Contributed by John:
This is also long but a very interesting read if true...
Nuclear Weapons & Materials Monitor
June 10, 2011
Chu, white House Expected to Play Larger Role in LLNL Director Search
-- Todd Jacobson
Energy Secretary Steven Chu and officials at the White House are expected to assert themselves in the search for a new director at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, strongly pushing for candidates with more of a basic science and energy background after similar concerns raised during the recently completed Los Alamos National Laboratory director search came too late to influence the selection. Chu was lukewarm about the selection of Charlie McMillan as Los Alamos National Laboratory’s next director, NW&M Monitor has learned, initially favoring a candidate with more of a basic science and energy background before signing off on the choice.
Several officials with knowledge of the search have confirmed that White House Science and Technology Policy advisor John Holdren also contacted Chu to make the case that Los Alamos would be best served by a lab director without a weapons program pedigree. One official said that Holdren did not suggest a particular candidate, but wanted “somebody who was safe and reliable and not of the weapons program,” though that input came near the end of the search process. “They’re not going to make that mistake again,” the official said, referring to the fact that the White House became involved in the LANL search late in the process. DOE and the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy did not respond to a request for comment. Potential intervention by the White House has stoked speculation that the University of California, which has the responsibility to conduct the search for lab contractor Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, could veer from the weaponeer profile embodied by retiring director George Miller, former LANL Director Mike Anastasio and McMillan in favor of a director with a more basic science-based resume. More than at Los Alamos, Lawrence Livermore’s mission is evolving toward energy and threat reduction, though it will still play a significant role in weapons design and maintaining the nation’s nuclear weapons arsenal. Chu and Holdren are believed to favor a lab director that better represents the evolving mission.
UC Turning Attention to LLNL Search
With the Los Alamos search out of the way, UC in recent weeks has turned its focus to the Livermore search. In a June 3 message to Livermore employees, Norman Pattiz, the chairman of the Board of Governors for Lawrence Livermore National Security LLC and the director of the Livermore lab director search committee, said the search will be very similar to the hunt for Los Alamos’ director that officials said drew approximately 150 applicants.
Pattiz said membership of the search committee hasn’t been finalized, but he said the panel will meet at the laboratory “within the next two months … to hear from various constituencies and to determine the criteria that we will use to evaluate candidates for the next director.” A screening task force will also be formed to recommend a pool of candidates to the search committee, though the committee could add additional names before bringing in candidates for interviews. He encouraged lab employees to submit potential candidates to the search committee
Different Approach, Different Candidates
If the search committee goes in the direction of a weaponeer, then Bruce Goodwin, the head of Livermore’s weapons program, is the front-runner, according to weapons complex observers. But if the committee were to seek a candidate with more of a science background, Under Secretary of Energy for Science Steve Koonin and Livermore Deputy Director for Science and Technology Tomas Diaz de la Rubia would be natural candidates, though there are likely many others in the scientific community that could draw interest. “Holdren really wants the Livermore director to be a nationally recognized scientist, as does Chu, and not someone from the nuclear weapons community,” another official told NW&M Monitor, adding: “There’s no doubt that if Holdren and Chu were picking, it would be someone that people in the [weapons] community had never heard of.” That potential approach has generated concern from some in the weapons community, given the central role of the weapons laboratory directors in annually certifying the nation’s nuclear stockpile. Though Livermore’s showpiece project, the National Ignition Facility, is up and running and eventually could lead to advances in clean energy, its primary mission involves maintenance of the nation’s nuclear weapons stockpile. Livermore will also have its hands full over the next decade as the lead laboratory for the W78 warhead refurbishment, which is expected to be the first refurbishment that will create a common warhead that can be used on intercontinental ballistic missiles and submarine-launched ballistic missiles.
Stockpile a Priority in Procurement Docs
Procurement documents from the competition for the lab’s management in 2007 also place a premium on certifying the stockpile in the discussion of requirements for key personnel, listing it first among the experience demanded for potential lab directors in a list that also includes leading “a broad-based and world-class scientific organization” and leading “an organization that includes multiple operations and business functions.” Certifying the stockpile “is the main mission,” another industry official said. “That’s where all the money goes, and they can try to change that all they want, but that remains the most important thing.”
At Los Alamos, McMillan suggested in a recent interview with NW&M Monitor that his background within the weapons program would help the laboratory meet the large list of weapons-related challenges it is facing over the next decade, which includes work on several life extension programs, a busy experimental schedule, and construction work on a new Chemistry and Metallurgy Research Replacement-Nuclear Facility. “The labs have different needs at different times in their histories,” McMillan said.
