The Nuclear Age
Peace Foundation's Top Five List of Events Related to Nuclear
Terrorism in 2001
Issued January 2002
On 11 September, terrorists hijacked four US jetliners,
crashing two into the World Trade Center Twin Towers in New York
City, one into the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. and one in Pennsylvania.
In the aftermath of 11 September, the question of nuclear terrorism
became a serious international concern. The following are the
top five nuclear terrorism related events of 2001.
1. In exercises designed to test security, US Army
and Navy Teams successfully penetrate nuclear facilities and obtain
nuclear materials. The US takes legislative measures to increase
security at and around nuclear facilities.
2. Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf orders
an emergency redeployment of the country's nuclear arsenal to
at least six secret new locations.
3. The UK Ministry of Defense publishes details
about the transport of nuclear weapons and plutonium throughout
the country on the Ministry of Defense website, raising controversy
over offering potential terrorists a guide to the rail lines,
roads and airports used for nuclear materials.
4. As a precaution against suicide attacks, France
increases the number of surface-to-air missiles near La Hague,
Europe's largest nuclear waste reprocessing plant.
5. Weapons experts testify to attendees of the
International Atomic Energy Agency conference in Vienna, Austria
that terrorists could use a nuclear device.
1. US Nuclear Facilities Fail Security Drills
A report released in October by a non-governmental
watchdog organization, Project on Government Oversight (POGO),
found that the ten US nuclear weapons research and production
facilities are vulnerable to a terrorist attack and failed about
half of recent security drills. In exercises designed to test
security, US Army and Navy teams successfully penetrated nuclear
facilities and obtained nuclear materials. US government security
regulations require that nuclear facilities defend themselves
against the theft of nuclear materials by terrorists or through
sabotage. According to Dannielle Brian, POGO Director, the repeated
security breaches are serious cause for concern because Department
of Energy employees were warned before each security exercise
but still failed to stop the would-be terrorists in more than
half the drills.
Nine of the ten weapons facilities are within 100
miles of cities with more than 75,000 people. Eight of the ten
weapons facilities contain a total of 33.5 metric tons of plutonium.
It only takes a few pounds of plutonium to create a nuclear bomb.
Regarding security at the nuclear weapons facilities, Brian stated
that no one thought it really mattered until 11 September. A spokesperson
from the National Nuclear Security Administration declined to
comment on the report. The full report can be accessed online
at POGO's website http://www.pogo.org/.
In related news, Representative Edward Markey (D-Massachusetts)
introduced legislation on 14 November requiring the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission to have supplies of potassium iodide within 200 miles
of each of the 103 operating nuclear power plants in the US. If
passed, the bill would also require the government commission
to stock potassium iodide at individual homes and public facilities
within 50 miles of a nuclear power plant. Potassium iodide has
been shown to protect the body's thyroid gland from diseases related
to radiation exposure and must be taken within several hours after
exposure to be effective.
In addition, Markey is urging US lawmakers to pass
measures that would increase security at nuclear power plants
in the wake of the 11 September events. Markey stated, "In
this new era of terrorism, in which the threat of an intentional
release of radioactivity can no longer be ignored, we should waste
no more time."
On 15 November, US Senators Hillary Rodham Clinton
(D-New York) and Harry Reid (D-Nevada) announced that they will
introduce legislation to federalize security guards at the 103
nuclear power plants across the US. Currently, nuclear power plant
operators hire private guards. The guards carry weapons, but they
do not have police power. Since the events of 11 September, local
police, and state police and, in some states, National Guard troops
have augmented security at the nation's nuclear power plants.
While conservatives in the Senate will likely object
to federalizing guards, according to Senator Clinton, "We
can no longer leave the security at our nation's nuclear power
plants to chance." Senator Reid noted that Congress just
agreed to federalize passenger and baggage screeners at airports.
He stated, "It's time we focus the same energy to improve
safety at nuclear power plants."
2. Pakistan Restructures Nuclear Arsenal and Military
to Avoid Nuclear Terrorism
On 10 November, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf
ordered an emergency redeployment of the country's nuclear arsenal
to at least six secret new locations. Pakistan's nuclear arsenal
was moved for fear of theft or strikes against the country's nuclear
facilities and also to remove its nuclear arsenal from bases that
might be used by the US.
Musharraf also reorganized military oversight of
the nuclear forces in the weeks after joining the US in its campaign
against terrorism in Afghanistan. On 7 October, Musharraf created
the new Strategic Planning Division, headed by a three-star general
to oversee operations as part of a top military and intelligence
restructuring designed to marginalize officers considered too
sympathetic to the Taliban and other extremist factions. General
Khalid Kidwai is now the director of operational security for
the country's nuclear sites and weapons and he answers directly
to Musharraf.
