Friday, January 31, 2014

The United States military has suspended 92 officers in charge of nuclear missiles operations after they allegedly cheated in a proficiency test exam.

More US nuclear missile officers involved in cheating scandal


Earlier this month, the 34 officers, who were in charge of launching nuclear missiles, were suspended.
Earlier this month, the 34 officers, who were in charge of launching nuclear missiles, were suspended.
Wed Jan 29, 2014 1:55AM GMT

The number of nuclear missile officers under investigation by the US Air Force over allegations of cheating has doubled from 34 initially to several dozen, officials said.
An Air Force spokesman confirmed the increase Tuesday but refused to mention a precise number in order "to protect the integrity of the investigation."
Earlier this month, the 34 officers, who were in charge of launching nuclear missiles, were suspended either for cheating on a key monthly proficiency test last year or for knowing about the cheating but failing to report it.
On January 15, the Air Force said it discovered that one missile officer at Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana had shared test questions with 16 other officers. Another 17 confessed to knowing about the misconduct but did not report it.

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"As the investigation has moved forward, we can now report there is a total of 92 crew members that have been identified as having some level of involvement," Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James said Thursday.
"That means either participating in the cheating or knowing something about it and not standing up and reporting it," she said.
James said the nuclear force is beset by "undue stress and fear," adding that the force suffers "systemic problems."
According to the US Air Force, 17 officers initially were believed to have been involved in cheating on a monthly proficiency test to ensure they know how to maintain, and launch, nuclear missiles.
The tests in question are designed to ensure proficiency by launch officers in handling “emergency war orders.”
The Air Force has 450 Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles, or ICBMs, on alert at all times, with a contingent of about 500 launch control officers.
Ninety officers work in pairs inside 45 underground US launch control centers each day and each center monitors and controls a group of 10 Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles.
The United States, which has thousands of nuclear warheads, upgrades the weapons of mass destruction on a regular basis.
AGB/AGB

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More nuke officers implicated in test cheating scandal

A mockup is seen of a Minuteman 3 nuclear missile used for training by missile maintenance crews at F. E. Warren Air Force Base, Wyo., Jan. 9, 2014. AP Photo
WASHINGTON -- Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James said Thursday the number of nuclear force officers implicated in a proficiency test cheating scandal has grown to 92 out of a force of 500.
James spoke to reporters after touring nuclear bases around the country. The cheating has been found at Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana. The Associated Press has revealed the overall nuclear force suffers from such low morale and burnout that they have committed serious security lapses and other breakdowns.
CBS News national security correspondent David Martin reported earlier this month, when 34 were implicated in the scandal, that a launch officer at Malmstrom allegedly texted the answers to a monthly proficiency test to other officers at the base.
Launch officers have to pass other monthly tests as well, including a simulated launch, so the cheating probably says more about their integrity than about their ability to perform the mission, Martin reported.
James, who is new to the job, said the nuclear force is beset by "undue stress and fear," and said the nuclear force suffers "systemic problems."
The Air Force announced recently that initially 17 officers were believed to have been involved in cheating on the monthly proficiency test to ensure they know how to maintain, and launch, nuclear missiles.
The widening cheating scandal has set off a top-level search for solutions.
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel summoned 15 of his top Air Force, Navy and nuclear mission leaders to the Pentagon, where they worked Wednesday to figure out whether cultural problems within the nuclear force make launch officers feel more compelled to cheat on their proficiency tests.
Pentagon press secretary Rear Adm. John Kirby said the officials spent the bulk of the meeting discussing the breadth of the problems, which include low morale, cheating and serious security lapses, and how to begin solving them.
"I think the general consensus in the room was that we all need to accept the reality that there probably are systemic issues in the personnel growth and development inside the nuclear mission," Kirby told Pentagon reporters after the two-hour meeting with Hagel. "The secretary made it clear at the end of the meeting that he intends to do these on a regular basis."

