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- <text id=94TT1153>
- <link 94TO0176>
- <title>
- Aug. 29, 1994: Cover:Proliferation:Formula: Terror
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 29, 1994 Nuclear Terror for Sale
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER/PROLIFERATION, Page 46
- Formula for Terror
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The former Soviet arsenal is leaking into the West, igniting
- fears of a new brand of nuclear horror
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Lara Marlowe/Beirut, Elaine Shannon/Washington,
- Bruce van Voorst/Bonn and Yuri Zarakhovich/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> On a sunny afternoon in central Kaliningrad, a Russian enclave
- on the Baltic, two private security guards and a trading-company
- executive strolled along a quiet street. They were expecting
- to meet a middle-aged man from St. Petersburg. In exchange for
- $1 million, they would hand over an 8-in. by 8-in. metal container
- holding highly radioactive material. But as the traders and
- their client were about to make their open-air swap in mid-August,
- 15 police officers rushed out to grab them. The police seized
- the 130-lb. case emitting gamma radiation. Until a specialized
- laboratory can examine the material, the police cannot be sure
- what it is or where it was stolen from, but they believe it
- is dangerous--and illicit. This is the second major case of
- nuclear theft that Vladimir Kolesnik, the deputy chief of St.
- Petersburg's organized-crime department, has thwarted since
- last May. "The problem," he says, "is that security standards
- have slackened, and virtually everybody who has access to nuclear
- materials could steal something."
- </p>
- <p> The first symptoms of the nuclear plague are spreading into
- Europe. After years of scares and false alarms--almost all
- the supposed bomb-grade goods on offer turned out to be fraudulent--German police have in the past four months uncovered four
- cases of smuggled nuclear material that could actually be used
- to make an atom bomb. The biggest haul came on Aug. 10, when
- Lufthansa Flight 3369 from Moscow landed in Munich with 350
- grams of atomic fuel aboard. As it happened, so was Viktor Sidorenko,
- Russia's Deputy Minister for Atomic Energy, whose agency supervises
- Moscow's stocks of fissionable materials. The lead-lined suitcase
- was carrying MOX--mixed-oxide fuel for reactors but perfectly
- usable in a bomb since it contained plutonium enriched to 87%.
- A Colombian and two Spaniards were arrested. While the Germans
- made it clear that they did not suspect Sidorenko of any involvement
- in the case, they had no doubts that it was the deputy minister's
- country from which the dangerous stuff had come. It was, said
- Bavarian Interior Minister Gunther Beckman, "the biggest-ever
- plutonium find in Germany, and probably the world."
- </p>
- <p> Two days later, at a railway station in Bremen, a 34-year-old
- German man was arrested trying to peddle a sample of plutonium
- to a journalist acting for the police. The seller had only a
- very tiny amount, .05 gram, but of such startling purity that
- experts said it probably came from a top-of-the-line Russian
- nuclear laboratory. Senior officials in Moscow reacted defensively,
- insisting that all their plutonium was accounted for and safely
- under guard. The accusation from Germany, blustered Deputy Atomic
- Energy Minister Yevgeni Mikenin, "is a provocation of the purest
- water."
- </p>
- <p> The world's first notice that weapons-grade plutonium was on
- the open market came in southern Germany last May, when 6 grams
- were found in a garage owned by a German businessman who had
- been arrested for counterfeiting. That was followed in June
- by recovery of less than a gram of highly enriched uranium--probably fuel from a nuclear-powered submarine--in Landshut.
- Even if all this smuggled booty were put together, there would
- not be enough for the smallest and crudest atom bomb, which
- in the hands of inexperienced makers would take about 8 kg of
- plutonium.
- </p>
- <p> Even so, the emergence of a black market for the essential material
- of mass destruction is a historic and nightmarish challenge
- for the world. It makes the threat of nuclear proliferation
- far more urgent and increases the number of characters who could
- do it themselves. "We've crossed a threshold. You smuggle small
- amounts of the stuff often enough, and you've got a bomb," says
- Leonard Spector, director of the nonproliferation project at
- Washington's Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. The
- arrival of these nuclear samples on the German market is a red
- alert, raising immediate questions about what is happening in
- other countries and who the potential users might be. If such
- snippets are on sale in Germany, what larger deals might be
- going undetected elsewhere? If bomb-grade plutonium is finally
- on sale, will a rogue state or terrorist group step up to buy
- enough to build a bomb?
