Posted on 09/05/2014 4:02:41 AM PDT by markomalley
U.S. and Iraqi authorities have jointly ramped up their efforts to prevent terrorists from acquiring nuclear and radioactive materials as concerns mount that Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL or ISIS) is seeking to recover these sensitive materials and use them in a terror attack.
ISIL now controls about half of Iraq, potentially giving it access to some low-level radioactive and radiological materials, according to a State Department official.
The threat has been deemed critical by the U.S. State Department, which announced on Wednesday that it had inked a new deal with Baghdad to ramp up joint efforts to detect and recover sensitive nuclear materials before ISIL and other terrorist entities can get to them.
While the United States currently has no evidence that ISIL has yet to locate these types of materials, there are concerns that lawless areas under the groups control could be used as a new smuggling route by rogue actors.
The signing and donation of radiation detection equipment reflect the common conviction of the U.S. and Iraqi governments that nuclear smuggling and nuclear and radiological terrorism are critical and ongoing global threats that require a coordinated, global response, the State Department said in a statement. Iraqs central location and the challenging security environment it faces reinforce the urgency with which these problems must be addressed.
The United States, which started working on the agreement in 2012, is now providing the Iraqi government with radiation detection and identification equipment, according to the State Department. These tools are expected to help Iraqi authorities locate, identify, characterize, and recover orphaned or disused radioactive sources in Iraq thereby reducing the risk of terrorists acquiring these dangerous materials.
The concern is that sensitive materials could be smuggled outside of Iraq and potentially used by extremists.
Theres always a concern about radiological or radioactive sources, said a State Department official who would only discuss the issue on background.
While the United States is not aware of any cases of these types of material being smuggled out of the country thus far, ISIL could potentially use radioactive materials found in hospitals and some medical devices to create a crude bomb, the official said.
This is the kind of thing where if ISIL got its hands on enough radioactive sources or radioactive sources of a sufficient radioactivity level and they decided to turn it into a bomb and blow it up in a market, that would be a very unpleasant thing, the official said, noting that theres no indication that ISIL is planning to do that.
Yet there is evidence that terrorists stole some nuclear materials in Iraq earlier this year.
Iraqi officials revealed to the United Nations in July that insurgents had seized uranium that was being used for research purposes at an academic institution in the northern part of the country.
Nearly 90 pounds of low-level uranium was stolen from Iraqs Mosul University by terrorist groups, Iraqs U.N. ambassador was quoted as saying at the time by Reuters.
Terrorist groups have seized control of nuclear material at the sites that came out of the control of the state, Iraqi Ambassador Mohamed Ali Alhakim wrote in a letter claiming that these material could be used in manufacturing weapons of mass destruction, according to Reuters.
However, the United States is not overly concerned about the loss of these nuclear materials because it is mostly depleted or naturally occurring. There is currently no enriched uranium that we know of in Iraq, according to the State Department official.
It continues to be our assessment that there is no indication ISIL has gotten hold of any material that would pose a nonproliferation threat, and no indication frankly that they are actively [seeking it out] even if they do control some significant portion of territory in Iraq, the official said. Theres been no indication, thankfully, that they are on the lookout for what we would consider to be a WMD.
And even if they found it they wouldnt know what to do with it, the official added.
Concern about these materials slipping into the wrong hands seems to have become more pressing for the United States and Iraq in recent months as ISIL gains control of more Iraqi territory, mainly in the northern and central parts of the country, including Mosul and Falluja.
There are some concerns about the rule of law and security control in parts of the country, that they cant necessarily control whats going through theyre territory, [and] suddenly, even though we havent seen radioactive or nuclear smuggling, theres a concern that if youre a smuggler from the Middle East, or from the Caucasus, or Central Asia, youd have a new smuggling route you might want to avail yourself of, according to the State Department official.
Reports also indicate that ISIL has stolen chemical weapons from a facility in Muthanna, though the United States has no evidence to confirm this.
Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel warned earlier this week that ISIL cannot be left to seize any more areas in Iraq and Syria, where it also controls about half the country.
The terror group will not end its radical mission unless the U.S. along with our partners and coalitions stop it, Hagel said Wednesday during a speech.
You gotta destroy it. Because if we dont destroy it, it will get worse. And it will get wider and deeper, Hagel said, warning that more than 100 U.S. citizens have been identified as fighting alongside ISIL in the Middle East.
American citizens fighting with ISIL currently have little trouble returning to the United States, a legal loophole that some in Congress are pushing to clamp down on.
ISIL has continued to expand outside of Iraq and Syria, with recruitment efforts ramping up in South East Asia, particularly in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
The group also is close to overtaking the international green zone in Baghdad, according to the latest reports from the Pentagon.
I thought there were no WMD in Iraq...
-- Col Frank Slade
post of the day
not that’s one scary and appropriate graphic
I wonder when, not if, a dirty bomb goes off in LAX or DFW who the libtards will blame?
Smuggling? The southern border is so wide open, they could drive a thermonuclear bomb in a truck full of illegal alien kids right on through, over the interstate highways, and right up Main Street of some state capitol, “like the mailman bringing bad news.” (quote from the movie Short Circuit)
Let’s hope there are no Cancer treatment hospitals, or significant industrial areas in ISIS territory.....
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goiânia_accident
Bookmark for later...
Hopefully it won’t physically look like that for a while, but with the missing planes from Libya and the missing nukes from TX and Iraq, terrorists have a very dangerous combination of weapons to use against us. Funny how that happens when the US has a foreign enemy combatant in our White House...
precisely
Ping
They're now ramping up efforts? Excuse me, but why weren't our efforts already at 100%? It couldn't be because hussein has been slipping some out to his muzzy bros, huh?
There are so many things wrong with that statement. Is the "US" our military or our dear leader? "Not aware" is the motto of our government these days. "These types of material" can be anything and they admit the bad guys could get it from hospitals. "Being smuggled... at this time", uh, but what about the previous time or a known time in the near future? "Out of the country", snort, but what about smuggling it into the country or that it's already here?
Placemark.
“.... we will just be playing footsie with a hydra. Cut one head off and two will grow in its place.”
Hail Hydra!
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