Title: The Four Faces of Nuclear Terrorism
1The Four Faces of Nuclear Terrorism
- Dr. Charles D. Ferguson
- Science and Technology Fellow
- Council on Foreign Relations
- September 29, 2004
- Georgetown University
- Financial support John D. and Catherine T.
MacArthur Foundation, Ploughshares Fund, and
Nuclear Threat Initiative
2Four Faces of Nuclear Terrorism
- Acquisition of an intact nuclear weapon
- Crude nuclear weapon or Improvised Nuclear Device
(IND) - Attack against or sabotage of a nuclear power
plant or other nuclear facility - Radiological dispersal device (RDD) or dirty
bomb
3Holmes to Watson Its Elementary
4Assessing Risk
- Risk Probability X Consequence
- Large uncertainties
- Lack of data
- Alternatively
- Risk Motivation X Intention X Capability X
Consequence
5Terrorist Motivations
- Why havent there been any RDD or crude nuclear
weapon terrorist attacks? - Those who study terrorist motivations are
underwhelmed by the probability of such an event
for most but not all terrorist groups.
Jerrold Post (IAEA presentation, Nov. 2001) - Psychological and political constraints are great
for most groups
6Terrorist Motivations (continued)
- Traditional thinking Terrorists want a lot of
people watching, not a lot of people dead. - -- Brian Jenkins, RAND
- New Breed of Terrorist Group
- Al Qaeda politico-religious
- Aum Shinrikyo Apocalyptic
- ? Want to kill many and have even more watching
in dread
7But Can They Get the Means?
- Nuclear weapons and fissile material are
difficult to obtain - Radioactive materials are much more accessible
- Variety of nuclear facilities to target Security
also varies
8Acquisition of Intact Nuclear Weapon
- Theft
- Purchase
- Gift
- (a little help
- from their friends)?
- Coup
9Estimated Nuclear Arsenals
Nation Total Active Weapons Relatively Portable Weapons
United States 7,650 3,000
Russia 8,200 8,000-10,000
France 348 60?
Britain 200 Unknown
China 380 Unknown
Israel 75-200 Unknown
India 30-35 Unknown
Pakistan 24-48 Unknown
North Korea 0-8? Unknown
10Greatest Risks of Terrorist Acquisition
- Russia
- Large numbers of portable, forward deployed
tactical nuclear weapons - Pakistan
- Presence of al Qaeda
- Unstable political system
- Parts of government (ISI) sympathetic to
terrorist causes - Nascent nuclear command control system
11Highest Priority Efforts Intact Nuclear Weapons
- U.S. should
- press Russia to fully implement 1991-1992
Presidential Nuclear Initiative pledges. - revamp policy prohibiting security assistance to
operational Russian nuclear weapons. - declare its intention to remove its tactical
nuclear weapons in Europe. - provide security assistance to Pakistan
contingent on constraints of NPT
12Can Terrorists Build Their Own Nuclear Bomb?
- Gun-type
- Simplest design
- Cannot use plutonium must use HEU
13Can Terrorists Build Their Own Nuclear Bomb?
(continued)
- Implosion-type
- More sophisticated, but still first generation
weapon - Can use either plutonium or HEU
14Major Hurdle Acquisition of Fissile Material
Material Type Global Inventory (metric tons)
Military plutonium (Pu) 250
Civil Pu (separated) 205
Military HEU 1,670
Civil HEU 20
15Highest Priority Put HEU at the Head of the
Queue
- Accelerate down-blending of Russian HEU
- Speed up repatriation of Soviet/Russian- and
U.S.-origin HEU and accelerate conversion of
research reactors - Use Mayak Fissile Material Storage Facility to
secure HEU - Subordinate Plutonium Disposition Program to HEU
First Strategy
16Attacks on Nuclear Facilities
- Commercial nuclear power plants
- Research reactors
- Spent fuel storage pools
- Reprocessing facilities
17Nuclear Facilities Highest Priority Efforts
- Design basis threat should reflect 9/11 magnitude
of attack - Rapidly identify and implement urgent upgrades to
vulnerable plant systems - Need performance-based (not-compliance based)
security system - Need formal government assessment of potential
vulnerabilities at research reactors
18Dirty Bombs Myth versus Reality
- RDDs (Dirty Bombs) are NOT Weapons of Mass
Destruction - Few, if any, people would die immediately or
shortly after exposure to ionizing radiation from
typical RDD - RDDs can be Weapons of Mass Disruption
- Major effects
- Panic (psychological and social effects)
- Economic costs (decontamination and rebuilding)
19High-Risk Radioactive Sources
- Finding Only a small fraction of commercial
radioactive sources pose inherently high security
risks - But still large number
- High-risk sources are
- Portable
- Dispersible
- More radioactive
20Dirty Bombs Highest Priority Tasks
- Improve security of high-risk radioactive sources
- Preparation and Response
- Develop and stockpile effective decontamination
technologies - Involve public in development of decon standards
- Provide better training of emergency first
responders - Educate public about real versus perceived risks
of radiation psychological immunization