From: *Travis*
Date: Sun, Oct 5, 2008
Subject:  Dangerous move for NORAD?


   Dangerous and stupid.  Problem with putting bureaucrats and accountants
in charge of ANYTHING in the real world.

B

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2008/oct/05/a-dangerous-move/

 October 5, 2008
 Dangerous move for NORAD?
 Michael de Yoanna and Bill Gertz THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Nestled a half mile inside a hardened rock tunnel, the Cheyenne Mountain
Operations Center buzzed with excitement on July 4, 2006, as the shuttle
Discovery prepared to launch.

Then, at approximately 1:30 p.m. during the final countdown at Florida's
Kennedy Space Center, the center's alarms and strobes shrieked to life.
Defense satellites had picked up a heat-related signature half a world away.
An expert crew at the mountain quickly identified it as a missile,
pinpointing its type, location and telemetry. It had been launched from
North Korea and was headed east. Several more missile launches were detected
including a long-range Taepodong II capable of striking the western United
States.

As the missiles advanced, the op center alerted top defense officials.
President Bush was just a phone call away and if contacted might have had
only minutes to decide whether to engage America's nuclear arsenal.
Fortunately, the missiles fell far from U.S. shores in North Korea, the Sea
of Japan and the Pacific Ocean.

Still, the episode marked the end of an era. A few weeks later, Cheyenne
Mountain's commander, Brig. Gen. Rosanne Bailey, retired and the once highly
sought command was downgraded to a "directorate."

Critics say a decision two years ago to move the operations center of the
North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) to the basement of an
office building on Peterson Air Force Base in nearby Colorado Springs and to
disperse other missions at the mountain could undermine U.S. national
security.

According to military and defense sources familiar with the missions and
U.S. government documents obtained by The Washington Times, the move —
billed as a cost-cutting measure — received insufficient government review,
violated previous Pentagon directives, may have broken U.S. law and has left
the United States less able to track potential threats and the operations
center more vulnerable to attack.

"We see decisions like closing Cheyenne Mountain that are driven for cost
purposes only, not military requirements," said Retired Air Force Lt. Gen.
Thomas G. McInerney. "Cheyenne Mountain should remain an active facility but
cost pressures are driving combatant commanders to make riskier decisions."

The decision to move the op center originated with Adm. Timothy Keating, in
2006 head of both NORAD and U.S. Northern Command, created after 9/11 to
safeguard further the U.S. homeland. Adm. Keating apparently convinced the
nation's top military leaders that moving the center would save taxpayers
millions of dollars.

Other government officials tried to slow the process to ensure that
safeguards would be incorporated at the new site. But they were marginalized
in what critics argue was a needlessly quick campaign to place the mountain
on "warm standby" while scattering critical elements of the mission to
several air bases.

Adm. Keating's mantra was "faster, quicker and cheaper," said one military
official familiar with Cheyenne Mountain's recent transition who asked not
to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue. "He would not let
anything stand in his way."

A spokesman for Adm. Keating, now commander of the U.S. Pacific Command,
referred questions to Northern Command.

Air Force Gen. Gene Renuart, commander of Northern Command and Norad, said
in a statement Sept. 18 in response to a Government Accountability Office
report on the transfer that he had told a closed-door briefing for the House
Armed Services Committee that he is "committed to improving our security
posture to protect our command center."

Gen. Renuart said he decided to "exceed the baseline security requirements
at our headquarters by implementing enhanced force protection measures." He
asserted that the move from the mountain would have more benefits than
costs. "The operational advantages of this effort are numerous and
unmistakable," he said in the statement.

However, Gen. Bailey said in a telephone interview that she had a number of
concerns.

"The reality is you can't make a glass building as resistant to attack as
you can a facility in a mountain," she said.

The Cheyenne operations center came on line at a time when NORAD was just
beginning to scour the skies for bombers and other threats.

