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Special Ops boarding ship to search for Nuclear Material off the NJ shore
Fox News Alert
| 9/12/02
| Brytani
Posted on 09/12/2002 10:15:38 AM PDT by Brytani
Fox News just broke in with an alert. Special Op's are now searching a Liberian flagged ship 8 miles off the coast of NJ looking for nuclear material. More information to follow.
TOPICS: Breaking News
KEYWORDS: nuclearweapons; ship; specialops; terrorism
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Comment #241 Removed by Moderator
To: TrappedInLiberalHell
Maybe I have too vivid an imagination.You've been watching too many James Bond flicks...
242
posted on
09/12/2002 11:21:13 AM PDT
by
mhking
Comment #243 Removed by Moderator
To: Dog; Squantos; piasa
Explosive-ordnance-disposal experts with the Joint Special Operations Command are on call to fly in and assist the scientists in taking apart anything they find,You had best believe they were on the first helo over the ship, along with NEST and SEALs. Not to mention there are lots of EOD qualified SEALs.
To: B-Chan
By converting the atoms in nearby materials to radioisotopes over time, neutron-emitting material can cause non-radioactive materials to become radioactive. Good post.
One addition: American nukes emit low enough levels of neutrons that it would take quite awhile to make the surrounding materials noticeably radioactive. A crude enough device might emit a lot more, but the very nature of the beast limits the amount of neutrons released.
The plutonium (or U-235) must be kept separated enough to avoid starting a chain reaction. Furthermore, the amounts used are not likely to be dramatically more than critical mass. The bad guys of the world would make more bombs rather than use up their supply of fissile material all in one place.
To: gridlock
The Ship:
Palermo Senator
Containerschiff
Klasse: GL+100A5 E
Baujahr: 1992
Flagge: Liberia
DWT: 45696 Tonnen
Tiefgang: 12,51 m (draft)
LüA/Breite: 216,19 m / 32,20 m (LOA/WOA)
Containerstellplätze: 2.680 TEU
Kühlanschlüsse: 150
Geschwindigkeit: 19,0 kn = 35,18 km/h (speed)
Hauptmaschine: BV Sulzer 6 Zylinder mit 16.440 KW = ca. 22.358 HP (engine)
To: Black Agnes
SEALS are special ops.
To: B-Chan
If that's the case then we definitely want to know who was responsible for the thing. Given this ship's itinerary from the far east it makes for some interesting possibilities beyond just al Qaeda, don't you think?
248
posted on
09/12/2002 11:23:37 AM PDT
by
piasa
To: Dog; Dark Wing
Nuclear Emergency Search Team!
249
posted on
09/12/2002 11:23:41 AM PDT
by
Thud
To: one_particular_harbour
Thanks for the ping... I've been following this rather closely...
To: browardchad
none of the other stories I've read said the intel was out there before the ship arrived (prompting the elevated alert, perhaps?) Exactly. Just look at the timing of it all. I guess we should really worry if we get bumped up to red status
To: Lazamataz
The laws of search and seizure are quite diffrent on the sea. The Coast Guard, or any other LEA can board and inspect without the cause for a warrant.
To: hchutch
Nah, it will turn out not to be serious. I expect they'll have a press conference soon announcing it turned out to be a comb on board, like last night's diverted "attempted hijacking."
To: B-Chan
"neutron emissions from some of the atomsThere are no neutron emmisions from any of these heavier elements. The neutrons come from the splitting reactions. The only elements that release neutrons are light ones like lithium and carbon that are really loaded up with extra neutrons from a reaction source. They are extremely short lived and would be gone before anyone could collect them.
All this says is that if their are neutrons detected there is a quantity of fissionable material. More neutrons mean the mix contains a higher quantity of isotope, or an isotope with a shorter lifetime.
To: mhking
Hey dude... the winds blowing hard... SE to E.
No big deal for small amounts.
What I worry about is the delivery of an old, leaky warhead.
The radiaiation would still be present on the container vessel.
Food for thought.
255
posted on
09/12/2002 11:25:27 AM PDT
by
johnny7
To: seeker41
If there is a nuke aboard ( a very big if but with the realm of possibility) the tangos made a big mistake by not detonating it when it got in New York Harbor. IF they detected neutrons rthen it is quite likely the vessel has transported a nuke in the past. The teams aboard should be ab;e to prevent any damage to the USA. I do not feel our borders are secure from someone smuggling a nuke.
Stay well - Stay safe - Stay armed - Yorktown
To: Travis McGee
What do you make of this??
Explosive-ordnance-disposal experts with the Joint Special Operations Command are on call to fly in and assist the scientists in taking apart anything they find,
If I read that passage right....Special Op's assist in the disarming of a device after a NEST Team has located one...am I right?
And that is what is more than likely happening right now......right.....tell me I'm wrong.
257
posted on
09/12/2002 11:27:21 AM PDT
by
Dog
To: harpseal
Thanks again. This is what is bothering me, it may not be there now but something has been on that ship at some point that is radioactive.
If someone hasn't said it before, watch for the lefties to insinuate that this is a 'manufactured' crisis to lend support to Bush's 'unjust' war on Iraq. I give it a day, two at the most. If it hasn't already started.
To: Travis McGee
A: Hide it in a shipment of cocaine. LOL, heck, just hide it amid all of that Chinese-made Walmart stuff.
260
posted on
09/12/2002 11:28:26 AM PDT
by
piasa
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