Breaking News Stories
These are news stories breaking after the publishing of this Word
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Is Iran
An Immediate Threat?
by Mark Armstrong |
War
with Iran Soon?
by Michael Burkert |
Space 'pulse' attack threat to
U.S.
By Bill Gertz - The Washington Times
WASHINGTON -- The United States is highly vulnerable to attack from
electronic pulses caused by a nuclear blast in space, according to a new
book on threats to U.S. security.
A single nuclear weapon carried by a ballistic missile and detonated a
few hundred miles over the United States would cause "catastrophe for
the nation" by damaging electricity-based networks and infrastructure,
including computers and telecommunications, according to "War Footing:
10 Steps America Must Take to Prevail in the War for the Free World."
"This is the single most serious national-security challenge and
certainly the least known," said Frank J. Gaffney Jr. of the Center for
Security Policy, a former Pentagon official and lead author of the book,
which includes contributions by 34 security and intelligence
specialists.
An electromagnetic-pulse (EMP) attack uses X-rays and gamma rays
produced in a nuclear blast in three separate waves of pulses, each with
more damaging effects, and would take months or years to repair, the
book states. The damage to unshielded electronics would be irreversible.
The EMP danger was highlighted recently by a special congressional
commission that has received little public attention and is considered a
unique way for rogue states such as North Korea and Iran, or other
enemies such as al Qaeda, to use nuclear weapons in the future.
Al Qaeda is known to be seeking nuclear weapons, according to documents
uncovered at the terrorist group's facilities in Afghanistan.
The group could use a freighter equipped with a short-range ballistic
missile to fire a nuclear missile over the United States, the book said,
noting that North Korea sells its own version of the Scud for around
$100,000.
North Korea, in recent nuclear talks in Beijing, threatened to export
its nuclear weapons, and Iran already has tested a Scud-missile launch
from a ship.
An EMP attack would damage the national power grid, unprotected
computers and all devices containing microchips, from medical
instruments to military communications, and knock out electronic systems
in cars, airplanes and those used in banking and finance and emergency
services.
"An EMP attack potentially represents a high-tech means for terrorists
to kill millions of Americans the old-fashioned way, through starvation
and disease," the book said.
"Although the direct physical effects of EMP are harmless to people, a
well-designed and well-executed EMP attack could kill indirectly far
more Americans than a nuclear weapon detonated in our most populous
city."
North Korea has been learning about EMP weapons from Russia, which is
believed to have worked on EMPs for decades. China is also working on
EMP arms, according to a recent Pentagon report.
The book calls for taking 10 actions to protect the free world from an
array of 21st-century threats, including hardening U.S. infrastructures
against an EMP attack and countering Islamist fascism through
ideological counterproposals.
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