Posted on 10/30/2001 4:17:08 PM PST by DrCarl
Am I the only one who heard Sean Hannity, at about 5:40PM EST, stop while on the air and say: "So that's what Ashcroft's warning is. It's a dirty bomb."
Be sure to let the International Atomic Energy Agency know that you know much better than they do about these dirty bombs and that what they've said hhere is false:
"The bomb would contaminate with radioactivity the area in which it detonates. It could affect the ability of a population to live in the area until it is decontaminated."
I'm sure they will appreciate your tremendous contribution.
This makes sense. The CT governor responded to the security advisory by beefing up the protection around CT's nuclear plants.
I don't know off the top of my head, but it was tons.
Actually, Strontium-90 and Iodine-131 are fission products, i.e. result from the fissioning of U235/PU239 and subsequent decay of the resulting atoms (need to go back and re-read the Rhodes book...details are a little fuzzy in my brain). If I recall correctly, dust and debris picked up by the blast become radioactive through neutron activation as well as having particles of the actual core material stick to them.
I think Atlanta is safe.
That's right. Get them out! Non-citizens have no right here. Citizens have rights here. In times of emergency like this, they should all be shipped out at least until the emergency has past. We will PC ourselves to death. Many Americans may die so that we can remain pathetically, ridiculously PC.
Isn't it funny that ever since Bubba, we never seem to know what anything really means anymore. I suppose that unless something is "weaponized" then the terrorists aren't seriously trying to kill us.
Richard W.
It is public record for anyone to check into. Hiroshima and Nagasaki are still large cities with very healthy populations and no more birth defects than anywhere else. The areas close to Chernobyl have people who have returned to villages the government ordered evacuated permanently. These are mostly older people who just wanted to go home. People are afraid for them, but they are doing just fine according to my Mother in Law in Ukraine.
But we aren't terrified. Concerned. Observant. Alert. We discuss rumors, possibilities, and events BUT we are NOT terrified.
For example, there's no Strontium or Iodine in the bomb itself, and not much in the environment, but the nuclear blast transmutates other elements in and near the blast into highly radioactive Strontium-90 and Iodine-131 (among others).Actually, Strontium-90 and Iodine-131 are fission products, i.e. result from the fissioning of U235/PU239 and subsequent decay of the resulting atoms (need to go back and re-read the Rhodes book...details are a little fuzzy in my brain).
Correct. Sorry if I wasn't clear, but I was speaking of fission products when I wrote of "other elements in" the bomb as being transmuted into Strontium-90 and Iodine-131, as well as other elements near the bomb being made radioactive as well.
Note: "Thousands could be exposed, causing both short- and long-term deaths and rendering areas uninhabitable for years."
Analysis: Bin Laden's 'nuclear threat'
Nuclear material can be used in "dirty bombs"
By BBC News Online's Natalie Malinarich Osama Bin Laden and his al-Qaeda network may have acquired nuclear materials, according to the Western intelligence sources quoted in the British media.
Although it is widely believed that al-Qaeda does not have the capability to build a conventional atomic bomb, experts fear that the radioactive material could be used in a so-called "dirty bomb" - a device to spread radioactive material. These so-called dirty weapons have never been used before.
Bin Laden does not have the technology to build a bomb
Radiation could be scattered from the top of a building, by detonating explosives wrapped with the radioactive material or by piloting an aircraft into a nuclear reactor.
Thousands could be exposed, causing both short- and long-term deaths and rendering areas uninhabitable for years.
Shopping for uranium
Bin Laden and his associates have long been accused of trying to acquire nuclear material.
Pakistan has an early nuclear programme and its highly enriched uranium would be very precious to it. It would not have enough to spare
John Large, nuclear consultant A close Bin Laden associate was charged by the US of trying to buy a cylinder of South African uranium in Sudan.
A letter alleged to have been written by Bin Laden and seized in London three years ago, called on Muslim nations to acquire nuclear weapons.
"We call for the Muslim brothers to imitate Pakistan as to the possession of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons," says the letter dated May 1998.
It is not known where Osama Bin Laden may have got his nuclear materials - if he has them - is not known, but fingers are pointing to ex-Soviet republics or Pakistan.
Pakistan says its nuclear materials are "in safe hands"
Pakistan has denied the accusations and insists that its nuclear assets are in safe hands.
John Large, an independent nuclear consultant, also says Pakistan is an unlikely source.
"Pakistan has an early nuclear programme and its highly-enriched uranium would be very precious to it. It would not have enough to spare, even if it wanted to," he says.
No nuclear competence
John Large thinks that Bin Laden probably does have enriched uranium bought in a former Soviet republic, possibly Kazakhstan or Uzbekistan.
"Unfortunately, he is in the right place at the right time. That area of the world is the worst place in terms of possible proliferation," he said.
A nuclear bomb is difficult to manufacture and requires a lot of industrial infrastructure, materials, machines and tools
John Large "With the break up of the Soviet Union there were many leaks, typically about 30 cases of smuggling of nuclear materials a year. It is like an open sieve. You get a superpower like the Soviet Union break up and of course its materials will come out."
The Washington-based Center for Defense Information (CDI) warns that there is still a long way to go to bring Russian nuclear security up to international standards.
However, experts insist that al-Qaeda does not have the technical competence to build a nuclear weapon.
"It is difficult to think of a sub-national group doing it without the help of a nuclear state," says John Large.
"A nuclear bomb is difficult to manufacture and requires a lot of industrial infrastructure, materials, machines and tools. It also takes a long time to develop the capability."
Israel, for example, took about 15 years to achieve nuclear status.
But not being able to build an atomic bomb does not mean that radioactive materials cannot be used to cause extensive damage, as many specialists have warned.
Dirty weapons
Weapons involving radioactive materials can take many forms.
A "dirty bomb" could leave areas uninhabitable for years
The most accessible for any terrorist is a radiological dispersion bomb, says the CDI.
This "dirty bomb" consists of waste by-products from nuclear reactors, wrapped in conventional explosives.
On detonation the dirty bomb would spew deadly radioactive materials into the environment.
According to some experts, it would be sufficient to explode an old X-ray machine containing cobalt 60 to produce radiation poisoning.
Another feared possibility is the spread of radioactive particles.
Elements such as caesium, cobalt, plutonium or uranium can be oxidised into respirable-sized particles and then dispersed in the environment.
The particles would settle as dust, and be very difficult to detect and clean up, leaving areas uninhabitable.
Thousands of people could suffer short- and long-term effects from the inhalation of radioactive material.
But experts say the ultimate dirty bomb is a nuclear power station which could serve as a target for a terrorist attack.
Crashing an aircraft into the cooling pool that holds the spent fuel, could have a devastating effect on the nearby population and environment.
Recognising the threat, the French military has stationed surface-to-air missiles at key nuclear processing sites in western France as a precaution against airborne suicide attacks and both the UK and US governments have said security measures are being reviewed.
I heard on here earlier on here that stated the threat was targeted for somewhere in "the South". Someone on here yesterday mentioned GHWB Airport, which is in Houston. Geez...glad I got my blood pressure medicine yesterday...
Gladly. Nuclear bombs and reactors produce radioactive isotopes (split atoms). One of these isotopes is Iodine 131. If you take potassium iodide before or during exposure to I-131, it limits the damage to your thyroid, which accepts iodine from your system. Potassium iodide is NOT a cure-all.
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