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Target America: The Simple Device For Causing An Explosion Of Panic
Independent (UK) ^ | 6-11-2002 | Andrew Gumbel

Posted on 06/10/2002 4:16:33 PM PDT by blam

Target America: the simple device for causing an explosion of panic

By Andrew Gumbel in Los Angeles
11 June 2002

This is the startlingly simple recipe for detonating a "dirty bomb" in the United States: take a small quantity, not necessarily more than a teacup, of a radioactive isotope such as caesium-137 or strontium-90. Both are used for cancer treatments in hospitals and are relatively easy to get hold of.

Pack it into a conventional explosive – anything from a small nail bomb to the fertiliser-based device that devastated the Oklahoma City federal building seven years ago. Even more simply, assuming the perpetrator is unconcerned about his own safety, one could just use an aerosol spraying device. And then go.

The result would be haphazard and hard to measure. The number of dead and injured would depend largely on the force of the conventional explosion rather than the spread of radioactive contamination, which could be relatively modest. But one thing is almost certain: it would create panic on a gigantic scale.

We have to be careful about our terms here. A dirty bomb is not a nuclear bomb, not even close; it is a crude system for dispersing radioactivity. Certainly, if the radioactive material used was weapons-grade plutonium, or spent nuclear fuel, it could cause horrific casualties, especially over time. The more immediate threat, however, is something less dramatic, something that would be more devastating psychologically and symbolically than in terms of the raw human cost.

Imagine an explosion in the centre of Washington, say. First indications from the Justice Department suggest that could have been the intention of Abdullah al Mujahir, the dirty bomb plot suspect whose arrest was announced yesterday.

Given the massive security presence in the capital since 11 September, it is unlikely that a major building could be taken out along the lines of the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995. But just imagine the effects of even a small explosion somewhere in the vicinity of the Capitol building, or the White House.

Whole city blocks would be evacuated. Hospitals would be jammed with citizens terrified about radiation poisoning. Emergency quarantine rules might have to be instituted. Government departments would have to move premises in a hurry, causing immense disruption. Both the President and Congress might have to find new temporary homes, or even leave Washington for secret underground locations.

Move the premise to another city, such as New York, and the nature of the havoc changes slightly, but not its extent. A strike on the financial district or midtown might have less symbolic value – apart from that of New York being lined up once again for attack – but just imagine the economic disruption in a commercial powerhouse of a city, densely populated with big corporations.

Or imagine another scenario, raised in The New York Times recently by the Russian nuclear physicist and radiation clean-up expert Vladimir Shikalov: a strike on Disneyland. Again, the immediate human toll might be relatively low, but the panic would be so great, and the lingering low-level radioactive contamination so hard to eliminate, that the Magic Kingdom might well be forced to close down for ever. It would, as the New York Times reporter Bill Keller put it, "constitute a staggering strike at Americans' sense of innocence".

There is, of course, nothing new about the idea of a dirty bomb explosion on American soil, or anywhere else for that matter. What has changed since 11 September is the realisation in high government circles that the theory is a lot closer to being put into practice than previously imagined.

Mr Muhajir's arrest provides the first concrete evidence that a dirty bomb plot was in the works. Since around March, however, US government experts have recognised that al-Qa'ida probably has access to both caesium-137 and strontium-90 and has the capability to use them to construct a dirty bomb. Their assessment is based both on written materials recovered after al-Qa'ida and the Taliban fled Kabul and other major cities in Aghanistan at the end of last year, and on the testimony of Abu Zabaydah, a senior al-Qa'ida operative captured in Pakistan in March.

According to media accounts of his interrogation, Mr Zubeida alluded to a dirty bomb plot right from the start. It took a couple of months for US officials to cross-check his claims and take them seriously enough to tail Mr Mujahir, who was arrested at O'Hare airport in Chicago on 8 May. That the arrest has only now been made public suggests it took several more weeks to assemble enough further corroborating evidence to be sure the threat was real.

The news of Mr Mujahir's arrest comes at a time of extreme public nervousness in America about what kind of attack might be coming next. Just yesterday, the Washington Post divulged details of a government report into air freight transport that revealed a near-absence of security checks on cargo consignments. Keller's recent piece in The New York Times magazine, meanwhile, speculated that the prospect of a full-blown nuclear attack on American soil was a matter not so much of if, but of when.

The piece uncovered yet another lax security area, this time the containers brought on board ship into US ports. Fewer than 2 per cent are opened for inspection, and most never pass through an X-ray machine, Keller reported. Containers delivered to up-river ports such as St Louis or Chicago pass many potential targets before they even reach customs.

Ultimately, the public nervousness has less to do with media stories than it does with the torrent of revelations about the intelligence failures leading up to 11 September. The FBI and CIA – once feared, if anything, for the excessive use of their powers – have been exposed in the past few weeks as feuding rivals of alarmingly limited competence, more interested in waging turf wars than in preventing future atrocities. As for the Bush administration, there are broadening suspicions that it has more ideas on spin-doctoring the crisis than it does on actually confronting it.

The nervousness is not as palpable as it was, say, at the height of the anthrax panic last autumn, when there was a nationwide run on gas masks, tinned food, bottled water and antibiotics. Part of the nature of the new mood of grim inevitability is the sense that there is little, practically, that anyone can do. Americans' gut instinct at times like these is to put their trust in government, and President Bush's continuing high poll ratings attest that they are continuing to do so. But government is also being shown to be falling demonstrably short and, for the first time since 11 September, there is rank cynicism about the effectiveness of the administration's proposed measures, such as the creation of an overarching domestic security agency.