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America's 10 most dangerous infrastructure problems

Our aging infrastructure earned a D+ overall in the American Society of Civil Engineers' annual report card. Here are the main culprits.
1 of 12
A span of highway bridge sits in the Skagit River May 24, 2013 after collapsing near the town of Mt. Vernon, Wash. © Cliff DesPeaux/Reuters
Pressing problems
All things being equal, it would be better for the country to have less debt. Nobody seriously disputes this, but the fact is that all things are not now, and are never really, equal. Today there is a strong argument that it is a wise time to make a strategic investment in U.S. infrastructure by adding to the country's debt while interest rates remain extremely low.
The World Economic Forum's Global Competitiveness Report for 2013-2014 ranked the United States a respectable No. 5 in term of overall competitiveness. But our prospects for the future are clouded by an infrastructure ranking that barely cracks the top 20.
On multiple ratings, the U.S. came out on top in exactly one category: the availability of airline travel. Other than that, rankings on the quality of roads (18th), rail (17th), ports (16th) and other measures show it trailing many of its international competitors.
Earlier this year, the American Society of Civil Engineers issued its annual infrastructure report card, and awarded the U.S. a D+ for infrastructure. You can discount the ASCE's findings as you please, considering the fact that civil engineers, as a whole, benefit from increased infrastructure spending, but the numbers are hard to argue with.
A few highlights from the report:
  • One in four bridges in the U.S. today are either structurally deficient, meaning that their condition has deteriorated to the point that they require annual safety inspections to remain open, or functionally obsolete, which means that they were built to such a low standard that they would be illegal to build today.
  • "Almost half of America's public school buildings were built to educate the baby boomers – a generation that is now retiring from the workforce," the report found. Meanwhile, annual spending on school construction fell to $10 billion in 2012, down 50 percent from pre-recession levels.
  • Congestion alone on U.S. highways costs the economy $101 billion in fuel and lost productivity every year. 

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politics

Where's The Moral Outrage' Over Daily Disaster Of America's Bridges, Experts Ask

Posted:   |  Updated: 01/25/2014 4:01 pm EST
aging infrastructure bridges
The scene of a bridge collapse on Interstate 5 on May 23, 2013, near Mt. Vernon, Wash. The interstate connects Seattle to Vancouver, B.C., Canada. | Stephen Brashear via Getty Images
WASHINGTON -- Bridgegate has been a nightmare for New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R), but it could have one upside for the rest of America: The scandal has refocused desperately needed attention on the New York metropolitan area's traffic bottlenecks and, more generally, the perilous state of America's bridges.
For years, leading transportation experts have been sounding the alarm over the country's aging infrastructure, warning that many bridges -- primarily those built during or before the Eisenhower administration -- struggle to handle today's traffic demands.
The George Washington Bridge at the center of the Christie scandal is not on the most endangered list, although it is undergoing some major work. But the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) has identified thousands of other bridges in poor condition that could present dangers to commuters.
In recent years, two highway bridges have actually collapsed. A bridge along Interstate 5 in Washington state failed in 2013 after it was struck by a truck. No fatalities were reported, but traffic between Seattle and Vancouver was redirected for nearly four months. In 2007, a bridge along Interstate 35 in Minnesota collapsed, killing 13 people. It was more than a year before a new bridge opened.
The state of New Jersey, Christie's domain, has 6,554 bridges in all, and 651 of them are considered structurally deficient -- meaning they are either deteriorating or severely damaged. More than one-quarter of them are considered functionally obsolete, meaning they no longer meet current standards, according to the ASCE. In New York state, 2,168 bridges out of 17,420 have been found to be structurally deficient, and 4,718 bridges are functionally obsolete.
The ASCE estimates that more than 200 million trips are taken across structurally deficient or functionally obsolete bridges every day in 102 metropolitan regions nationwide. One in nine of the nation’s 607,380 bridges are rated as structurally deficient, while the average age of bridges nationwide is 42 years, according to an analysis by the ASCE. In its authoritative report card for 2013, the group gave the country's bridges an overall C+ grade.

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US spy chiefs say number of foreign militants in Syria rises ..... Meanwhile, US arms keep flowing into Syria. Hmmmmm.....

