Sunday, September 9, 2007

NWO 'OPERATION EMPTY QUIVER' ALERT: Why a 'dull sword' is bad, but a 'bent spear' is even worse




Michael Hoffman - Staff writer, the author who wrote Reported below for the Military 2 different figures when it came to the Loose Nuke Blunder.

A mistake in loading procedures on the ground sent five nuclear warheads on a flight from Minot to Louisiana last week. Has resulted in first reports mentioning 5 nukes, then later the story changes to 6.

NWO 'BROKEN ARROW' UPDATE:The 2nd 9/11 Nuke Detection Drill

Most possible a nuke has gone "missing" on Aug. 30 on the territory of the U.S.. Everything we have heared about that incident with the B52 points towards that assumption.

A B-52 bomber mistakenly loaded with five nuclear warheads flew from Minot Air Force Base, N.D., to Barksdale Air Force Base, La., on Aug. 30


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The Air Force continued handing out disciplinary actions in response to the six nuclear warheads mistakenly flown on a B-52 Stratofortress bomber from Minot Air Force Base, N.D., to Barksdale Air Force Base, La., on Aug. 30.


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Operation Empty Quiver - Lewisburg, TN

« posted on: September 06, 2007, 07:10:58 pm »
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When you hear the cry "dull sword", you should start worrying. When you hear "bent spear" , get your geiger counter out. Hear the signal "broken arrow" or "empty quiver" and it is time to panic. "Nucflash" and it's probably all over.
The codewords are contained in a short but eerie booklet leaked to the Guardian. In language reminiscent of the cold war, it instructs personnel at RAF Lakenheath - the US air force's largest nuclear base in Europe - what to do in the event of an accident.

The Nuclear Surety Guide comes complete with a multiple choice quiz. But it is deadly serious and far from an academic exercise. At least two accidents involving nuclear weapons have occurred at Lakenheath. Both were covered up at the time.
The most serious was in 1956, when an American bomber skidded out of control into a store containing three nuclear weapons. Firefighters were ordered to ignore the four crewmen of the bomber and douse the flames engulfing the weapons.

An American newspaper which quoted a retired US general as saying it was possible that "a part of eastern England would have become a desert".

Carefully prepared procedures are not always followed in such emergencies. According to one account, panicking military personnel stampeded from the base. One American airman dashed from the gates of the base to hail a taxi, telling the driver: "Go anywhere - just get away from here."

Five years later, a US warplane carrying a nuclear bomb caught fire. The bomb was "scorched and blistered", according to an official report.

Cyril Brown, local councillor for the area, said: "There is a mind-set of cover-up around the base. We have no way of knowing what has gone on."

The US air force guide, printed in March 1999, says personnel must be specially screened in a "reliability programme". Personnel are assured they will receive "nuclear surety training before they are given access to nuclear weapons, weapons systems, or critical components".

However, it makes clear that even without mishaps, nuclear stockpiles pose a danger. "Nuclear weapons," it says, "emanate a certain amount of intrinsic ionizing radiation."

The aim is to keep "exposure to a minimum, consistent with operational requirements".

Lakenheath, in Suffolk, is the base for the US air force's 48th fighter wing. Its website boasts the exploits of US F15 bombers - "the world's most awesome air combat power force" - over Serbia and Iraq.

Both the US Pentagon and the ministry of defence adhere strictly to a policy of neither confirming nor denying the location of nuclear weapons.

The guide confirms their presence at Lakenheath. According to the independent US National Resources Defence Council, 33 tactical nuclear weapons are stored there.

Perhaps it is some comfort that in 1995, the base was awarded a special plaque for "outstanding achievements" to nuclear security.

Cracking the nuclear code

Broken Arrow A nuclear weapons accident that does not risk war but involves a nuclear detonation or burning of a weapon and a hazard to the public

Empty Quiver The loss, seizure, or destruction of a nuclear weapon or the 'inadvertent release' of such a weapon

Bent Spear An incident involving radioactive contamination

Dull Sword A nuclear safety deficiency that involves minor damage to the weapons

Nucflash A nuclear weapons systems accident leading to possible detonation and the risk of war

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