energy ignored nuke data warning," this reporter received a call from a senior policy adviser to Richardson. He insisted that the hard drives that were missing do not contain the Sigma codes 1 and 2, or 14 and 15, that were specifically recommended for upgrade in the Narath report. Therefore, he said he didn't "see the relevance" of the report in relation to the latest Los Alamos security breach. The adviser, who asked not to be named, would not say if the hard drives contain any of the more than 100 other sensitive items Narath picked for protecting with higher fences. For that matter, he refused to even hint at what information the drives do contain. The hard drives are part of a kit used by the Nuclear Emergency Search Team, the scientists and technicians trained to locate and disable nuclear bombs in the event of a terrorist threat or accident. Contrary to the assertions of the Richardson aide, an official who has actually been on NEST deployment exercises during which the drives were used, told WorldNetDaily that the drives do contain the Sigma codes. In fact, they contain "everything," including secret codes needed to build nuclear bombs, he said. "In the NEST deployment exercises that I've been on, where they (drives) were used, it was everything. It was everything. It (Sigmas 1, 2, 14 and 15) would be a very narrow definition of those Sigmas (codes on the drives)," he said. "It was radiographs of weapons. I mean, you could build them (nuclear bombs) from those things." Asked about it, Energy spokesman Nagurka defended Richardson's adviser's claims. "He's seen what's on them," Nagurka said. "And he's been very insistent. He's extremely trustworthy and not a person to mislead." "Someone's putting out bum information," he said of the NEST source. Has the adviser actually been on a NEST exercise and seen what's on the drives, which mysteriously reappeared last month behind a lab copying machine? "I don't know if he's seen the drives or if he's seen a written report of what's on them," Nagurka said. "I am under the impression that he has seen whatever he needs to see to be convinced of what was on them." But the official who's been on the NEST deployment exercises says Energy's front office is misleading the public as to the seriousness of the information on the drives. "Look, if you can go in and take them (nuclear bombs) apart without detonating, you've got to have detailed information," he said. "These are technical flyaway packages that the NEST people would take with them if they went to the field, to the site of an actual weapon or an improvised weapon." Nagurka says that maybe the source is talking about a different set of NEST drives stored in the vault. "Not every drive is the same," he said. ================================================================= Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT FROM THE DESK OF: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> *Mike Spitzer* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ~~~~~~~~ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day. ================================================================= <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A> DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. 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