NBC World News

US spy chiefs say number of foreign militants in Syria rises


Militant Website / AP
This undated image posted on a militant website on Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2014, shows fighters from the al Qaeda-linked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) marching in Raqqa, Syria.
More than 7,000 foreign militants are fighting for the rebels in Syria's civil war and some are being trained to return home and conduct attacks, U.S. spy chiefs told lawmakers on Wednesday.
The estimate, given at a Senate intelligence hearing, was much higher than earlier figures of 3,000 to 4,000 foreign fighters in Syria, and came after news emerged this week that Congress had secretly approved more funding to send weapons to "moderate" rebels.
"We estimate, at this point, an excess of 7,000 foreign fighters have been attracted from some 50 countries, many of them in Europe and the Mideast," James Clapper, the U.S. director of national intelligence, told the hearing.
"And this is of great concern not only to us, but to those countries," he said at the Senate Intelligence Committee's annual hearing on global security threats. 
U.S. spy agencies had not previously made the figure of 7,000 public, though it has appeared in classified intelligence reports, a U.S. official said.

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US arms flow hinders Geneva II talks on Syria: Analyst


The ongoing Geneva II talks on the crisis in Syria will fail to yield “concrete” results as long as the United States continues to support the militancy in the Arab state, an analyst tells Press TV.
In a Thursday interview with Press TV, William Jones, with the Executive Intelligence Review, described Washington’s decision to send more arms to the militants in Syria as a “contradictory policy.”
According to Jones, the ongoing Geneva II conference, aimed at containing the crisis in Syria, will not “lead to anything concrete as long as there’s a policy of supporting the violence in the region.”
“They (Americans) are feeding in more guns and ammunition. The violence will increase and it’s hard to see how [Geneva II] negotiations under those circumstances can lead to a lasting peace,” added the analyst.
Jones made the statements after Reuters reported earlier this week that lawmakers in the US Congress had secretly approved the provision of US arms to the Takfiri militants fighting against the Syrian government.
Reports also say the US increased more than twice its supply of light weaponry and munitions to the militants linked to the so-called Free Syrian Army (FSA)’s Supreme Military Command in the month of January. The military command is aligned with the Western-backed opposition Syrian National Coalition (SNC).
The Geneva II meeting, which opened in Switzerland on January 22, has already hit a deadlock amid sharp differences between the Syrian government and the foreign-backed opposition.
On Wednesday, UN-Arab League Special Representative for Syria Lakhdar Brahimi said there is a “quite large” gap between the rival sides in the Geneva II meeting. He has also said that the ongoing talks have not produced much.
MKA/HJL
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WTAE-PA: Pennsylvania Small Business Hit With Skyrocketing Health Costs From ObamaCare

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Published on Jan 30, 2014
WTAE-PA: Pennsylvania Small Business Hit With Skyrocketing Health Costs From ObamaCare (January 29, 2014)



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Opposition to ObamaCare now 2:1 … among the uninsured

posted at 10:41 am on January 30, 2014 by Ed Morrissey

Behold, your chart of the day. This comes from Kaiser Health News, which has regularly polled on health-related policies, and in particular the uninsured in relation to ObamaCare. Since 2011, the support and opposition have remained fairly close together, but now that ObamaCare has been implemented, a dramatic change has taken place — and one the White House and Democrats won’t like:
kaiser-poll-uninsured
KHN says, presumably without irony, that the reason for the sudden shift is unclear:
Uninsured Americans — the people that the Affordable Care Act was designed to most aid — are increasingly critical of the law as its key provisions kick in, a poll released Thursday finds.
This month’s tracking poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation found that 47 percent of the uninsured said they hold unfavorable views of the law while 24 percent said they liked it. These negative views have increased since December, when 43 percent of the uninsured panned the law and 36 percent liked it. (KHN is an editorially independent program of the Foundation.)
The poll did not pinpoint clear reasons for this drop, which comes in the first month that people could start using insurance purchased through the online marketplaces that are at the heart of the law. It did point out that more than half of people without insurance said the law hasn’t made a difference to them or their families. In addition, the pollsters noted that almost half of people without coverage were unaware the law includes subsidies to offset premium costs for people of low and moderate incomes.
Among all Americans, the sentiment was also negative, with 50 percent holding unfavorable views of the law and 34 percent supporting it. Views on the law have not been even since the end of 2012. Despite this, just 38 percent of the public wants the law to be repealed.
One reason could well be that there are more uninsured, and this time because of ObamaCare.

