Sunday, April 17, 2016

NUKES : ON THE PATH TO THE DIRTY ISLAMIC BOMB





                     CLICK URL BELOW 
                  TO READ INTRODUCTION TO
                              

                              " DIRTY BOMB"



                              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Dy5nVe7TI0



                         DEFINITION OF A TERRORIST


                          ALL MUSLIMS ARE NOT TERRORISTS
                                                    
                                                       BUT
                         
                        ALL TERRORISTS ARE MUSLIMS.
                                                      REST
                             ALL OTHERS WHO CARRY OUT
              TERRORIST LIKE ACTIVITIES ARE GANGSTERS

                                                              -  HISTORY SPAKE THUS





SOURCE
http://belfercenter.ksg.harvard.edu/files/PreventingNuclearTerrorism-Web.pdf



                                   NUKES :  ON THE PATH
                                        TO 
               THE DIRTY ISLAMIC  BOMB

What if a dirty bomb hit London?





A dirty bomb explosion would cause chaos

 
It wouldn't take much for terrorists to wreak havoc in London - just a simple explosive and some industrial waste. Such is the gruesome reality of the dirty bomb.



People wearing protective suits and gas masks











Fears of a terrorist attack on the UK by Islamic extremists are running at an all-time high.

The discovery of the deadly poison ricin in a London flat has heightened concerns and recently Tony Blair said it was not a case of "if" but "when".

"We'd have contaminated air moving across London with no indication it's there "

Graham Smith, Enviros


One frightening possibility is the so-called dirty bomb - a crudely-made device that combines a simple explosive with any radioactive material. The idea is that the blast disperses the radioactive material willy nilly.

The dirty bomb is perhaps the least understood of all terror weapons, but new research by BBC Two's Horizon programme brings home the full horror of how a dirty bomb attack might affect London.

 
The dirty bomb is sometimes called the "poor man's nuclear weapon". But whereas the aim of a nuclear bomb is instant and outright destruction, a dirty bomb would have an entirely different effect.


It would wreak panic in built-up areas, see large areas contaminated and closed off and result in long-term illnesses such as cancer, caused by the dispersed radioactive material attacking living cells.

Using sophisticated modelling, experts commissioned by Horizon constructed a scenario around a radioactive material called caesium chloride, which in the old Soviet Union was used in seed irradiating.

Much of this and other radioactive material used by the Soviets is now unaccounted for. No one knows whether it has fallen into unsafe hands




Particles disperse


Experts working for Enviros, a consultancy that advises nuclear authorities around the world, modelled a fictional explosion combining a handful of caesium chloride - equivalent to the contents of one Soviet seed irradiating machine - with 10lbs of explosive.

JOSE PADILLA
Arrested in May 2002 at Chicago airport in the US
Also known as Abdullah al-Mujahir, he is accused of planning a dirty bomb attack on America
He has been called an al-Qaeda operative
They then "placed" the fictional bomb in Trafalgar Square.

The blast itself might kill 10 people immediately. As the emergency services arrived at the scene of the incident a few minutes later, they would realise this was no ordinary blast.

"The simple buoyancy of the air that's been heated may carry the radioactive material tens of metres up into the air," says Graham Smith, of Enviros.

Almost immediately, millions of tiny flakes of caesium chloride would be floating in the breeze over London. In seconds, depending on the direction of the wind, the plume could reach Whitehall. A minute later Charing Cross, then the City and within half an hour radioactive smoke could reach London's suburbs - 10 kilometres away.

"We've got contaminated air moving across London and there would be no indication that contamination was there," says Mr Smith.

Cancer Time Bomb


  Click to read "GOIANIA DISASTER" [  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goi%C3%A2nia_accident ]

As the air began to cool, the particles would fall on people who are completely unaware of the danger around them. They would settle on parks, gardens, pavements and cars.

A TV reconstruction of the Goiania disaster
A TV reconstruction of the Goiania disaster
The worry then is of a cancer time bomb. Every day we are exposed to natural radiation, and in low doses this background level is harmless.

