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posted by martyb on Tuesday May 19 2015, @11:27AM   Printer-friendly
from the pointed-commentary dept.

UK Royal Navy "Trident" nuclear weapons submariner William McNeilly, aged 25, who has been in communications with WikiLeaks since the beginning of May, has decided he wants to go public about the detailed nuclear safety problems he says he has been "gathering for over a year". An excerpt from William McNeilly's exclusive original report to WikiLeaks follows:

My name is William McNeilly. I am an Engineering Technician Weapons Engineer Submariner for UK's Trident II D5 Strategic Weapons System.

This is document will enlighten you to the shockingly extreme conditions that our nuclear weapons system is in right now, and has been in the past. It describes different threats and events that have happened and are threats that are highly likely to happen; each one individually should raise maximum concern. I need you to publish this document or send it to someone who will; please, for the safety of the people.

This will jump between things like food hygiene and a flooded toilets, till describing the complete lack of security, floods, a blazing inferno in the Missile Compartment etc. My aim is to paint an overall picture of what I've seen, and to break down the false images of a perfect system that most people envisage exists.

[More after the break...]

According to a BBC report, A Navy spokesman said:

"The Royal Navy takes security and nuclear safety extremely seriously and we are fully investigating both the issue of the unauthorised release of this document and its contents."

"The naval service operates its submarine fleet under the most stringent safety regime and submarines do not go to sea unless they are completely safe to do so."

The spokesman also said the Navy "completely disagreed" with Mr. McNeilly's report, claiming that it "contains a number of subjective and unsubstantiated personal views, made by a very junior sailor".

However, they added that it was "right" that the contents of the document were considered in detail.

At the risk of editorializing, I am not surprised a navy spokesman is delivering a point-blank denial, along with an implicit admission that the very release of classified information is more troubling to them than the probable and imminent nuclear security threat, but I am curious about the limits of the public patience. If past leaks are any indication, this report will be found accurate. What then? A navy spokesman is either lying to the press about a matter of national security, or is ordered to lie to the press. Either way, it feels like the Navy is piling new crimes on top of the old ones.

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 19 2015, @07:06PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 19 2015, @07:06PM (#185185)

    Well, it's from the UK. People must know their place and stick to it from cradle to grave.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 19 2015, @11:47PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 19 2015, @11:47PM (#185246)

    Tell that to the black dude who was shot in the back and then had a taser dropped by his side a few weeks back. I'm sure that, had the video footage not been recorded, that the cop's word would have been taken.

    America! Fuck yeah!