Posted on 08/23/2002 7:32:05 AM PDT by Momaw Nadon
Move described as a preemptive strike vs. terror
WASHINGTON - US and Russian officials whisked away 100 pounds of weapons-grade uranium from an aging nuclear reactor in Yugoslavia yesterday in a dramatic, military-style operation described as the first of a series of preemptive strikes against the danger of nuclear terrorism.
Rest of article may be viewed here
(Excerpt) Read more at boston.com ...
But then, their note-pad is probably pretty full by now.
VRN
However, later in the article it says the Yugoslavs GAVE PERMISSION for the operation.
No one siezed any uranium......the Yugos have been wanting to get rid of the spent rods for a long time....they finally were able to arrange a place to dump the stuff.
The entire story is actually very old "news".
The real news this week has been the arrest of Clinton's KLA buddies in Kosovo by our guys. Apparently, GWB has realized the Kosovo and Bosnian Jihadists need to be stopped. Clinton must be fuming that his Jihadist pals in the Balkans are now getting thrown in jail.
No one siezed any uranium......the Yugos have been wanting to get rid of the spent rods for a long time....they finally were able to arrange a place to dump the stuff.
The entire story is actually very old "news".
The real news this week has been the arrest of Clinton's KLA buddies in Kosovo by our guys. Apparently, GWB has realized the Kosovo and Bosnian Jihadists need to be stopped. Clinton must be fuming that his Jihadist pals in the Balkans are now getting thrown in jail.
Thanks to NATO, Vinca became a potential terrorist target.
Yeah ... same way he was crying after Ron Brown's funeral and fuming over the way his Whitewater buddies ended up jailed or dead.
Was Bush cooperationg with Turner?
From Timesonline-UK via Drudge:
August 24, 2002 US and Russia in raid to snatch uranium |
The dawn ?raid? on the Vinca Institute of Nuclear Sciences in Belgrade, protected by Yugoslav Army helicopters and 1,200 heavily armed troops, was the first joint effort by the US and Russia to retrieve weapons-grade nuclear material supplied by Moscow to research centres around the world. Under a Moscow-Washington agreement, America will help to finance a programme to retrieve all the research uranium from 17 countries formerly allied with the Soviet Union.
Since the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington and the discovery in Afghanistan of al-Qaeda plans to develop crude nuclear devices, the programme became a priority. A recent report by Harvard University?s Kennedy School of Government in Washington said that there were 345 operating or idle research reactors in 58 countries that had highly enriched uranium that could be converted for use in a weapon by terrorists.
Matthew Bunn, one of the authors, said security at the research facilities ranged from ?excellent to appalling?. He named the 16 other countries with Russian nuclear fuel as North Korea, China, Libya, Egypt, Uzbekistan, Romania, Ukraine, Belarus, Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, Kazakhstan, Syria, Vietnam, Latvia and Bulgaria.
The 48.1kg of highly enriched uranium ? enough for at least two bombs ? had been kept at the Vinca Institute since the 1970s. It was put in sealed containers and loaded into a lorry. Three lorries, two of them decoys, left with military escorts for Belgrade?s international airport.
The fuel, in the form of 5,000 rods of highly enriched uranium, was flown out of Belgrade in a Russian transport aircraft to Dimitrovgrad, southeast of Moscow, where it will be reprocessed, converting the 80 per cent enriched uranium into material that cannot be used in a bomb. The operation had been planned for a year. The media tycoon Ted Turner funded the operation with a £3.3 million donation from the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a non-proliferation foundation of which he is co-chairman.
Approval required a vote of the Yugoslav parliament, which was sworn to secrecy because of the fear that terrorists might try to hijack the fuel. Half Belgrade was closed off while the fuel was removed. The operation took 17 hours.
The next operation will be at a research facility in Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan, after the Government signed an agreement with Washington and Moscow. The Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency was involved in the removal negotiations.
There had been concerns that the plan had leaked out, because several Yugoslav scientists involved in research work at the Vinca Institute had written to a Belgrade newspaper complaining that a ?national treasure? was to be removed.
The IAEA has written to all the recipient countries to ask if they would co-operate in a ?take-back? programme.
Guess they'll just have to switch to WordPad.
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