“My view is today many of the deliverables that we face are in the weapons area and so someone who brings not only knowledge of that area, but also the sets of relationships with DoD and DOE/NNSA is the right kind of person today to be able to help ensure that we deliver on the kinds of commitments we have particularly in that area.”
This is also long but a very interesting read if true...
Nuclear Weapons & Materials Monitor
June 10, 2011
Chu, white House Expected to Play Larger Role in LLNL Director Search
-- Todd Jacobson
Energy Secretary Steven Chu and officials at the White House are expected to assert themselves in the search for a new director at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, strongly pushing for candidates with more of a basic science and energy background after similar concerns raised during the recently completed Los Alamos National Laboratory director search came too late to influence the selection. Chu was lukewarm about the selection of Charlie McMillan as Los Alamos National Laboratory’s next director, NW&M Monitor has learned, initially favoring a candidate with more of a basic science and energy background before signing off on the choice.
Several officials with knowledge of the search have confirmed that White House Science and Technology Policy advisor John Holdren also contacted Chu to make the case that Los Alamos would be best served by a lab director without a weapons program pedigree. One official said that Holdren did not suggest a particular candidate, but wanted “somebody who was safe and reliable and not of the weapons program,” though that input came near the end of the search process. “They’re not going to make that mistake again,” the official said, referring to the fact that the White House became involved in the LANL search late in the process. DOE and the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy did not respond to a request for comment. Potential intervention by the White House has stoked speculation that the University of California, which has the responsibility to conduct the search for lab contractor Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, could veer from the weaponeer profile embodied by retiring director George Miller, former LANL Director Mike Anastasio and McMillan in favor of a director with a more basic science-based resume. More than at Los Alamos, Lawrence Livermore’s mission is evolving toward energy and threat reduction, though it will still play a significant role in weapons design and maintaining the nation’s nuclear weapons arsenal. Chu and Holdren are believed to favor a lab director that better represents the evolving mission.
UC Turning Attention to LLNL Search
With the Los Alamos search out of the way, UC in recent weeks has turned its focus to the Livermore search. In a June 3 message to Livermore employees, Norman Pattiz, the chairman of the Board of Governors for Lawrence Livermore National Security LLC and the director of the Livermore lab director search committee, said the search will be very similar to the hunt for Los Alamos’ director that officials said drew approximately 150 applicants.
Pattiz said membership of the search committee hasn’t been finalized, but he said the panel will meet at the laboratory “within the next two months … to hear from various constituencies and to determine the criteria that we will use to evaluate candidates for the next director.” A screening task force will also be formed to recommend a pool of candidates to the search committee, though the committee could add additional names before bringing in candidates for interviews. He encouraged lab employees to submit potential candidates to the search committee
Different Approach, Different Candidates
If the search committee goes in the direction of a weaponeer, then Bruce Goodwin, the head of Livermore’s weapons program, is the front-runner, according to weapons complex observers. But if the committee were to seek a candidate with more of a science background, Under Secretary of Energy for Science Steve Koonin and Livermore Deputy Director for Science and Technology Tomas Diaz de la Rubia would be natural candidates, though there are likely many others in the scientific community that could draw interest. “Holdren really wants the Livermore director to be a nationally recognized scientist, as does Chu, and not someone from the nuclear weapons community,” another official told NW&M Monitor, adding: “There’s no doubt that if Holdren and Chu were picking, it would be someone that people in the [weapons] community had never heard of.” That potential approach has generated concern from some in the weapons community, given the central role of the weapons laboratory directors in annually certifying the nation’s nuclear stockpile. Though Livermore’s showpiece project, the National Ignition Facility, is up and running and eventually could lead to advances in clean energy, its primary mission involves maintenance of the nation’s nuclear weapons stockpile. Livermore will also have its hands full over the next decade as the lead laboratory for the W78 warhead refurbishment, which is expected to be the first refurbishment that will create a common warhead that can be used on intercontinental ballistic missiles and submarine-launched ballistic missiles.
Stockpile a Priority in Procurement Docs
Procurement documents from the competition for the lab’s management in 2007 also place a premium on certifying the stockpile in the discussion of requirements for key personnel, listing it first among the experience demanded for potential lab directors in a list that also includes leading “a broad-based and world-class scientific organization” and leading “an organization that includes multiple operations and business functions.” Certifying the stockpile “is the main mission,” another industry official said. “That’s where all the money goes, and they can try to change that all they want, but that remains the most important thing.”
