Pentagon wants to avoid misunderstandings over nuclear weapons related to millennium bug.
Published:
23 July 1999 y., Friday
The United States has again asked Russia to join in minimizing the risk of a missile-launch misunderstanding at the height of Year 2000 computer uncertainties, the U.S. Defense Department said Tuesday. Moscow has not yet replied to the latest U.S. overture, said a Pentagon spokesman. At issue is a proposed temporary "early warning" center that would keep missile-launching commanders constantly aware of what the other side was seeing and doing during the potentially troublesome date rollover. Simulations have shown that older computers and microchips could crash or malfunction by misreading the year 2000 as 1900, the result of an old programming shortcut based on a two-digit date field. A facility designed to be shared with Russia to head off any false alerts has already been set up by the United States at Peterson Air Force Base, near Colorado Springs, Colo. President Clinton and Russian President Boris Yeltsin set the project in motion when they met in Moscow last September as part of a post-Cold War plan to share early warning data about long-range missile launches. Before the bombing of Serbia drove U.S.-Russian ties to their lowest ebb of the post-Cold War period, the United States and Russia had been talking regularly about 2000-related computer issues. Pentagon officials say they are fully confident, based on extensive testing, that critical systems in the U.S. nuclear chain of command will work flawlessly during the date change. They also say they see virtually no possibility of accidental launches because humans must make final decisions in both countries.
Šaltinis:
Internet
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Heads of foreign states bid farewell to the late President of the Republic of Lithuania, Algirdas Mykolas Brazauskas.
more »
Today we say farewell to one of the most prominent Lithuanian politicians, a sincere and open person, a man of principle, Algirdas Brazauskas - the first directly elected president of Lithuania after re-independence.
more »
Head of Cabinet of the Secretary General of the Council of the European Union Marek Mora is paying a visit to Lithuania from 30 June to 1 July.
more »
Lithuania‘s Minister of Foreign Affairs A. Ažubalis says, that continuous implementation of the Treaty of Lisbon, energy security, as well as European Union‘s relations with Eastern Neighbourhood countries and Russia would stay on the list of European policy issues that are the most important to Lithuania in the second half of 2010.
more »
President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaitė calls the decisions adopted by the European Council strategic and important for Lithuania and for the whole European Union.
more »
On 16 June in Vilnius, Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Audronius Ažubalis and Poland’s Minister of National Defence Bogdan Klich discussed successful bilateral cooperation on security and defence matters.
more »
President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaitė sent congratulations to President Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson of the Republic of Iceland on Iceland's national holiday, the Independence Day.
more »
President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaitė goes on an official visit to the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.
more »
President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaitė received a high-ranking government official from China, He Guoqiang.
more »
On the occasion of European Day for Border Guards, the 10th of June, heads of diplomatic missions of the European Union member states in Lithuania visited the Border Guard School in Medininkai.
more »