- </p>
- <p> Such fears have a foundation: the world has seen terrorism continuously
- evolve to new heights of ingenuity and depravity. This week
- Carlos the Jackal is in jail in France, and North Korea is using
- the threat of nuclear weapons to try to extort billions from
- its neighbors. Their juxtaposition in the news, linking the
- worst of 1970s-style terrorism with the brazen threat of irresponsible
- nuclear ambitions, shouts a warning of a different sort of terror,
- still indefinable but extremely frightening. The combination
- of brutality and fanaticism with nuclear weapons could bring
- about disasters almost too chilling to contemplate.
- </p>
- <p> The old wave of terror, personified by Ilyich Ramirez Sanchez,
- is ebbing. "Carlos," says Paul Wilkinson, an expert on terrorism
- at St. Andrews University in Scotland, "symbolized a terrorism
- of the extreme left which has almost died out in Europe." Carlos
- and his Soviet, Marxist and leftist Palestinian allies represent
- failed ideologies. The inheritors today are nameless Islamic
- extremists from Hizballah, Hamas and their sponsors--everyone
- thinks first of Iran as chief sponsor--who see themselves
- as the force of the future in the Middle East. While their cause
- is the same--derailing the peace process and destroying Israel--the Islamists do not need a secular professional like Carlos.
- </p>
- <p> Nuclear weapons in the hands of extremists willing to use them
- would produce terrorism of a wholly new magnitude. The central
- logic of terrorism is to maximize horror and shock, producing
- a blaze of publicity and attention for the cause it represents.
- By that measure, the crudest of fission bombs set off in a modern
- city, vaporizing entire blocks, would make the crimes of Carlos
- and his ilk rank as little more than pinpricks.
- </p>
- <p> WHO ARE THE SELLERS? Beyond terrorism, if significant amounts
- of plutonium are beginning to flow from Russia, they could make
- the development of nuclear weapons much easier for states that
- up to now have found bomb programs too expensive and technically
- beyond their capabilities. Countries such as North Korea and
- Pakistan, which have some plutonium of their own, as well as
- countries such as Iran and Libya that would like to, might begin
- to look seriously at what is on offer in the new marketplace.
- "There is already far more bomb-quality nuclear material in
- Germany than the authorities can imagine," said Russian atomic
- expert Vladimir Chernosenko, who was one of the officials charged
- with cleaning up the Chernobyl nuclear accident. "If economic
- conditions in Russia do not improve soon, there will be an outflow
- organized from the highest echelons."
- </p>
- <p> To help prevent that, German Chancellor Helmut Kohl sent intelligence
- coordinator Bernd Schmidbauer to Moscow on Saturday to talk
- with President Boris Yeltsin about ways to tighten controls
- over nuclear stocks. "We have to tell our Russian friends,"
- said Kohl, "you must guarantee that these possibilities for
- theft are reduced as much as possible."
- </p>
- <p> Some Russian officials continue to deny that their facilities
- are the source of the leaks into Germany. "Not a single gram
- of plutonium-239 is missing from storage," a spokesman for the
- Federal Counter-Intelligence Service insisted last week. "Our
- storage system is as reliable as a bank vault," claimed Alexander
- Rumyantsev, director of the Kurchatov Institute, a leading nuclear
- laboratory in Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> Conditions in Russia more closely resemble a bazaar than a bank.
- Industry and most sectors of the economy are tottering; workers
- are mostly unpaid. Poor people are inventive, goes a Russian
- proverb, and the poorer they are the more inventive they become.
- Among the most aggrieved are the 100,000 workers employed in
- national nuclear plants and laboratories, whose salaries have
- slid to $100 a month--or no pay at all for months at a time.
- So almost anything is for sale. Last year Russian police acknowledged
- thwarting 11 attempts to steal uranium from nuclear installations.
- </p>
- <p> Other attempts may have succeeded, as nuclear workers grew increasingly
- desperate. At Krasnoyarsk-26, a factory producing weapons-grade
- plutonium, employees mounted a protest last month, demanding
- salaries that had not been paid since May. Russian Prime Minister
- Viktor Chernomyrdin then had to rush to Arzamas-16, where nuclear
- warheads are being disassembled, to head off a similar kind
- of unrest.