Anyone five km from the blast would face only a tiny increased risk of cancer - one in 1,000 - as the background level would be largely unaffected.



But at one km, radiation doses would rise to six times background level, increasing the risk of cancer by about one in 100. At 500 metres downwind from the blast, the risk of dying of cancer from this radiation exposure would be about one in 50 and at 200 m radiation levels would be 80 times background level, equating to a one in seven increased risk of dying of the disease.





 

 
The next challenge would be to deal with the contaminated parts of central London. Any clean-up job would be immense and costly, but left undisturbed the particles could remain harmful for 200 years.

Police cordon
Swathes of the city could be cordoned off
One option might be to abandon or demolish parts of the city.
But perhaps the biggest immediate threat wrought by a dirty bomb is not the destruction or the threat to life, but its ability to stir blind panic among thousands, maybe millions, of people.
A leak of caesium chloride in the city of Goiania, southern Brazil, in 1987 contaminated 200 people. The experience gives a useful template for how other cities might cope.

When news of an attack breaks, there will be a clamour for information and help. People will want to know the extent of contamination, but it can be hard to supply answers.
In the Brazil example, medical services were swamped as a tenth of the city's population queued for radiation screening.

It is the dirty bomb's power to spread fear and spawn chaos that makes it a really effective weapon.

Horizon - Dirty Bomb was on BBC Two on Thursday 30 January at 2100 GMT.







Nuclear security: Continuous improvement

                                      or 

                     dangerous decline?

                                       By

Matthew BunnMartin B. MalinNickolas RothWilliam Tobey
  
Click the URL below to open the PDF file text


http://belfercenter.ksg.harvard.edu/files/PreventingNuclearTerrorism-Web.pdf






                    ISIS's Hunt for WMDs:
 Navigating the Nuclear Underworld with
                           C.J. Chivers

                       Center for Strategic & International Studies
                     

                                    [ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U2ScJW3w0PY ]



Published on Feb 9, 2016
 
The Project on Nuclear Issues (PONI) is pleased to invite you to a discussion with C.J. Chivers on nuclear smuggling in the Middle East. Chivers, a former marine and Pulitzer Prize-winning investigator with the New York Times, has reported from the front lines of Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, and more, analyzing conflicts and the weapons that fuel them. One of Chivers' recent features, "The Doomsday Scam," revealed how ISIS and other terrorist groups have pursued a fictional weapon-making substance known as red mercury. Chivers, who has been called "the greatest war reporter in a generation," will share his unique insight about the possibilitiy of terrorist groups obtaining nuclear materials, where they could be bought, and how the international community should respond if a terrorist group were to acquire nuclear material, or some other weapon of mass destruction. The discussion will be moderated by Rebecca Hersman, Director, Project on Nuclear Issues, and Senior Adviser, International Security Program, CSIS







        ISIS Plans to Unleash Nuclear Terrorism
                                 on U.S. soil

 
Published on Apr 12, 2016
 
ISIS terrorism,nuclear terrorism,Brussels,dirty bombs,open borders,democrats,geopolitics,meltdown

Heed this warning! ISIS terrorists are now targeting nuclear facilities in the USA and across Europe, and they hope to unleash massive nuclear terrorism by forcing power plants into criticality events (meltdowns).

Because of this, the open borders policies of liberal politicians in America and the EU amounts to nothing less than NATIONAL SUICIDE.

By allowing ISIS terrorists to walk right into the USA via the totally unprotected southern border, lunatic liberals are creating ready opportunities for terrorists to strike any one of America's hundreds of nuclear power plants, potentially forcing them into nuclear fuel meltdowns that could snowball into devastating radiation poisoning for huge regions of the nation (including many liberal cities).


