WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. military mistakenly shipped four fuses for nuclear missiles to Taiwan in 2006 and never caught the error, the Pentagon said on Tuesday, acknowledging an incident likely to rile China.
The military was supposed to ship helicopter batteries to Taiwan, but instead sent fuses used as part of the trigger mechanism on Minuteman missiles. Taiwan returned the parts to U.S. custody last week.
No nuclear material was shipped to Taiwan, Pentagon officials said.
The problem went unnoticed until Taiwan realized it did not have the helicopter batteries it ordered and reported the issue to the United States, U.S. officials said.
The United States has notified China, which claims the self-ruled island as its own, and is modernizing its military to close the technology gap with Taiwan's mainly U.S. weapons. The two sides have been run separately since 1949, and Beijing has never renounced the use of force to bring the island under its control.
"The secretary of defense is taking this very seriously. We are all taking this very seriously," Air Force Secretary Michael Wynne said.
"Though this was not and could not be construed as nuclear material ... I would tell you that we are very concerned about it," he told reporters at the Pentagon.
What I find so amazing here is that the U.S. military sent the nuclear fuses to Taiwan in 2006, and they never caught the error. The fuses were placed in an unclassified storage facility in the U.S., and then shipped to Taiwan in 2006. The Taiwan military then placed the fuses in their own storage facility until 2008, when they opened the box and discovered they had nuclear fuses instead of helicopter batteries. It was the Taiwanese military that caught the error--and not the U.S.
I'm starting to wonder when the U.S. military will be mistakenly shipping nuclear warheads to Iraq?
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