At Los Alamos, McMillan suggested in a recent interview with NW&M Monitor that his background within the weapons program would help the laboratory meet the large list of weapons-related challenges it is facing over the next decade, which includes work on several life extension programs, a busy experimental schedule, and construction work on a new Chemistry and Metallurgy Research Replacement-Nuclear Facility. “The labs have different needs at different times in their histories,” McMillan said.
“My view is today many of the deliverables that we face are in the weapons area and so someone who brings not only knowledge of that area, but also the sets of relationships with DoD and DOE/NNSA is the right kind of person today to be able to help ensure that we deliver on the kinds of commitments we have particularly in that area.”
Comments
Hey Charlie. Have you heard of self-aggrandizement? I know it may be hard to believe but you were not the most qualified person on earth for the job you were appointed to.
Following (and ongoing) the multi-billion program to refurbish the W76, the U.S. is now refurbishing the W78 to also be loaded into SLBMs! The Life Extension Programs (LEPs) at the Labs have become nothing more than unregulated slush funds. Incidentally, doesn't LANL have the expertise on the W78, or did Bret Knapp successfully run-off all the LANL weapon engineers and design physicists? All of this is one word: stupid. The Labs are sucker punching the government for all it's worth.
Methinks we are circling the drain.
June 13, 2011 6:41 PM
Not the first time. LANL also gave LLNL the W80 responsibilities to keep them alive. LLNL warheads were first to hit the scrap heap.
Hey Charlie. Have you heard of self-aggrandizement? I know it may be hard to believe but you were not the most qualified person on earth for the job you were appointed to.
June 13, 2011 6:26 PM
Can you say "Destiny's Child"?
Qualifications had nothing to do with it. Just family business.
The DoE has already gone a long way to ruin LLNL and LANL with their idiotic ideas.
One place should make damn sure weapons work properly.
June 13, 2011 7:25 PM
For the record, LANL has not given LLNL anything. DOE/NNSA gave LLNL the W80 and W78. On the other hand, LLNL has given LANL Anastasio, McMillan, and Knapp. I would say that LANL got the shaft on that deal!
The most likely target of a US nuclear response will be a runaway conflict over Taiwan. Who trusts any leader to plan to nuke his own relatives? More likely he will pick a lab leader to insure failure; thus continuing the legacy of Bodman, D'Agostino and Pryzbylek to destroy the US weapons complex.
And no one in Congress will notice. The men are mesmerized by anyone who will spread their legs and the women are so wrapped up in getting power by pushing the feminist agenda that no one cares about strategic defense nor effective government.
The future at LANL involves endless construction projects (Bechtel's favorite!), modifying the B61 and maybe some side work for ASC.
Unfortunately, if you are not in one of these three prime "thrust" areas then you have no future at LANL. Diversified science at LANL is now officially dead in the water with McMillan's rise to Director.
Where was Dr. Chu when all the reports came out over the last few years discussing the 'death of science' at the NNSA labs after their "for profit" corporate takeovers? Even both retiring Directors Miller & Anastasio aired their concerns over this issue during the recent NAS visits/report on the labs' condition that took place this winter. Geeze!
Yeah.....you wouldn't want that at a weapons lab.
It might be possible that what he is saying is code for "we want someone who is a good scientist".
Why not a good manager from silicon valley....or the best social worker......or "a good" fast food worker. At one time LLNL was a weapons lab.....you might want someone who is comfortable with the weapons complex and the various and sundry weirdness that is DOE/NNSA as opposed to a "good scientist" who won't be doing "science".
Having actually been involved in NIF since the mid-1990s, I've never really understood how its main selling point was "maintenance of nuclear weapons." A better understanding of fusion implosion physics and Supercomputer Code validation performed by NIF seems to be an order of magnitude removed from actual "design validation" and verification of the real inner workings within a weapon system.
NIF seems to be about "basic" scientific knowledge and not actual weapons design work. Is Ed Mosses a weapons guy?
True enough...but why throw three times (maybe more) the money at NIF when basic science flows better in an academic setting? Why shackle "science" with DOE/NNSA work control, safety practice and paperwork burden? Fundamental science is really working with a handicap at the DOE labs....maybe in the sixties and seventies you could do cutting edge work without the staggering extraneous costs.....those days are no more.
Guess that UC and MacMillan didn't get that message, since they are taking LANL backward in time. Can you say 'Rocky Flats, New Mexico'?
Just look at what MacMillan has to say: all national security is centered on nuclear weapons production.
It might be possible that what he is saying is code for "we want someone who is a good scientist".
June 14, 2011 7:19 AM
Duh!