In the late 1950s, Gen. Earle E. Partridge, who commanded the first version
of NORAD, feared the mission was in grave danger because it was located
inside an Ent Air Force Base building surrounded by the rapidly growing
suburbs of Colorado Springs. The New York Times quoted Gen. Partridge
fretting that "one man with a well-aimed bazooka shot" could obliterate
NORAD in the first wave of a nuclear battle, blinding the nation when
seconds counted to respond.

Gen. Partridge and others lobbied for, and won, a massive bunker inside
Cheyenne Mountain.

The Army Corps of Engineers supervised the excavation of the mountain, which
has more than 100,000 32-foot-long implosion-preventing bolts and a
horseshoe-shaped tunnel — an ingenious funnel, designed to sweep the force
of a nuclear blast past the compound's two imposing 25-ton steel blast doors
and 15 separate building-sized areas inside the complex.

The mountain was completely operational by 1966. It was fenced and wired on
the outside and machine-gun carrying soldiers kept saboteurs from coming
anywhere near the op center in the mountain's heart.

Recent visitors, including these reporters, faced security searches before
entering a bus that brought them into the tunnel, through the blast doors
(which were last closed on 9/11), up a small gangway, and into the compound,
which sits on 1,300 half-ton shock-absorbing springs. The complex contains
sleeping quarters, a medical facility, food stocks, large water supply -
even a barbershop.

The mountain became a lasting symbol of fears of an apocalyptic war as
depicted in films such as "War Games," a movie directed by John Badham
featuring a young Matthew Broderick. Cheyenne Mountain also figures in
flying saucer and 9/11 conspiracies and was part of an annual NORAD public
relations campaign to "track" Santa Claus' sleigh as he delivers toys around
the world each Christmas Eve.

As the Cold War dragged on, the advent of more accurate Soviet
intercontinental ballistic missiles meant the mountain would be less likely
to survive a direct nuclear hit. Yet a jetliner loaded with fuel — like
those that caused New York's Twin Towers to crumble on 9/11 — would barely
cause op center crews to blink, in contrast to what could happen should the
same fate befall Peterson.

A U.S. military official, who is familiar with the program and asked not to
be named because of the sensitivity of the issue, said the decision to move
operations from the mountain may have violated a classified National
Security Presidential Directive, dated June 20, 2003, that requires the
director of central intelligence, in cooperation with the Defense
Department, to maintain a capability to "provide continuously, strategic and
correlated tactical warning and crisis situation assessment information" to
the president and top military and civilian defense leaders.

The directive warns that terrorists have "shown both the capability and
willingness to attack high-value U.S. targets within the homeland and
abroad. ... Accordingly, we must assume that U.S. nuclear weapons and the
associated nuclear command and control system could some day be the target
of a determined state or non-state adversary with access to substantial
resources, intelligence, and advanced capabilities, including weapons of
mass destruction."

Therefore, facilities must provide "appropriate protection for personnel and
equipment" and "critical equipment" must be "made survivable" so the
president and top leaders can obtain timely "warning and assessment
information," the directive said. Facilities should be "designed to operate
through or otherwise survive nuclear effects."

On May 28, the transition was completed. Northern Command and NORAD
announced that their operations had been combined in Peterson Building 2.

Problems began surfacing within weeks. When Iran in early July launched a
volley of test missiles, including a type capable of striking Israel, NORAD
took longerto identify the threat than it would have at the mountain,
according to a military official who asked not to be identified. The
official did not say how much longer.

The transition, the official said, has "slowed the process considerably. ...
The missions, once done by a single entity ... has now been fractured."

James W. Graybeal, chief Northcom spokesman, declined to comment on the
monitoring of the Iranian missile launches, saying that such operational
capabilities are classified.

Northern Command has argued that the mountain was outmoded, no longer
necessary because the threats facing the United States are different from
the Cold War era.

Mr. Graybeal said the consolidated NORAD and Northcom command center at
Peterson "has provided unprecedented command and coordination capability and
agility in supporting our federal and state partners during pre- and
post-landfall operations for Hurricanes Gustav, Hanna and Ike."

