FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 7, 1997
NEWS MEDIA CONTACT:
Bill Wicker, 202/586-5827
Peņa Takes Action to Boost Security
at DOE Defense Nuclear Facilities
Secretary of Energy Federico Peņa today announced
several actions to strengthen the safeguards and security
at the Department's defense nuclear facilities. The
measures include deployment of new technologies, involvement
of Navy SEALs in training for "force-on-force"
exercises and additional involvement and advice from
outside experts.
"The Cold War is over, but the potential threat
to our nation's security is not. At Energy Department
sites, where we are dismantling and cleaning up after
50 years of building nuclear weapons, we face new
security challenges that demand new security solutions,"
Peņa said.
In announcing the actions, Peņa released two reports
that he had ordered earlier this year on safeguards
and security -- one by the independent Office of Oversight
and one by the Director of the Office of Security
Affairs. Both reports indicate that there is no immediate
danger to nuclear material at any DOE site but highlight
the need for significant improvements.
"Several months ago when security concerns were
first brought to my attention, I ordered these reports.
Today, I am publicly releasing them because I think
we have a responsibility to the American people to
address these challenges as openly and directly as
possible. More importantly, we are taking actions
to further secure our facilities. The reports highlight
problems, but they also show that our site managers
have been instrumental in helping to identify the
problems and have been working to address them,"
Peņa added.
Peņa announced several actions that have been initiated
to enhance security and respond to the recommendations
in the reports, including:
- DOE -
R-97-123A
[Editors note: A two-page fact sheet with more details
about the reports and announcements follows.]

FACT SHEET
Site-by-Site Report by the Independent Office
of Oversight
The site profiles were completed over six months by
teams of security specialists from the Department's
Office of Oversight, which is independent of the various
organizations responsible for managing safeguards
and security policy. Actual security performance was
closely observed at each facility, including the conduct
of "performance tests" -- including actual
attempts to penetrate alarmed barriers and simulated
terrorist attacks that used laser devices that simulated
automatic weapons. The outcome of each performance
test was evaluated along with conclusions from computer
models and the analyses of technical experts.
The report, which summarizes more than 2,000 classified
pages, identified the need to continue to improve
protection at four sites -- Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory (evaluated in May 1997), Rocky Flats (evaluated
in April 1997), Pantex Plant (evaluated in August
1997) and Los Alamos National Laboratory (evaluated
in May 1997). According to the report, these sites
do not have "vulnerabilities that would have
allowed an adversary to penetrate the facility, but
rather that one or more of the layered elements of
the protection system surrounding a very important
asset had an exploitable weakness." At the remaining
sites, the combination of multiple layers of protection
-- including security clearances, access controls,
sophisticated alarm systems and highly trained and
armed protective forces -- provide an adequate safety
margin. The oversight review concludes that there
is no immediate security danger at any DOE site.
This is the first time an unclassified report on
safeguards and security at all major DOE facilities
has been prepared and released to the public.
Office of Security Affairs Report to the Secretary
On the Status of Safeguards and Security
Last May, Secretary Peņa appointed Joseph Mahaley
as director of the Office of Security Affairs, and
instructed him to review security at DOE sites as
well as issues affecting the department's security
management structure. His 56-page report highlights
issues, initiatives and achievements which characterize
the current protection posture and status of safeguards
and security programs at DOE's 12 major defense nuclear
facilities. The report found that the current level
of security being provided across the board is satisfactory
at most locations. "Three facilities are not
fully satisfactory at this time, although, with very
few exceptions, these marginal facilities are currently
implementing compensatory measures or developing and
implementing corrective actions to upgrade their status,"
the report notes in its executive summary.
The Office of Security Affairs Report also highlights
the need to improve DOE's management of security affairs.
Several reports have made the same recommendations.
Secretary Peņa is establishing a new Security Management
Council to make recommendations and follow up on management
reforms. The council will be led by Deputy Secretary
Moler.
New Board to Advise on Safeguards and Security
The Security Oversight Board, which was first proposed
by Senator John Warner and is pending in the National
Defense Authorization Act of 1998, will counsel the
Secretary on policy, operational concerns, strategic
planning, personnel, budget, procurement and development
of priorities relating to the DOE safeguards and security
program.
The board will consist of experts from both inside
and outside the department. Members will include the
Secretary of Energy (chair); Director of the Office
of Nonproliferation and National Security; Assistant
Secretary for Environmental Management; Assistant
Secretary for Defense Programs; Assistant Secretary
for Environment, Safety and Health; Associate Deputy
Secretary for Field Management; and five additional
members appointed by the Secretary of Energy who are
not employees of DOE or its contractors and selected
as follows: three by the Secretary of Defense, one
by the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
and one by the director of Central Intelligence.
Board members will evaluate the Department's procedures
for protecting nuclear weapons and weapons-capable
material at facilities which were involved in building
nuclear weapons during the Cold War. The board will
disband on Oct. 31, 2000.
Navy SEALs, FBI to Help Train Protective Forces
The Department of Energy will start using U.S. Navy
SEALs for training and planning tactics for the "force-on-force"
exercises that DOE uses to test security and train
security police officers. The specialized SEAL units
have the advanced tactical skills and the technology
that is available to potential adversaries and they
are trained to accomplish highly focused military
objectives. The Department will also enhance cooperation
and training between the FBI and DOE field sites for
threat contingency planning and emergency response.
More Protective Forces, New Technologies, Background
Checks
To further ensure the security of DOE nuclear laboratories,
facilities and sites, additional security officers
would be hired at least four locations -- Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory (California), Hanford
(Washington), Nevada Test Site (Nevada) and Los Alamos
National Laboratory (New Mexico). Upgrades to security
systems at facilities throughout the DOE complex,
including Pantex Plant (Texas), Idaho National Engineering
& Environmental Laboratory (Idaho), Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory, Hanford, Oak Ridge Reservation
(Tennessee), Savannah River Site (South Carolina),
Rocky Flats Environmental Technology Site (Colorado)
and Los Alamos are either planned or already under
way.
Examples of recent and continuing enhancements include
construction of new guard stations, guard towers and
vehicle barriers; improved security fencing and lighting
systems; new gamma ray, x-ray and metal detectors;
improved security alarm and aircraft detection systems;
closed circuit TV systems; improved computer protection
systems; and installation of upgraded encryption and
technical countermeasurement instruments.
The Department is taking steps to strengthen the
process for checking backgrounds of foreign visitors
to DOE's nuclear facilities, including allocating
an additional $5 million to enhance counterintelligence
resources and the security activities that support
them. The aim is to clarify sensitive subject areas
that require protection and apply that knowledge to
actual visits to DOE facilities by foreign nationals.
The Department will also evaluate several new technologies
to enhance protection of DOE sites, nuclear materials
and classified information, including a heartbeat
detector that can find humans in confined spaces;
a device that automatically screens vehicles and pedestrians
entering/leaving DOE facilities; a high-speed network
intrusion detection system for identifying suspicious
activities on a computer network; and non-lead/non-toxic
ammunition, which provides safer, healthier firearms
training for DOE protective forces.