‘Nuclear
disaster waiting to happen’: Royal Navy probes Trident
whistleblower's claims
18
May, 2015
The
Royal Navy has launched an investigation into whistleblower William
McNeilly, who exposed horrid security lapses in UK’s trident
nuclear program which make it easier for intruders to access some
secured areas than enter “most nightclubs.”
UK
authorities are “concerned for the whereabouts” of the 25-year
old whistleblower, who went absent without leave and cooperated with
WikiLeaks to post a detailed 18-page report called The Nuclear
Secrets.
McNeilly,
a weapons engineer, who allegedly served from January to April this
year on board the HMS Victorious, claims that a number of security
lapses and technical faults with the Trident missiles carrier exposes
the UK nuclear deterrent to potential terrorist attacks that “would
kill our people and destroy our land.”
Possible
attackers have “the perfect opportunity to send nuclear warheads
crashing down on the UK,” he claims.
In
his revelations, the whistleblower notes some 30 safety and security
flaws on Trident submarines that are based out of Faslane on the
Clyde, Scotland. McNeilly took his time outlining the ease at which
potential terrorist can infiltrate the secured base.
“At
a Base security brief we were told that thousands of Royal Navy IDs
go missing every year. A terrorist can use them, or create
counterfeits with them and easily gain access down the submarine.
Considering most of the guards barely look at them from a few metres
(couple of feet if they’re the rare ones) away the fakes wouldn't
have to be too perfect,” the whistleblower explains.
“I've
shown a room card or nothing, at least once at every check point,”
McNeilly wrote.
An
intruder could bring inside the secured facility any private
electronic device to potentially steal top secret data – or even
weapons and explosives, since the whistleblower claims, contractors
and their equipment are hardly ever being searched.
“You
can carry anything through the security check points without it being
checked!” he says in the report. Personnel Electronics should be
banned yet the policy isn't enforced. You can bring whatever
electronic devices you want onboard... They use their own personal
electronics right beside the missiles.”
Lack
of security checks was not because McNeilly was among the Royal Navy
personnel, but because “that was a standard procedure.”
“100's
of contractors go down the boat when it's alongside. Their equipment
isn't searched and they are not pat down. All it takes is someone to
bring a bomb onboard to commit the worst terrorist attack the UK and
the world has ever seen,” he wrote.
Besides
the evident security flaws, the weapons technician lists a number of
equipment problems, including a seawater leak, a flooded torpedo
compartment and defective toilets. His revelations include missile
compartment being used as an exercise gym, and the communication
system that was difficult to understand.
“There
were a lot of red tags on equipment in most of the compartments we
went into. I highly suspected a lot of them were for defect
rectification, rather than standard maintenance Tagouts. Seeing the
condition of the security and equipment made me more than concerned,
for the safety of the people,” he wrote.
The
state of affairs is so chaotic that McNeilly says any “psychopath”
can gain access to UK’s nuclear site.
“It's
just a matter of time before we're infiltrated by a psychopath or a
terrorist,” he says. “There were some people that I served with
on that patrol who showed clear psychopathic tendencies.”
In
his testimony the runaway weapons engineer submariner also claims
that the missile launch tests failed on three occasions during his
serve time, meaning a successful launch would likely be impossible.
“Basically
they're endangering the public and spending billions upon billions of
tax payers money for a system so broken it can't even do the tests
that prove it works,” he wrote.
McNeilly
also writes that there was a “massive cover-up” of the HMS
Vanguard submarine colliding with a French nuclear submarine, Le
Triomphant, in the Atlantic in February 2009. In his report, he
quotes a senior officer who was on Vanguard at the time as saying:
“We thought, this is it, we're all going to die.”
The
Royal Navy has launched an investigation into McNeilly’s report,
calling his claims “subjective and unsubstantiated,” adding that
“submarines do not go to sea unless they are completely safe.”
While
acknowledging that McNeilly’s report does “not pose any security
risk to our personnel or operations,” the Ministry of Defense is
nonetheless working with the police to find him.
“The
Navy is concerned for the whereabouts and wellbeing of able seaman
McNeilly and is working closely with civilian police to locate him,”
the Navy said.
The
whistleblower who has not returned from his leave of absence since
taking off last week, acknowledged that “the penalty for releasing
this will be life prison if I’m lucky.”
“The
worst fear for me isn’t prison or being assassinated, it’s the
fear of sacrificing everything I have just to warn the public and yet
never be heard,” the 25-year-old wrote.
Some
Scottish Civil Rights organizations have welcomed the sailor’s
courageous act.
“He
should be commended for his action, not hounded by the Royal Navy. He
has exposed the fact that Trident is a catastrophe waiting to happen
- by accident, an act of terrorism or sabotage,” John Ainslie,
co-ordinator of the Scottish Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, told
The Herald.
Meanwhile
the leader of SNP in London, MP Angus Robertson has called for full
explanation and action remedy from the Royal Navy.
“These
revelations, if true, are extremely concerning. It reads as a
nightmare catalogue of serious safety breaches,” Robertson said.
“Failure to follow standard safety procedures is unacceptable in
any workplace but on a Trident submarine on patrol it could result in
extreme tragedy, not just for those on board but indeed for the
entire planet.”
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