"At the same time, we have continued to monitor long-range aviation in our
NORAD mission, as well as support security efforts at the Democratic and
Republican National Conventions," he said. "These multiple and
near-simultaneous operations, which in the past would have caused
impediments in our unity of effort and time-sensitive decision making, were
improved because of the new consolidated command center."

However, the decision to transfer operations was made despite concerns that
the new location would be much more vulnerable to attack.

Classified defense documents from Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates' Program
Analysis and Evaluation Office in late 2007 raised the specter of a
"successful surprise attack" on a NORAD operating at Peterson.

The documents, obtained by The Times, said that by 2020, if China decided to
launch a nuclear attack, a mere fraction of its arsenal would be needed to
have a 99 percent assurance of destroying NORAD's mission at Peterson.
However, a NORAD kept in the mountain would possess "up to an 85 percent
chance" that "functions will survive," according to the documents.

In layman's terms, said a second military official closely involved with
security, NORAD is now vulnerable to the sort of terrorism that would have
been impossible had operations stayed in the mountain.

"Park a guy who will give his life for his dear leader at the [open land]
right outside [Peterson's] north gate with a rocket-propelled grenade [and
NORAD] is out of any fight," the official said. "Make your cell-phone call
and give the green light to launch nuclear missiles at North America, and
it's over. There's no one to fight the fight. You bring down the world's
only super power and the cost is minimal."

A former NORAD officer, who asked not to be identified because of the
sensitivity of the issue, described another scenario: A plane veering off
course from the Colorado Springs airport and hitting the Peterson building
within seconds of ironically being identified by NORAD, creating chaos,
possibly blinding the United States as related attacks begin.

Mr. Graybeal noted that the command is committed to improving security of
the command center, as stated by Gen. Renuart and said that there are
redundant security features.

"We are not closing Cheyenne Mountain," Mr. Graybeal said. "It will serve as
an alternate command center with critical watch and warning systems
remaining in Cheyenne Mountain and more than 60 people from our commands
continuing to work in the facility." Instead, Northcom is "simply remoting
or 'piping in' capabilities that exist in Cheyenne Mountain to provide a
fully integrated command center for all NORAD and USNORTHCOM missions at
Peterson," he said.

But a military official and others familiar with the operations center said
that piping in information from the mountain is not secure and that the flow
of information could be deliberately or accidentally severed.

On Aug. 15, there was an unspecified power problem at Peterson's Building 2,
causing an evacuation, including personnel to Cheyenne Mountain.
Nonessential personnel were sent home and authority for NORAD's mission was
temporarily transferred back to the mountain. An "after-action review" of
the incident obtained by The Times noted that Building 2's "poorly defined
power" and "unstructured evolution" of networks since the inception of
Northern Command contributed to the event.

"Building 2 was never designed to house the number of networks, servers, and
user terminals currently installed," the review states, adding that the
event was the "second major power issue" in five months, "calling into
question the concept of redundant power."

Adm. Keating — who is now head of Pacific Command — told reporters in March
2007 that moving operations from the mountain to Peterson would "save us
money" and improve "combat efficiency and effectiveness." However, the
Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, has
been unable to verify Adm. Keating's claims that the move would save $150
million to $200 million.

Moreover, inspectors cautioned that there had been no analysis of what
effect the transition would have on NORAD's ITW/AA mission, which is
pronounced as "it-wa" by insiders. ITW/AA uses satellite, radar, sensor and
intelligence to monitor events around the world, around the clock, against
strategic, tactical and terrorist perils.

"Without benefit of an analysis of operational effects of the proposed
moves, the completed security assessments, and final protection level
designation to inform him, it is unclear what level of risk the commander is
accepting," said the May 2007 GAO report.

The 2008 GAO analysis, released to Congress Sept. 18, also highlighted
serious problems. It stated that NORAD no longer enjoys the highest level of
protection, meaning that the "loss, theft, destruction, misuse, or
compromise of these assets would result in great harm to the strategic
capability of the United States."

