From Military.com:
“Missile
Drill Momentarily Triggers False 'Air Attack' Alarm at Ramstein Air Base”
Americans
living on and near Ramstein Air Base may have thought 2020 was about to pack
yet another punch when sirens wailed and the "giant voice" shouted to
take cover because of an incoming aerial attack. Sirens sounded on the base's
loudspeaker system Saturday morning, followed by the warning: "Aerial
attack, aerial attack, seek cover, seek cover." Missing were the words
that typically accompany such messages -- "Exercise, Exercise,
Exercise" -- sending some who heard the giant voice into a momentary
panic. A Russian nuclear submarine's test-firing of four intercontinental
ballistic missiles -- launched from the western Pacific region -- was likely
the trigger for a brief real-world scare in the Kaiserslautern military
community Saturday. The Russian dummy warheads hit their targets in the
Arkhangelsk region in northwestern Russia more than 3,400 miles away, the
Russian Defense Ministry said in a statement, according to The Associated
Press. The warning "made my heart skip a beat for a second," said a
comment on Ramstein Air Base's official Facebook page Saturday. Another person
responded: "me too I ran into the [base exchange] and started yelling at
folks to take cover."
The 86th
Airlift Wing said on Facebook that its command post "was notified via an
alert notification system of a real-world missile launch in the European
theater." The all-clear was given after the missile launch was
"assessed to be part of a training exercise and not a threat to the KMC
area," the Air Force said in the post, while thanking command post members
"for their quick response." Air Force officials Monday would not say
exactly why the alarm was triggered.
U.S. Air Forces
in Europe-Air Forces Africa said Monday that "the control center followed
proper procedures ... to provide rapid and accurate notifications to all
required personnel," both when the initial alert was received and
"within minutes" after the missile launch was determined to be part
of a training exercise. "We consistently and routinely monitor for any
threats to our forces and our allies," USAFE spokeswoman Erica Vega said
in a statement. At least one person took the false alarm in stride and thanked
the command post on Facebook for "keeping Team Ramstein on their
toes," adding: "The commissary might need to restock TP after that
warning."
^ The US Air
Force and the officials at Ramstein in particular need to do a thorough
investigation on why the false alarm was given to make sure it only happens
again for a test or for an actual attack. ^
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