News Stories
These are news stories breaking after the publishing of this Word
from.
What to Look For in
World Events
...a scorecard
Nuclear terrorism realities
Byline: I-wei J. Chang, THE WASHINGTON TIMES ---Article
Excerpt
A nuclear catastrophe could occur if terrorists gained access to nuclear
weapons or weapons-grade materials, and if regional conflicts or
instability degenerated into wars in which nuclear weapons were used,
said a report by researchers at the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace to a Nonproliferation Conference last week.
Nuclear terrorism on the one hand, and regional proliferation and
conflict on the other, are the two most pressing nuclear threats facing
the world today, according to "Universal Compliance: A Strategy for
Nuclear Security," the preliminary report by George Perkovich, Joseph
Cirincione, Rose Gottemoeller, Jon Wolfsthal and Jessica Mathews. The
final version is to be released in January to the next U.S.
administration.
Unlike countries, which may fear retaliation, terrorist groups could be
undeterred about using nuclear weapons to achieve a political agenda,
the Carnegie report said.
Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden has expressed interest in acquiring
nuclear weapons. While terrorist groups are not believed to have the
ability to produce nuclear weapons, they may be able to seize such
weapons or materials from other countries.
The report, issued at the conference in Washington, recommends securing
nuclear weapons facilities, particularly those in the former Soviet
Union, and ending worldwide the production of weapons-usable nuclear
materials.
"If the U.S. and others just keep doing what they are doing today, a
nuclear 9/11 is more likely than not in the decade ahead," said Graham
Allison, director of Harvard University's Belfer Center for Science and
International Affairs.
"Nuclear terrorism is, in fact, preventable," Mr. Allison said. "It is a
challenge...
|