"We are recommending that the Commander of NORAD and USNORTHCOM re-evaluate
the full spectrum of security vulnerabilities associated with moving the
NORAD Command Center and related functions from Cheyenne Mountain to
Peterson AFB, and that the Commander certify that he is fully aware of and
accepts all of the risks, " the report stated.

An official familiar with internal NORAD matters who spoke on condition that
he not be named stated that no analysis has been done on the effect the
transition would have on ITW/AA. Short for Integrated Tactical
Warning/Attack Assessment. ITW/AA is NORAD's number one mission.

There are also questions about the training of Peterson staff.

The mountain's former four centers relied on a rigorous regimen to produce
officers capable of handling complex computer systems and the stresses of a
nation under siege. The systems are so complicated that it takes officers
several months to fully qualify in rigorous testing that includes absorbing
12 study guides, mastering some 900 critical tasks and working under
supervision for at least two months.

Asked if this is still the standard at Peterson, an official who is close to
Northern Command said no.

Mr. Graybeal, however, said "all capability risks were considered prior to
making the decision to move." He did not elaborate.

In March 2005, the mountain's place in the nation's defenses seemed stronger
than ever. Northern Command and NORAD commanders whisked the media into the
mountain on a tour to boast about a new, larger operations center. Plans
were even made for a new command center to be built inside the mountain so
that Northern Command's crews could work alongside NORAD, according to
officials in Colorado.

During the tour, Adm. Keating told reporters there were so many significant
improvements to the computer system and operations that "we've got it right
here." "This is state-of-the-art," Adm. Keating said. "We're not going to
come back in a month and say, 'Oh Jimminy.'"

But not long after, Adm. Keating's frustrations with the mountain began to
surface, according to Northern Command officials. He found it difficult to
wear two hats, the officials said. His NORAD hat required him to be inside
the mountain for exercises and Northern Command officials said Adm. Keating
only visited the mountain for training.

The two commands, separated by a 25-minute drive between Peterson and the
mountain, were put together because of their proximity to each other. But
Adm. Keating preferred to begin the day at Peterson, the Northern Command
officials said.

The issue came to a head, according to the officials, in the fall of 2005,
during a training exercise in which Adm. Keating lost communication with
NORAD and then complained to his staff that he was unable to be in two
places at once.

In 2006, Adm. Keating's office circulated among Northern Command officers a
"point paper on cost savings." It is in these documents, obtained by The
Times, that he first proposed placing Cheyenne Mountain on "warm minimal" or
"warm robust" status, a first step to breaking up of the mountain's pieces
and moving operations to Peterson.

The documents contain no option to retain NORAD inside Cheyenne Mountain,
but indicate that the objective was to "explore alternative approaches to
meeting the mission at a lower cost." The documents also noted that ITW/AA's
abilities might be negatively affected and that the commander would be
"accepting risk" to gain efficiencies.

In July 2006, Gen. Bailey retired. She had criticized the way the move was
being conducted.

During a meeting, according to one participant, she questioned the logic of
a proposal to move NORAD's missile warning center out of the mountain to
Schriever Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, fearing the move would harm
national security. Adm. Keating thanked her for her input but did not change
his mind.

In an interview this week, Gen. Bailey said that at the time she left the
service she expressed three main concerns about the transfer: how to
integrate NORAD's strategic mission with the less urgent tasks of Northcom;
whether training at Peterson would be as good as training for Cheyenne
Mountain personnel; and whether moving from a mountain to a building would
reduce security.

"If concern about an aircraft heading toward our shore was raised, that's an
urgent and immediate need," she said. "That is the sort of thing that is
done in the mountain. If the aircraft is an airlifter with a maintenance
problem, that is something that ultimately could be the attention of
Northcom."

"The challenge of integrating the two is not to divert attention from
resetting the warning operation after something occurs," she said.

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