- </p>
- <p> What makes the disarray so frightening is the staggering amount
- of dangerous radioactive material all over Russia. Experts there
- say the old Soviet weapons complex produced more than 140 metric
- tons of plutonium. The stockpiles of highly enriched uranium,
- which can also be used to make bombs, total about 1,000 metric
- tons.
- </p>
- <p> Under strategic-disarmament treaties with the U.S., Russia is
- dismantling about 2,000 warheads a year, recovering shiny, fist-size
- spheres of plutonium called pits--the elemental core of a
- bomb--which it is putting into storage. A purchaser who acquired
- one of these would have the key ingredient of a bomb. Over the
- next 10 years, the U.S. and Russia will take 100 metric tons
- of plutonium out of warheads, and their nuclear-power industries
- will produce an additional 110 tons. By then there will be enough
- plutonium in storage worldwide to build 42,000 atom bombs.
- </p>
- <p> Some Western estimates put Russia's current stock of plutonium
- at 200 tons. The military weapons, including all those pits,
- are still under tight security--as far as anyone knows. But
- other forms of plutonium are scattered all over the country
- in research institutes, laboratories, reprocessing plants, shipyards
- and power stations, where security is believed to be lax and
- accounting is unreliable.
- </p>
- <p> With big money presumably to be made in the plutonium trade,
- some thefts will be inside jobs. Deputy Interior Minister Mikhail
- Yegorov told Western officials at a conference in Germany that
- he believed the 6 grams of plutonium found in that country in
- May had been stolen by officials of the Russian Atomic Energy
- Ministry. In other cases, Russian gangsters will step in and
- bribe or coerce those with access to fissionable materials to
- steal them.
- </p>
- <p> When FBI director Louis Freeh visited Moscow last month, he
- told cadets and faculty of the Russian Police College that "one
- criminal threat looms larger than the others: the theft or diversion
- of radioactive materials in Russia and Eastern Europe." Organized-crime
- groups, he warned, would try to obtain such materials "to be
- offered for sale to the highest bidder." The Russian daily Izvestia
- makes the same judgment. It reported recently that more than
- 5,500 criminal gangs were operating in Russia, and "the lion's
- share of their operations involve stealing fissionable nuclear
- materials and smuggling them out."
- </p>
- <p> WHO ARE THE BUYERS? The rise of this illegal commerce suggests
- that there are serious bidders out there. But there is no evidence
- indicating who they are. Three of the four samples of weapons
- materials that turned up in Germany were purchased by undercover
- agents in sting operations designed to trap the sellers or their
- couriers. Indeed, in the Bremen episode, the defendant's lawyer
- claims that his client too is a police operative. There have
- been rumors in Germany, but no proof, that the 6 grams found
- in May were acquired for a foreign government, possibly Iraq
- or North Korea. In fact, there is no evidence yet that anyone
- in Germany was buying or prepared to buy nuclear material except
- the police.
- </p>
- <p> When the first samples of low-grade nuclear material began to
- leak out of former Warsaw Pact countries in 1991, the German
- police sent special squads into the field to find them. Since
- 1991, German police have counted 440 cases of nuclear smuggling,
- and almost all have been stings. With so many agents posing
- as buyers, some skeptical officials wonder if they might be
- creating a demand. "There's no evidence of a real market for
- plutonium in Germany," says Bremen's chief prosecutor. He wonders
- whether "our interest in pursuing criminals is bringing danger
- into Germany."
- </p>
- <p> Yet the spectacle of apparent amateurs in the plutonium business
- getting their hands on the real thing could bring serious conspirators
- onto the scene with big money. How big the money has to be is
- still unanswered because no deals outside police scams have
- come to light. Even so, the price of enough plutonium to make
- a bomb would have to be in the millions of dollars or tens of
- millions. It is doubtful that any terrorist group has that kind
- of financing. Even Hizballah, the extremist group most directly
- linked to a state sponsor, cannot expect to receive tens of
- millions for its own purchases from an Iran that is struggling
- to arm itself.