As one columnist, Rob Morse of the San Francisco Chronicle, put it: "None of us should be reassured about anything. As shown by its recent mixed messages about terrorist threats, the White House doesn't know anything. If the FBI knows anything, it's in a memo buried on some bureaucrat's desk."

The picture that has emerged over the past few weeks is of a country almost lackadaisically uninterested in counter-terrorism until it was too late. On 10 September, the Attorney General, John Ashcroft, turned down a request to boost the FBI's counter-terrorism budget by $58m (£40m). According to yesterday's Los Angeles Times, FBI agents at the Phoenix field office were taken off counter-terrorism assignments last summer and diverted to a series of more mundane arson attacks.

Until 11 September, counter-terrorism was the number four priority at the Phoenix office, behind mafia activity, white-collar crime and crime on Indian reservations. A now much-cited memo from a Phoenix field officer about suspicious Middle Eastern men training at flight schools, filed last July, was roundly ignored by FBI higher-ups in Washington.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: america; device; explosion; panic; target

1 posted on 06/10/2002 4:16:33 PM PDT by blam
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2 posted on 06/10/2002 4:17:53 PM PDT by WIMom
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To: blam
Thanks to Andrew Gumbel for describing a way to build a dirty bomb for many who did not have the recipe. Way to go, Andrew!
3 posted on 06/10/2002 4:21:46 PM PDT by NoControllingLegalAuthority
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To: blam
Did anyone notice that they showed "The Stand" on USA Network last night? Scary stuff.
4 posted on 06/10/2002 4:23:46 PM PDT by drew
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To: NoControllingLegalAuthority
--the only reason any device such as this could cause any real harm at all (other than in the immediate blast area) is the irrational, unreasoning fear of low level radiation caused by years of fearmongering by the media and the anti-nuke crowd.
5 posted on 06/10/2002 4:25:55 PM PDT by rellimpank
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To: NoControllingLegalAuthority
--the only reason any device such as this could cause any real harm at all (other than in the immediate blast area) is the irrational, unreasoning fear of low level radiation caused by years of fearmongering by the media and the anti-nuke crowd.
6 posted on 06/10/2002 4:26:41 PM PDT by rellimpank
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To: blam
What a moron. While we're imagining dirty bombs going off in New York, why not imagine a bomb going off in the offices of the Independent (UK), while we're at it?

No doubt hard-core terrorists already know how to make bombs, but we don't need some jackass reporter teaching every fanatical ideologue and unstable idiot who read his left-wing rag how to do it.

7 posted on 06/10/2002 4:28:03 PM PDT by Cicero
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To: NoControllingLegalAuthority
Thanks to Andrew Gumbel for describing a way to build a dirty bomb for many who did not have the recipe.

Are you telling me, with a straight face, that this wasn't known to the terrorists prior to Gumbel writing this?

In suppose we'll have to shoot all those Freepers who posted about this possibility, too.

8 posted on 06/10/2002 4:28:21 PM PDT by Poohbah
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To: NoControllingLegalAuthority
Thanks to Andrew Gumbel for describing a way to build a dirty bomb for many who did not have the recipe.

Anybody who couldn't figure it out probably can't tie his own shoes, let alone get their stubby inbred fingers on hot materials.

9 posted on 06/10/2002 4:29:18 PM PDT by fourdeuce82d
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To: blam
Think about this folks. Have you seen this guys picture? Do you really think the masterminds of al Qaeda would use this chump in a major plot? He's either a patsy set up to divert attention or a low level contributor associating with wannabees. If this is the best the Bush administration can do we are a long ways from finding the light at the end of the tunnel.
10 posted on 06/10/2002 4:31:56 PM PDT by mercy
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To: rellimpank
Ef these damned islamists. "Cry havoc, and loose the Dogs of War."
11 posted on 06/10/2002 4:32:01 PM PDT by onedoug
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To: rellimpank
the irrational, unreasoning fear of low level radiation caused by years of fearmongering by the media and the anti-nuke crowd.

Bingo. "I can smell the radiation- the foul, rotten stench of our rotten, Promtehean hubris..."

Followed, of course, by "THE CHILREDN- OH DEAR GOD, THE CHILDREN."

Actually, if they develop a healthy glow, they'll be easier to find in the dark, as they brachiate through the trees, using their giant mutant bat ears to navigate by sonar...

12 posted on 06/10/2002 4:32:29 PM PDT by fourdeuce82d
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To: blam
Well we know one thing, the terrorists couldn't set it off in Nevada, because they've declared they won't accept any nuclear waste.
13 posted on 06/10/2002 4:35:50 PM PDT by colorado tanker
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To: blam
Perhaps we should start our anti-terrorism campaign by dropping a daisy-cutter on the offices of the Independent...
14 posted on 06/10/2002 6:27:14 PM PDT by Own Drummer
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To: blam
It is time for us to tell all leaders of countries who spawn terrorists that the next attack on us means an immediate attack on them (the leaders). Not an attack on the country, nor on the people, but a bomb down their own individual chimneys. Perhaps then they would rain them in.
15 posted on 06/10/2002 7:46:50 PM PDT by Mind-numbed Robot
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