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Is a Nuclear 9/11 in Our Future?
by David Krieger, October 6, 2003
Sooner or later there will be a nuclear 9/11 in
an American city or that of a US ally unless serious program is
undertaken to prevent such an occurrence. A terrorist nuclear
attack against an American city could take many forms. A worst
case scenario would be the detonation of a nuclear device within
a city. Depending upon the size and sophistication of the weapon,
it could kill hundreds of thousands or even millions of people.
Terrorists could obtain a nuclear device by stealing
or purchasing an already created nuclear weapon or by stealing
or purchasing weapons-grade nuclear materials and fashioning a
crude bomb. While neither of these options would be easy, they
cannot be dismissed as beyond the capabilities of a determined
terrorist organization.
If terrorists succeeded in obtaining a nuclear
weapon, they would also have to bring it into the US, assuming
they did not already obtain or create the weapon in this country.
While this would not necessarily be easy, many analysts have suggested
that it would be within the realm of possibility. An oft-cited
example is the possibility of bringing a nuclear device into an
American port hidden on a cargo ship.
Another form of terrorist nuclear attack requiring
far less sophistication would be the detonation of a radiation
weapon or “dirty bomb.” This type of device would
not be capable of a nuclear explosion but would use conventional
explosives to disperse radioactive materials within a populated
area. The detonation of such a device could cause massive panic
due to the public’s appropriate fears of radiation sickness
and of developing cancers and leukemias in the future.
A bi-partisan task force of the Secretary of Energy’s
Advisory Board, headed by former Senate Majority Leader Howard
Baker and former White House Counsel Lloyd Cutler, called upon
the US in 2001 to spend $30 billion over an eight to ten year
period to prevent nuclear weapons and materials in the former
Soviet Union from getting into the hands of terrorists or so called
“rogue” states. The task force called the nuclear
dangers in the former USSR “the most urgent unmet national
security threat facing the United States today.” At present,
the US government is spending only about one-third of the recommended
amount, while it pours resources into paying for the invasion,
occupation and rebuilding of Iraq as well as programs unlikely
to provide effective security to US citizens such as missile defense.
The great difficulty in preventing a nuclear 9/11
is that it will require ending the well-entrenched nuclear double
standards that the US and other nuclear weapons states have lived
by throughout the Nuclear Age. Preventing nuclear terrorism in
the end will not be possible without a serious global program
to eliminate nuclear weapons and control nuclear materials that
could be converted to weapons. Such a program would require universal
agreement in the form of an enforceable treaty providing for the
following:
- full accounting and international safeguarding
of all nuclear weapons, weapons-grade nuclear materials and
nuclear reactors in all countries, including the nuclear weapons
states;
- international tracking and control of the movement
of all nuclear weapons and weapons-grade materials;
- dismantling and prohibiting all uranium enrichment
facilities and all plutonium separation facilities, and the
implementation of a plan to expedite the phasing out all nuclear
power plants;
- full recognition and endorsement by the nuclear
weapons states of their existing obligation pursuant to the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty for an “unequivocal undertaking”
to eliminate their nuclear arsenals;
- rapidly dismantling existing nuclear weapons
in an orderly and transparent manner and the transfer of nuclear
materials to international control sites;
-
and criminalizing the possession, threat
or use of nuclear weapons.
While these steps may appear extreme,
they are in actuality the minimum necessary to prevent a nuclear
9/11. If that is among our top priorities as a country, as surely
it should be, the US government should begin immediately to lead
the world in this direction. Now is the time to act, before one
or more US cities are devastated by nuclear terrorism.
David Krieger is president of the Nuclear Age Peace
Foundation (www.wagingpeace.org). He is the co-author of Choose
Hope, Your Role in Waging Peace in the Nuclear Age.
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