Wasn't a key early step for both Hitler and Stalin to only let good news press get out and repress unfavorable stories? The US won both WW II and the Cold War with its strategic nuclear forces, yet LANS doesn't have the guts to tell the workforce that just about everyone except UC thinks the new guy is unqualified. Sad, but true.
Just wait until Brett Knapp takes up the Director's crown in a couple of years at LANL!!!! The fix is already in for this boy.
Wallace, Rees, Seestrom? Who will be first to leave and look elsewhere for a more promising environment?
June 14, 2011 11:00 AM
Me thinks that you had better dust off your resume working for Bret Knapp as well. If you think for one moment that you are "stable" working for Knapp, just ask the 25 engineers he "gave the boot to". Why? Just because "he felt like it".
June 13, 2011 9:10 PM
Bret Knapp is doing a fine job ensuring the damn things fail on his own, thank you very much. All Chu has to do is watch.
Wallace, Rees, Seestrom? Who will be first to leave and look elsewhere for a more promising environment?
June 14, 2011 6:27 PM
Seriously, the losers are the US taxpayers. The winners are yet to be determined, but you might vote for construction contracts. You pegged the charade alright. Guess that science is now officially RIP at LANL.
June 14, 2011 7:06 PM
No. The winners have been announced! Didn't you hear? Both McMillan and Knapp gave themselves big fat raises the past 2 weeks. Yeah, again!
June 14, 2011 6:27 PM"
I heard Wallace will be going to something in the UC system. I heard Reese will also be leaving but I am not sure where. Nothing about Seestom. I also know that at the end of the summer several younger staff members will be leaving for university positions. Winning!!!
Anyone who has spent time in DC is tainted by the libertine outrages that Congressmen fall temptation to. Meanwhile congresswomen vie to push the feminist agenda of kill or be killed.
Only a matter of time before O'bama succumbs to temptation.
Best to keep away from that cess pool until after it self destructs. Goodwin is a safe choice.
Postmodern Washington heros are Clinton, Weiner, Rockefeller, JFK, MLK, Condit, Spitzer, Hart, the late great insatiable Teddybear and him binge buddy Chris Dodd. Gingrich and Edwards too, can't pass up an opportunity to score a friendly that presents herself. Not libertine, rather boring post-adolescent bed hoppers, wasting the public trust to "have a spring awakening on the old Appalachian trail".
Washington is overrun with scum. No surprise that governance suffers and we get deadheaded synchophants like Bodman, Pryzbylek and D"Agostino.
Like the ribald Roman senate under the empire, no one cares, except to score.
June 14, 2011 10:42 PM
Don't forget O'Leary, Richardson, and JaraPena. Another bunch of bloodsucking egocentric synchophants.
June 15, 2011 6:08 PM
Bingo! Common thread: Sorbid Lab politics and sorbid D.C. politics. So much politics for so little at stake.
June 15, 2011 7:20 PM
Shucky darn! You cracked the code that everyone else missed.
Yep, you got it right, brother. LANS has little at stake. Just look at the words of the Dear Leader -- LANS is a weapons production plant. That is little at stake, ... indeed.
Dear Leader:
“My view is today many of the deliverables that we face are in the weapons area and so someone who brings not only knowledge of that area, but also the sets of relationships with DoD and DOE/NNSA is the right kind of person today to be able to help ensure that we deliver on the kinds of commitments we have particularly in that area.”
June 15, 2011 10:46 PM
Anastasio, MacMillan, and Knapp sure have given LANL employees the different impression that past 5-years. They constantly refer back to the "excellence" back at Livermore. I hear "at Livermore, at Livermore, .." reverberating in my ears. I think we've been "snookered" at LANL by these con artists.
June 17, 2011 5:40 AM
Went wrong? No, it all went according to plan. Pattiz and his Bechtel friends got exactly who they wanted in the crowning of McMillian as LANL Director... a strong supporter of construction work along with weapon refurbishment for this former "science lab", diversified science be damned!
I fully expect McMillian to make it abundantly clear over the next few months that unless you are involved in the above two areas, your services at LANL will not be needed for much longer.
Chu is an idiot for showing concern on this important issue at such a late date! Los Alamos will be Pantex-ized by the "for profit" LANS crew.
Bechtel.... WINNING!
"Throughout his career, Bret has established an outstanding record of programmatic achievements while demonstrating technical depth, honest, and open communication and fostering internal collaboration".
Anastasio, MacMillion, and Knapp just can't help but say enough about their respective adoration for each other. In terms of what MacMillion said about Knapp above. BS!