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The Problem of Redundancy Problem: Why More Nuclear Security Forces May Produce Less Nuclear Security

机译:冗余问题:为什么更多的核保安部队可能产生更少的核保安

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摘要

After the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, many scholars, journalists, and public officials expressed fear about the security of nuclear facilities in the United States. Terrorists could attack military bases, weapons in transit, or nuclear weapons production and dismantlement plants in order to steal a weapon or its components. Terrorists might attack nuclear power reactors, nuclear materials storage sites, nuclear waste transportation vehicles, or nuclear research facilities, with two basic motives in mind: to cause a conventional explosion, spreading radioactive materials in the area; or to seize the nuclear materials, which could be used for building either a dirty bomb (a radiological weapon) or, conceivably, a primitive nuclear bomb. These fears were highlighted in President George Bush's January 2002 State of the Union address, in which he reported that diagrams of American nuclear plants were discovered in al-Qaeda hideouts in Afghanistan. Senior U.S. intelligence officials also revealed that Osama bin Laden had sent operatives to try to purchase stolen nuclear materials and that there was "pretty convincing evidence" that al-Qaeda operatives had been "casing" nuclear power plants in the United States prior to the September 11 attacks. In January 2002, U.S. intelligence agencies issued a warning, based on an interrogation of a captured terrorist, of a possible attack on a nuclear power plant or Department of Energy (DOE) nuclear weapons facility. Then, in June 2002, the Justice Department announced that it had arrested an American citizen who had joined al-Qaeda in Pakistan and was sent back to the United States to develop and execute a plan to seize nuclear materials and use them in a radiological bomb attack.
机译:在2001年9月11日对世界贸易中心和五角大楼的恐怖袭击之后,许多学者,新闻工作者和政府官员对美国核设施的安全表示担忧。恐怖分子可能会攻击军事基地,在途武器或核武器生产和拆除工厂,以窃取武器或其组件。恐怖分子可能会出于两个基本动机,攻击核动力反应堆,核材料储存场所,核废料运输工具或核研究设施:造成常规爆炸,在该地区散布放射性物质;或没收核材料,这些材料可用于制造肮脏的炸弹(放射性武器)或可以想象的原始核弹。乔治·布什总统在2002年1月的国情咨文中强调了这些担忧,他在报告中说,在阿富汗的基地组织藏身处发现了美国的核电站图。美国高级情报官员还透露,奥萨马·本·拉登(Osama bin Laden)已派遣特工试图购买被盗的核材料,并且“有说服力的证据”表明,基地组织特工在9月之前一直在美国“装填”核电站。 11次攻击。 2002年1月,美国情报机构根据对被捕恐怖分子的讯问,发出警告,称有可能袭击核电站或能源部(DOE)核武器设施。然后,在2002年6月,美国司法部宣布已逮捕一名在巴基斯坦加入基地组织并被遣送回美国的美国公民,以制定和执行一项计划,以扣押核材料并将其用于放射性炸弹中攻击。

著录项

  • 来源
    《Risk analysis》 |2004年第4期|p.935-946|共12页
  • 作者

    Scott D. Sagan;

  • 作者单位

    Center for International Security and Cooperation, Encina Hall, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94301-6165;

  • 收录信息
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 自然科学总论;
  • 关键词

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