- </p>
- <p> Nor is a radical state like Iran, Libya or Iraq likely to buy
- a bomb and hand it over to terrorists. "If you just spent $300
- million on something," asks a State Department specialist, would
- you turn it over to a band of terrorists "or would you keep
- it for your own protection?" He also wonders if Iran could keep
- secret forever the transfer of a nuclear weapon to Islamic militants.
- Tehran would have to be certain it did not leave fingerprints
- on the deal, or the country could become the target of reprisals--possibly nuclear. "God help the state that gave terrorists
- nuclear material," says the official. "The international community's
- response would be dramatic."
- </p>
- <p> Yet the mere fact that plutonium is on the market could conceivably
- lend credibility to terrorist groups that might try to persuade
- people they have built a bomb. "The problem now," says Richard
- Guthrie of the Verification Technology Information Center, a
- nonprofit group in London, "is blackmail. If someone says he's
- built a bomb in a basement somewhere, how does a government
- react when that person produces a gram or so of weapons-grade
- material to prove the threat?"
- </p>
- <p> While the ultimate terror would be a working bomb constructed
- by terrorists on their own, the much likelier catastrophe is
- a large purchase of plutonium by a country looking for a shortcut
- to a nuclear arsenal. "It's clear that the highest bidder is
- going to be a state," says Phebe Marr, an expert on Iraq at
- the National Defense University in Washington. A government
- with nuclear ambitions would want not just a single bomb but
- an arsenal or significant additions to an existing arsenal.
- One or two bombs could attract threats and retaliation from
- abroad. So an interested state would be in the market for tens
- or hundreds of kilograms of plutonium--and that amount would
- be extremely expensive.
- </p>
- <p> Experts in the Middle East suggest that only Iran--in addition
- to Israel--is believed to be actively pursuing nuclear weapons.
- In spite of its severe problems of debt and unemployment, the
- Iranian government has not reduced its spending on arms programs.
- "Iran wants to be the most powerful military presence in the
- gulf," says Mourad El-Desouky, a military expert at Al Ahram
- Strategic Studies Center in Cairo. "It wants nuclear weapons
- for deterrence and to intimidate its neighbors." He believes
- that the Iranians have the money to go shopping for plutonium
- and weapons-grade uranium from Russia's black market in Western
- Europe, and "it is realistic to think they are doing that."
- </p>
- <p> WHO CAN CONTROL IT? Policymakers and scientists in the West
- hope to persuade the Russians to take steps that would head
- off the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. On this
- score, the U.S. has often talked a better game than it has played.
- In 1991 Congress authorized the Bush Administration to spend
- $400 million a year for three years to help the former Soviet
- republics keep nuclear materials and facilities secure. So far,
- in part because of congressional inaction, about $500 million
- of the first $900 million authorized has not been spent. Among
- the projects held up: a Pentagon-organized training course for
- border-control officials of the former Soviet Union.
- </p>
- <p> The National Academy of Sciences looked at the plutonium piling
- up in the U.S. and Russia and this year recommended concrete
- steps to take it out of circulation. Since the outright destruction
- of plutonium is problematic and prohibitively expensive, the
- academy suggested mixing it with other nuclear wastes and molten
- glass, creating radioactive glass logs weighing an unusable
- two tons. These would be stored in deep holes. It also proposes
- combining plutonium with uranium to make reactor fuel, which
- after use will leave the plutonium locked into contaminated
- fuel rods.
- </p>
- <p> The main problem with such ambitious ideas is that the Russians
- want no part of them. In general, there is enough suspicion
- left over from the cold war to make Russian nuclear officials
- determined to keep Americans from getting anywhere near their
- plutonium stocks. More specifically, the Russians view their
- plutonium as a national treasure, and they don't propose to
- do away with it.
- </p>
- <p> Rather, they want to store their plutonium to use later as fuel
- in a new generation of breeder reactors, which they hope to
- have up and running in about 20 years. They intend to keep their
- tons of shiny plutonium warhead pits in storage until then--even at a cost they estimate at around $2 per gram per year.
- The new reactors will be hugely expensive too, and the floundering
- Russian economy may not be able to afford them. Then the plutonium
- will be little more than an immense security problem, requiring
- protection against theft and diversion for about 25,000 years--the half-life of plutonium. It would be better if the experts
- could get to work on a solution before the huge stockpile's
- still-small leaks turn into a flood that could engulf the world.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-