lecture 17: wmd part 1
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Weapons of Mass Destruction: An Introduction
Weapons that have a relatively large-scale impact on people, property, and/or infrastructure.
WMD are defined in US law (18 USC §2332a) as: (A) any destructive device as defined in section 921 of this
title (i.e. explosive device);(B) any weapon that is designed or intended to cause death or
serious bodily injury through the release, dissemination, or impact of toxic or poisonous chemicals, or their precursors;
(C) any weapon involving a biological agent, toxin, or vector (as those terms are defined in section 178 of this title)
(D) any weapon that is designed to release radiation or radioactivity at a level dangerous to human life.
CBRN weapons: chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear
“The probability of a terrorist organization using a chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear weapon, or high-yield explosives, has increased significantly during the past decade.”
– 2003 US National Strategy for Combating Terrorism
“Terrorists have declared their intention to acquire and use weapons of mass destruction (WMD) to inflict even more catastrophic attacks against the United States, our allies, partners, and other interests around the world. ”
– 2006 US National Strategy for Combating Terrorism
“The prospect that a nuclear capable state may lose control of some of its weapons to terrorists is one of the greatest dangers the US and its allies face.”
– Quadrennial Defense Review, February 6, 2006
High
Low
Low
High Capabilities & Opportunities
Intentions
During the Cold War Bipolar international system Monopoly of nukes & CBW by strong, powerful states Terrorists did not cross threshold of mass destruction Nuclear terrorism ruled out because of stringent security
surrounding atomic material in US/USSR
The Post-Cold War threat environment has changed The Non-Proliferation Regime’s crisis of legitimacy & nuclear
proliferation in South Asia, N Korea, the Middle East Fears of CBRN proliferation post-Soviet collapse Precedents set by Aum Shinriyko, LTTE and Chechen rebels The 2001 anthrax attacks in US Jihadi terrorist groups’ explicit interest in WMD to inflict mass
casualties on their enemies Major advances in biotechnology
Transfer by a sympathetic national government, perhaps using export control loopholes
Assistance from custodians of nuclear weapons (security guards)
Unauthorized assistance from corrupt, angry or disenchanted, scientists/officials
Seizure without insider help via armed raids Coup d’etat and chaos in a nuclear-armed failing
state Technical information to build a nuclear weapon
is widely available With relatively little radioactive material obtained
from a power plant or medical facility, terrorists could construct a “dirty bomb”
4 Weapon Types1. Chemical2. Biological3. Radiological4. Nuclear
Effects produced by Chemical and Biological Weapons are usually delayed and spread over time.
Terrorists, in contrast, prefer spectacular, massive impact, instant worldwide publicity, shock & awe effect
Thus, nuclear or radiological may be more likely, but are significantly more difficult to design or acquire
Chemical Weapons use the toxic properties of chemical substances to cause physical or psychological harm to an enemy
Many different kinds, including:
Choking and blood agents (like chlorine, phosgene, fentanyl gas) cause respiratory damage and asphyxiation
Blistering agents (like mustard gas and lewisite) cause painful burns requiring immediate medical attention
Nerve gases degrade the functioning of the nervous system, causing a loss of muscle control, respiratory failure, and eventually death
Can be delivered through bombs, rockets, artillery shells, spray tanks, and missile warheads
al-Mubtakkar
- Relatively cost-effective weapons - Considered by many to be the most insidious type of weaponsStrikes against the agricultural sector pose a serious threat
Biological weapons intentionally disseminate agents of infectious diseases to harm or kill others.
Key considerations include infectivity, virulence, toxicity, pathogenicity, the incubation period, transmissibility, lethality and stability.
* Bacteria (like Anthrax, Brucellosis, Tularemia, Plague)* Viruses (Smallpox, Marburg, Yellow Fever) * Rickettsia (Typhus fever, Spotted fever) * Fungi (the molds that cause stem rust of wheat and rye)* Toxins (like Ricin, Botulinum and Saxitoxin) aka “midspectrum”* Infectious Pathogens:
Emerging threats; SARS, Avian Influenza‘Old’ threats: TB, HIV, Malaria
• Disenchanted Scientists• Corrupt Security Guards• Export Control Loopholes• Global Crime Networks• Black Markets• Weak State Governance
A radiation emission device (RED) or a radiological dispersion device (RDD) or “dirty bomb” is a bomb to cause panic, terror and mass disruption.
Such a device, comprising radioactive material (such as plutonium 239, uranium 235, plutonium oxide and uranium oxide) dispersed by the detonation of conventional explosives, could spark terror and paralyze whole cities, even if its killing capacity were limited
Myriad sources could be used for this purpose Medical/educational facilities, atomic waste storage
reservations, commercial sites, etc.
Many lack concerted security Especially medical facilities, educational institutions
Unique in their explosive energy, derived from nuclear fission: splitting the nuclear of an atom, usually of highly enriched uranium or plutonium, into two or more parts by bombarding it with neutrons, and causing a chain reaction
Destructive power up to 50 megatons
1,000 tons of TNT = 1 kiloton
WWII nukes = 15-22 kilotons
1,000 kilotons = 1 megaton
2 types: Gun-type and Implosion
The transfer, theft and detonation of an intact nuclear weapon (INW) – “sum of all fears” scenario
The theft or purchase of fissile material to fabricate and detonate a crude nuke – an improvised nuclear device (IND)
Attacks against and sabotage of nuclear facilities, in particular nuclear power plants, causing the release of large amounts of radioactivity
Illicit market for nuclear materials: the case of A.Q. Khan In October 2003, US intelligence agents boarded a cargo ship en
route from Malaysia to Libya via Dubai and found thousands of centrifuge parts for enriching uranium. The buyer was Libya’s Col. Gaddafi; the seller, Dr A. Q. Khan, the father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb
This interception uncovered the dark underside of globalization – a worldwide, black market in nuclear materials, designs and technologies that the IAEA chief, Mohammed El-Baradei, has called a “Wal-Mart of private-sector proliferation”
“Pre-positioned WMD?”
Nuclear power plants Chemical storage facilities Bio-technology labs Dams, water protection infrastructure
(Katrina) Urban Transportation of Toxic Chemicals Etc.
9/11 attacks used “pre-positioned” weapons
Potential exists for limited CBRN strikes
Can’t rule out attacks that local affiliates can execute on a (semi-) autonomous basis
Aim to elicit mass disruption rather than physical destruction per se
Weapon type determines possible availability and impact
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