                                [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zeGVUeeCK5M ]








                         The Dirty Bomb:
       Is India Safe From The Nuclear Threat




                                     [  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RW3j2uDRDBg ]




Published on Apr 16, 2016
 
United State Of America's President Barack Obama describes the possibility of terrorists getting their hands on the dirty bomb as the greatest threat the world faces at this time. The worlds intelligence agencies believe that ISIS is working very aggressively towards acquiring a dirty bomb. How real is the threat? and how safe is India's nuclear installations. Listen in.
ISIS plans to unleash nuclear terrorism on U.S. soil

 

 
 
 
                     Threat Of Nuclear Terror Revolves                               Around India
 




                  MOTHER OF GLOBAL TERRORISM

                     PAKISTANI COUPLES
HAVE ONLY ONE NATIONAL PASS TIME
                TO CONCEIVE TERROR
              IS NATIONAL OBLIGATION
 

High risk of theft of Pakistan nuclear weapons: US report

Pakistan has the world’s fastest-growing nuclear arsenal, and is shifting toward tactical nuclear weapons, says US report





By: PTI | Washington | Published:March 22, 2016 10:22 am

shaheed 2 missile, pakistan missile, indo-pak


A Pakistani Shaheen II missile is displayed during the Pakistan National Day parade in Islamabad, Pakistan (Source: AP Photo)



 
With Pakistan moving towards tactical nuclear weapons, there is an increasingly higher risk of nuclear theft, a US think-tank report has warned ahead of the Nuclear Security Summit here later this month.

“Overall, the risk of nuclear theft in Pakistan appears to be high,” said the report ‘Preventing Nuclear Terrorism: Continuous Improvement or Dangerous Decline?’ released by the prestigious Harvard Kennedy School.
 



“The trend seems to be toward increasing risk, as Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal expands and shifts toward tactical nuclear weapons, while adversary capabilities remain extremely high,” it said.

Over the longer term, the possibilities of state collapse or extremist takeover cannot be entirely ruled out, though the near-term probability of such events appears to be low.

The report from the Harvard Kennedy School comes a week after a top American diplomat had raised a similar concern.

“We’ve been very concerned about Pakistan’s deployment of battlefield nuclear weapons,” US Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security, Rise E Gottemoeller told members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee during a Congressional hearing on Thursday.



Battlefield nuclear weapons, by their very nature, pose security threat because you’re taking battlefield nuclear weapons out to the field where, as, you know, as a necessity, they cannot be made as secure,” Gottemoeller had said.



In Pakistan, a modest but rapidly growing nuclear stockpile, with substantial security measures, must be protected against some of the world’s most capable terrorist groups, in an environment of widespread corruption and extremist sympathies, said the Harvard Kennedy School.

By some estimates, the Strategic Plans Division, which manages Pakistan’s nuclear weapons, has 25,000 troops available to guard Pakistani nuclear stocks and facilities.


Pakistani officials report that sites are equipped with extensive barriers and detection systems, that the components of nuclear weapons are stored separately (though that may be changing as Pakistan moves toward tactical nuclear weapons intended to be rapidly deployed to the field), and that the weapons are equipped with locks to prevent unauthorised use.


It said there are negative trends, which may be related to the absence of recent US expressions of confidence.

“Pakistan has the world’s fastest-growing nuclear arsenal, and is shifting toward tactical nuclear weapons intended to be dispersed to front-line forces early in a crisis, increasing the risks of nuclear theft in such a crisis,” it said.

“This increase in numbers of weapons is probably leading to an increase in numbers of locations as well,” it said, adding that terrorist groups continue to demonstrate that they are willing and able to launch complex, well-coordinated attacks on heavily-defended military targets within Pakistan.



Related Article


 

http://indianexpress.com/article/news-archive/print/continued-instability-in-pak-poses-threat-to-its-nweapons-report/

India, Pakistan expanding nuclear arsenal despite global trend in disarmament: Report

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/chinese-takeaway-10/

http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-news-india/indian-nuclear-facilities-face-insider-threats-us-report/

http://indianexpress.com/article/news-archive/print/india-pak-developing-new-systems-for-delivering-nukes-sipri/























 

No comments:

Post a Comment