|
Arab News
The arrest last week in Bangkok of a Thai national with 66 pounds
of radioactive cesium-137, possibly intended for use in militant
attacks, has officials worried at the UN organization that monitors
nuclear programs. Experts fear the seizure of the nuclear isotope
— which US customs officials believe originated in Russia —
signals a growing demand among terror organizations to create a
so-called “dirty-bomb.”
Thai officials say the man suspected of smuggling the cesium
confessed to smuggling the deadly material, a common radioactive
substance, from neighboring Laos. “It could be deadly if it got
into the hands of terrorists,” says Deputy National Police Chief
Sombat Amornvivat. “We have heard reports that terrorists were
planning attacks on embassies in Thailand.”
Dirty bombs are made by spiking a conventional explosive with
low-level radioactive material obtained from the black market or
even stolen from hospitals, dumps or factories. These weapons
don’t have same explosive force of a nuclear weapon, but the
psychological toll and contamination they wreak would be
considerable, said officials of the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA).
“The willingness of terrorists to commit suicide to achieve
their evil aims makes the nuclear-terrorism threat far more likely
than it was before Sept. 11,” Mohammed El-Baradei,
director-general of IAEA, warned an international group of nuclear
analysts at recent conference in Vienna, Austria.
The UN agency is seeking an additional $30 million to $50 million
annually to expand its counterterrorism programs.
The IAEA is the nuclear watchdog agency charged with regulating
the safety and security of nuclear power plants and other
nonmilitary atomic sites. It has 132 members, 2,200 employees and an
annual budget of $330 million.
Nuclear power plants vary in quality around the world, the agency
said, but most are robust enough to withstand natural disaster and
— especially in the industrialized world — acts of sabotage or
terrorism. “Now we are seeing terrorists that are not afraid to
lose their own lives,” said Gustavo R. Zlauvinen at the Vienna
conference. Gustavo, who serves as the IAEA representative in New
York, added that it would be difficult to protect against attack by
an airplane, as occurred in the Sept. 11 strikes in New York and
Washington.
In a world filled with uncountable — and often unpoliced —
radiation devices, IAEA officials warn that terrorists have a
variety of options for obtaining radioactive material.
Radioactive material can be found in hospital X-ray machines; it
also is used in cancer treatment. Commercial food-processing plants
use radiation to kill bacteria before canning or freezing. Used fuel
rods and nuclear waste are sitting in dumps that may not be guarded.
In addition, an unknown amount of research and military equipment is
thought to be floating around “orphaned” by the collapse of the
Soviet Union. These sites are not under international regulatory
control.
“Now we have to face a new threat. There is no limit to the
intent [of some] groups to use any type of tool, machine or
technology to commit horrific acts and to bring terror, destruction
and death,” Zlauvinen told reporters at the Vienna conference.
To illustrate the havoc a dirty bomb can wreak, IAEA officials
pointed to Goiania, the Brazilian city that in 1987 was contaminated
by thieves who inadvertently stole a 20-gram capsule of highly
radioactive cesium-137 — the same material authorities apprehended
in Bangkok.
The curious material was cut up and passed around. In all, four
persons died, 85 houses had to be destroyed and more than 125,000
drums of contaminated soil, clothing and other effects had to be
carted away.
Specialists warn that the dirty bomb is the most likely nuclear
terrorism scenario. They say it is nearly impossible for
nongovernmental actors to get their hands on the estimated 17 pounds
of plutonium or 60 pounds of enriched uranium necessary to build
such a weapon. Even if they did, the precise calibration that goes
into making the material detonate properly is beyond all but the
most sophisticated laboratories.
However, specialists admit that stealing a weapon or its
components is possible, especially in unstable regimes. Zlauvinen
refused to comment on reports that Pakistan, which tested its own
nuclear devices three years ago, might be a source of hardware or
weapons for such groups.
|