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NATIONAL CENTER FOR POLICY ANALYSIS
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| How Seriously Should Americans Take The Threat of Nuclear Terror |

Daily Policy Digest

Terrorism Issues

Thursday, November 29, 2001
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No one wanted to even bring up the subject prior to Sept. 11. But Osama bin Laden has now stated that his al-Qaeda network has nuclear weapons, and Americans are forced to confront the possibility of a nuclear attack on a major U.S. city. How seriously do authorities think that threat should be taken?
- U.S. intelligence and defense officials do not believe any terrorist group -- including al-Qaeda -- has acquired or built a full-fledged nuclear bomb, yet.
- But experts say terrorists could construct a "dirty bomb" that uses dynamite to disperse radioactive material in an urban setting -- killing perhaps 1,000 people, rendering the area unlivable for months and causing cancer risks for decades.
- From 1993 through 2000, the United Nations agency which monitors nuclear security confirmed 153 cases of theft of nuclear materials -- as well as 183 cases of thefts of other radioactive materials that could be converted into dirty bombs.
There are four leading scenarios under which terrorists could launch a strike -- obtaining an existing bomb from the stockpiles of a nuclear nation through theft or other means, by obtaining the necessary materials and building their own device, through seizure of a missile site or computer codes to cause an illicit missile launch, and through construction of a dirty bomb that would not require weapons-grade materials.
Each scenario has its own challenges and drawbacks, as well as opportunities, from the perspective of terrorists.
Source: Bill Nichols and Peter Eisler, "The Threat of Nuclear Terror Is Slim But Real," USA Today, November 29, 2001.
For text http://www.usatoday.com/hphoto.htm
For more on Weapons of Mass Destruction http://www.ncpa.org/iss/ter/
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Copyright © 2001 National Center for Policy Analysis - All rights reserved.
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