Reports from the US Central Intelligence Agency
and other sources have stated that Pakistan stores its nuclear
warheads and missiles separately but it is unknown whether in
the emergency conditions of the months following the 11 September
events whether the equipment was repositioned for easier assembly.
Intelligence sources believe that Pakistan has between 30-40 warheads
and it has test-fired intermediate range ballistic missiles. US
officials fear that if Musharraf is assassinated or ousted in
a military coup, extremists could gain control of the Pakistan's
nuclear arsenal or share knowledge about them with hostile organizations
or regimes.
3. UK Ministry of Defense Releases Details of Nuclear
Transports Despite Threat Posed by Nuclear Terrorism
The UK Ministry of Defense published details about
the transport of nuclear weapons and plutonium throughout the
country on the Ministry of Defense website in November intended
to assist police, fire brigades and city councils in drafting
emergency plans in case of an accident. The Ministry of Defense
has received criticism for the report entitled "Defence Nuclear
Materials Transport Contingency Arrangements," because opponents
argue that the report could offer potential terrorists a guide
to the rail lines, roads and airports used for nuclear materials.
It also raised controversy in light of Home Secretary David Blunkett's
attempts to prevent nuclear terrorism. The report challenges one
of Secretary Blunkett's proposed measures that makes it an offense
punishable by seven years in jail to disclose any information
that "might prejudice the security of any nuclear site or
of any nuclear material."
The report details security for nuclear convoys.
It also lists UK military nuclear reactor factories and test sites
and for the first time where "special nuclear materials"
such as weapons-grade uranium and plutonium would travel. In addition,
the publication reveals that a warhead is unstable if heated.
According to the report, "If weapon is jetting (flames under
pressure) explosion may be imminent, debris may be scattered within
600 m[eter] radius."
Stewart Kemp, Secretary of the Nuclear Free Local
Authorities stated, "If the government judges that there
is an increased terrorist threat then the right thing to do is
to stop the transports altogether."
The full report can be obtained online at http://www.mod.uk/index.php3?page=2474.
4. France Deploys Missiles to Defend Nuclear Waste
Reprocessing Plant
As a precaution against suicide attacks, France
increased the number of surface-to-air missiles near La Hague,
Europe's largest nuclear waste reprocessing plant in November.
In October, the French Defense Ministry announced that radar systems
capable of detecting low-flying planes and surface-to-air missiles
had been positioned at La Hague as well as at Il Longue, a military
base for nuclear submarines off the Brittany coast in northwest
France.
A top regional official stated that the deployment
of surface-to-air missiles was placed a mile from the plant and
the measure was purely precautionary in light of the events of
11 September in the US.
5. IAEA Calls for Global Nuclear Security Standards
to Prevent Nuclear Terrorism
Weapons experts told attendees of the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) conference in Vienna, Austria on 2
November that terrorists could use a nuclear device. Speakers
at the conference suggested that western countries, in particular
the US, should accelerate efforts to protect nuclear materials
that could, if they haven't already, fall into the hands of terrorists.
Morten Bremer Maerli, a researcher at the Norwegian Institute
of International Affaris, stated, "The only strategy is to
protect the material where it is, but this kind of implementation
strategy doesn't exist."
Maerli and other experts testified to a shocking
lack of security and control to prevent the theft or purchase
of highly enriched uranium and plutonium from nuclear facilities
in many countries, especially Russia. Since 1993, the IAEA has
reported 175 cases of nuclear materials trafficking, including
18 cases involving small amounts of highly enriched uranium or
plutonium. In these cases, law enforcement agencies seized the
materials, but records at the facilities from which the materials
were stolen, most of them Russian, did not show anything missing.
According to Matthew Bunn, Assistant Director of the Science,
Technology and Public Policy Program at Harvard University's Kennedy
School, up to 60 percent of nuclear material remains inadequately
secured in Russia.
Mohamed ElBaradei, IAEA Director General, stated
"The controls on nuclear material and radioactive sources
are uneven. Security is as good as its weakest link and loose
nuclear material in any country is a potential threat to the entire
world." According to ElBaradei, in the wake of the 11 September
events, the IAEA has expanded its concerns about nuclear materials
getting into clandestine weapons programs, not only in states
that sponsor terrorism, but also into the hands of extremist groups.
ElBaradei called for international unity to create
universal minimum security standards for nuclear plants and materials.
Currently, standards are largely left to individual countries.
The IAEA also requested $30 million to $50 million to step up
safety work in securing nuclear materials globally.
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