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Cancer-stricken Sen. Tom Coburn revealed Tuesday that his health insurance under Obamacare doesn’t cover his oncologist

File:Tom Coburn official portrait 112th Congress.jpg
Images Source  :  Wikipedia.org  (Public Domain)
Official portrait of United States Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK).
Source http://coburn.senate.gov
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Remember When Sen. Tom Coburn Lost His Cancer Doctor Because of ObamaCare?

| On 29, Jan 2014
Due to changes in his coverage due to ObamaCare, Sen. Tom Coburn, who has been diagnosed with a recurring case of prostate cancer and has survived colon and melanoma cancers, will not be able to keep his current doctors.
“I’m doing well from a health standpoint, got great docs,” Coburn said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” on Tuesday when asked about his health. “Fortunately — even though my new coverage won’t cover my specialist — I’m going to have great care, and I have a great prognosis.”
Thankfully Sen. Coburn has the means to afford the specialist he needs.
Read More Here
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POLITICO

Obamacare: Tom Coburn loses cancer doctor

By TAL KOPAN | 1/28/14 11:29 AM EST
Cancer-stricken Sen. Tom Coburn revealed Tuesday that his health insurance under Obamacare doesn’t cover his oncologist, but said he still is receiving excellent care. “I’m doing well from a health standpoint, got great docs,” Coburn said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” on Tuesday when asked about his health. “Fortunately — even though my new coverage won’t cover my specialist — I’m going to have great care, and I have a great prognosis.”
The Oklahoma Republican’s spokesman confirmed to POLITICO that since the senator enrolled in his health insurance plan under Obamacare, his coverage has been reduced and he lost coverage for his cancer specialist. Coburn will continue to pay out of pocket and see his oncologist, his office said.
Coburn made public in November that he had been diagnosed with a recurrence of prostate cancer.
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Armed officers guard 'Wolf of Shenfield' banker from his hospital bed... as police prepare to quiz him after he was shot in the leg following financial woes

  • Robin Clark, 44, shot in the thigh at Shenfield station, Essex, on Friday
  • Mystery attacker wearing a black mask sped off in a vehicle
  • Victim treated for leg injury but not well enough to speak to police yet
  • Armed officers are guarding him amid fears he was deliberately targeted
  • Mr Clark sent tweet reading: 'At what point on a first date do you mention you are emotionally unstable and in financial ruin?’
  • Car dealer says he tried to sell Range Rover for a quarter of its value
By Hugo Gye and John Stevens
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Cheers: Robin Clark in a photo posted on his Twitter page
Cheers: Robin Clark in a photo posted on his Twitter page
Police are keen to interview a city trader dubbed the 'Wolf of Shenfield' as soon as he recovers after being shot in the leg while on his way to work, officers said today.
Robin Clark, who is believed to have been suffering from money problems before he was targeted by an unknown gunman last week, is currently under armed guard in hospital as he is treated for a serious leg injury.
The 44-year-old was shot by a man in a balaclava as he got out of his car at Shenfield railway station in Essex at around 5.45am on Friday.
Police have still made no arrests in the case four days later, and have been unable to talk to Mr Clark about the incident due to his serious injuries.
'Our investigations into the incident at Shenfield on Friday, 24 January are ongoing,' a spokesman said today.
'The victim of the attack currently remains in hospital with a serious leg injury, and we hope he will be fit enough to be interviewed by officers in the next couple of days.'
Just days before the shooting, Mr Clark hinted that he was in financial trouble as he shared a message on Twitter stating: ‘At what point on a first date do you mention you are emotionally unstable and in financial ruin?'
The comment – originally made by another Twitter user before being retweeted, or forwarded, by Mr Clark – was his penultimate message before he was wounded.
Officers are investigating whether the shooting was related to Mr Clark’s money problems, but they say they have been unable to establish a motive so far.
Dozens of armed officers from Essex Police were scrambled to the scene while a large section of the car park was taped off
Dozens of armed officers from Essex Police were scrambled to the scene while a large section of the car park was taped off

Detective Superintendent Gary Richardson said today: 'We are doing everything in our power to identify the motive behind the attack, which we hope in turn will enable us to identify the person or people responsible.
'I would also like to repeat my reassurance to the general public that there is no reason for any undue concern as we believe this was a targeted attack.'
Mr Clark, a twice-divorced father-of-four, last year rented out his £2.2million five-bedroom house in nearby Ingatestone after running into debt.
Also last year, a county court judgment was filed against him for debts of £14,653 and he was director of a number of companies that were shut down while owing money.
The day before the shooting Mr Clark had tried to sell his Range Rover for £10,000.
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