Time to Shut Down
the Nation's Nuclear Plants
by Mark Gaffney*, October, 2001
In the aftermath of the horrific September 11 attack
on the World Trade Center there has been considerable discussion
in the US media about the threat of a future chemical or biological
attack. Meanwhile, the much greater threat posed by a successful
terrorist attack on a US nuclear reactor has passed almost without
notice. Currently there are about 110 operational nuclear reactors
in the United States. And virtually every one of these electrical
generating facilities is vulnerable to terrorism. Indeed, from
the standpoint of the terrorist it would be hard to imagine a
more ideal target than a nuclear reactor. These plants are uniquely
vulnerable by virtue of their design. A successful assault on
even one nuclear reactor could produce a catastrophe that would
make the recent tragedy in New York seem puny by comparison.
Such terrorism would be much easier to mount than
the attack on the World Trade Center. No need to hijack a commercial
jet liner. A small plane would suffice, and could be legally rented
at any of a hundred airports in the US. The plane could be flown
to a remote air strip located, say, on a rented farm, there loaded
with explosives or even gasoline, before being pointed in kamikaze
fashion at a nuclear plant.
Such an attack, planned by someone with the necessary
expertise, and staged by a handful of determined men, would be
extremely difficult to stop. Current operational safeguards at
US nuclear plants are designed to protect against truck bombs.
But apparently no thought has been given to the sort of aerial
assault that toppled the World Trade Center.
The objective of such terrorism would be to disable
the nuclear plant's safety (cooling) systems, triggering a worst-case
scenario: a nuclear melt-down.
A partial melt-down of uranium fuel did occur at
Three Mile Island in 1979, and, again, at Chernobyl in 1986. However,
serious as these accidents were, especially Chernobyl, the long-term
consequences of a full-scale melt-down would be immeasurably worse,
worse even than the detonation of a nuclear weapon. Why? Because
the core of a nuclear reactor contains many times as much uranium
fuel as the largest nuclear bomb. Hence the potential for the
release of far more radiation.
Try and imagine, if you can, the hellish scenario
that would result from such an attack. A full scale melt-down
is a runaway nuclear reaction in the core of a nuclear reactor.
It leads to a "China Syndrome," where the "hot"
uranium fuel literally melts its way through the floor of the
reactor's containment vessel, then sinks into the earth until
it reaches ground water; whereupon a gigantic plume of intensely
radioactive material rises like death into the air and begins
to spread with the winds over a vast area.
Let us assume such an attack near a large US city
-- a fair assumption given that many nuclear plants are located
near metropolitan areas. With the prevailing winds, a melt-down
at a plant in Pennsylvania, say, or in Virginia, would contaminate
a large portion of the eastern seaboard with lethal radiation,
killing untold numbers of people, and necessitating the evacuation
of tens of millions of others. Large areas would be rendered uninhabitable
for centuries. Entire cities, including New York and even the
nation's capital, might have to be permanently vacated. The human
cost in lives, not to mention the vast disruptions to American
society, would be on a scale that is impossible to comprehend.
Yet the danger is all too real. Although the inherent
vulnerability of nuclear reactors to terrorism has been understood
for many years, the threat has not been taken seriously -- until
now -- for reasons of hubris and greed.
From the day of their election President Bush and
Vice President Cheney have touted a new generation of "clean"
and "safe" nuclear power reactors that, we are told,
will solve the nation's latest energy crisis. The two most powerful
men in the land have, in short, been doing everything in their
power to magnify the problem, and have played straight into the
hands of Osama bin Ladin.
No doubt, Bush and Cheney's support for nuclear
has been driven by politics. They have sought to reward those
in industry who supported their candidacy. Make no mistake, the
only reason nuclear power has survived is because of federal subsidies.
Corporate welfare has been its life-blood. In a truly free marketplace
nuclear energy would long ago have gone the way of the dinosaurs.
In the wake of the disaster in New York the nation
must finally come to terms with the true risks of nuclear energy.
We must face the reality that there is no way to adequately safeguard
these plants. When terrorists are willing to die they are very
difficult to stop. The only solution is prevention: phase out
nuclear power as soon as possible in an orderly transition to
wind and solar energy; which are immune to terrorism, in addition
to being cost-effective and environmentally friendly.
*Mark Gaffney
is the author of a pioneering study of the Israeli nuclear weapons
program. Mark is currently preparing a briefing paper "Will
the Next Mid-East War Go Nuclear?" for the Washington-based
Middle East Policy Council.
He can be reached at:
PO Box 100
Chiloquin, OR 97624
541-783-2309
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