Thursday, June 5, 2008

Asked to resign, which is code for firing,




On today’s edition of CNN Newsroom Senior Pentagon correspondent Jamie McIntyre reports that top Air Force leadership were asked to resign. This is a result of the B-52 bomber that flew across country with six nuclear-tipped cruise missiles that nobody knew were live nuclear weapons until the plane landed.



Please credit all usage to Jamie McIntyre





BRIANNA KEILAR, CNN ANCHOR: We've got breaking news to tell you about that's coming to us from the Pentagon, and specifically from the Department of the Air Force. We have just learned that the top Air Force leadership is out, fired.



Let's head straight to the Pentagon and our senior correspondent there Jamie McIntyre. What's going on, Jamie?



JAMIE MCINTYRE, CNN SR. PENTAGON CORRESPONDENT: Well, Brianna, this is an example of Defense Secretary Robert Gates no-excuses management style. As you said, heads are rolling over the issue of the handling of nuclear weapons and other leadership issues in the Air Force.



Asked to resign, which is code for firing, is the top civilian in charge of the Air Force, Air Force Secretary Michael Wynne and the top military general in charge of the Air Force, Air Force Chief of Staff General Mike Moseley. The two top leaders of the Air Force are being replaced because Secretary Gates has received a highly critical report of how the Air Force has reacted to an embarrassing incident last year which a B-52 bomber flew across country with six nuclear-tipped cruise missiles that nobody knew were live nuclear weapons until the plane landed in Barksdale, Louisiana.



There were supposed to be big changes made from that. But a recent inspection of the base was less than satisfactory, and Secretary Gates just got a report on his desk from an independent investigator, a Navy admiral who has been in charge of reviewing what the Air Force has done to take care of this.



It's not just this issue though. There have been a number of leadership issues in the Air Force including questions about a conflict of interest around a high-profile public relations contract that was left from the Air Force. And all of that together led Secretary Gates to decide that he was going to take decisive action.



It's not unlike what he did when he heard about the shortcomings at Walter Reed Army Medical Hospital. In that case, he fired the Army secretary and head of the hospital there, as well -- Brianna.

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