U.N. Nuclear Chief Warns Of 'Dirty Bomb' Threat
More action is needed to stop militants acquiring plutonium or highly-enriched uranium that could be used for atomic bombs, nuclear experts and government officials said on Monday.
Speaking at a
meeting in Vienna, Yukiya Amano, head of the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA), warned against a "false sense of security" over the
danger of nuclear terrorism.
Amano, holding up a small lead
container said to have been was used try to traffic highly enriched
uranium in the former Soviet Republic of Moldova two years ago, said it
showed a "worrying level of knowledge on the part of the smugglers".
"This case ended well," he said. "Unfortunately, we cannot be sure if such cases are just the tip of the iceberg."
Analysts
say radical groups could theoretically build a crude but deadly nuclear
bomb if they have the money, technical knowledge and the amount of
fissile material needed.
Many states have taken steps to prevent malicious acts such as nuclear theft and sabotage, Amano told the delegates.
"Partly
as a result of these efforts, there has not been a terrorist attack
involving nuclear or other radioactive material," Amano said. "But this
must not lull us into a false sense of security."
Obtaining
weapons-grade fissile material - highly enriched uranium or plutonium -
poses the biggest challenge for militant groups, so keeping it secure is
vital, both at civilian and military facilities, experts say.
An
apple-sized amount of plutonium in a nuclear device and detonated in a
highly populated area could instantly kill or wound hundreds of
thousands of people, according to the Nuclear Security Governance
Experts Group (NSGEG)lobby group.
Because radioactive material is
seen as less hard to find and the device easier to manufacture, experts
say a so-called "dirty bomb" is a more likely threat than a nuclear
bomb.

In a dirty bomb, conventional explosives are used to
disperse radiation from a radioactive source, which can be found in
hospitals or other places not very well protected.
U.S. Energy
Secretary Ernest Moniz repeated Washington's assertion that al Qaeda had
been trying for years to obtain nuclear material for a weapon.
"Despite
the strides we have made in dismantling core al Qaeda we should expect
its adherents...to continue trying to achieve their nuclear ambitions,"
he said.
More than a hundred incidents of thefts and other
unauthorized activities involving nuclear and radioactive material are
reported to the IAEA every year, Amano said.
"Some material goes missing and is never found," he said.
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