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Depleted uranium slipped in by ABC
This was on the ABC News website on Sunday the 21st.
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/wnt/DailyNews/sept11_uranium020911.html
How Safe Are Our Borders? Customs Fails to Detect Depleted Uranium Carried
>From Europe to U.S.
By Brian Ross, Rhonda Schwartz and David Scott
Sept. 11- On July 4, in a train station in Europe, a suitcase containing 15
pounds of depleted uranium, shielded by a steel pipe with a lead lining,
began a secret 25-day, seven-country journey. Its destination was the
United States.
It was the kind of uranium that - if highly enriched - would, by some
estimates, provide about half the material required for a crude nuclear
device and more than enough for a so-called dirty bomb - a nightmare
scenario for U.S. authorities.
"I would say that the single largest, most urgent threat to Americans today
is the threat of nuclear terrorism," said Graham Allison, an expert on
nuclear terrorism. Allison is the director of the Belfer Center for Science
and International Affairs at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government and a
former assistant secretary of defense.
This suitcase's journey was not part of a terrorist plot, but rather part
of an ABCNEWS investigation into whether American authorities could, in
fact, stop a shipment of radioactive material. The depleted uranium packed
in the suitcase was not highly enriched and therefore not dangerous, but
similar in many other key respects.
In other words, to the to the human eye or to an X-ray scanner, the
depleted uranium would look the same as an actual radioactive shipment.
ABCNEWS' project was designed with the help of three of the world's leading
authorities on nuclear terrorism: Dr. Thomas Cochran, senior scientist and
nuclear weapons expert with the Natural Resources Defense Council, an
environmental group that lent the depleted uranium to ABCNEWS for the
investigation; Dr. Fritz Steinhausler of Stanford University in California
and the University of Salzburg in Austria; and Allison of Harvard's Belfer
Center.
"It is a perfect mockup," said Cochran. "It replicates everything but the
capability to explode.
"This is what [customs is] looking for, or should be looking for," he
added, "and this is what they absolutely have to stop."
"What I hope your program will help people do, is say, 'My God, this could
really happen.' And this could really happen," said Allison. "There [are]
things we could do to prevent it."
Route Well-Traveled by Smugglers
Starting in Austria on July 4, the suitcase began its journey by rail,
traveling first across the border to Hungary, where the ABCNEWS team's
passports were checked - but there was no inspection of the suitcase. From
there, it was on to Romania, through the Transylvanian Alps, across the
fields of Bulgaria and into Turkey - all without even one inspection of the
suitcase.
This is precisely the route and the method authorities say has been used in
the past to transport radioactive material smuggled out of the former
Soviet Union. But throughout the 47-hour European rail trip, the suitcase,
packed with depleted uranium, sat untouched on a rack in the cabin. ABCNEWS
saw no evidence of radiation detectors in use anywhere.
"Well, that's a pretty good test," said Allison. "I would have wished or
hoped that you would have at least gotten some look."
But there was nothing. The suitcase traveled all the way to Istanbul,
Turkey, which is considered a hub of the world's nuclear black market.
Steinhausler, an expert in weapons trafficking who has compiled a database
of nuclear-smuggling incidents, described it as "a crossroad between a
leaking Central Asian region and possibly a receptive Middle East."
Turkish authorities report they have detected more than 100 cases of such
attempted smuggling in the last few years.
ABCNEWS was doing what some law enforcement officials say al Qaeda
terrorists have known how to do for years.
"For a decade, they've sought nuclear weapons," said Allison."[Osama] bin
Laden has said it is his and al Qaeda's religious duty . to acquire nuclear
weapons."
Documents in Arabic seized from one of bin Laden's top aides five years ago
show how he apparently planned to use shipping containers packed with
sesame seeds as part of a plan to smuggle high-grade radioactive material
to the United States.
Allison is concerned that what ABCNEWS did as a test may have already been
done for real. "There's no reason to think that they haven't," he said.
Suitcase Labeled 'Depleted Uranium'
Hours after the ABCNEWS team arrived in Istanbul, the suitcase of
radioactive material was prepared for shipment by sea to the United States.
The suitcase was placed inside an ornamental Turkish chest that was
carefully marked as containing depleted uranium, in case inspectors
discovered it.
Then, in the middle of a busy Istanbul street, the chest itself was crated
and nailed shut. The crate containing the suitcase was then nestled
alongside crates of huge vases and Turkish horse carts in a large metal
shipping container that was ordered from a company that arranges shipments
to the United States.
"If it were a real weapon, you know, that you'd managed to get out of the
Soviet inventory, [it] would fit in this container," said Allison. "A
battlefield nuclear weapon, an artillery shell would fit fine in there."
The company hired to handle the shipping did not know, nor did its workers
check to see, what was inside the crate. The company told ABCNEWS this week
that it is re-evaluating its practices in light of this report.
The container, with the suitcase inside, left Istanbul on July 10, bound
for the Port of New York, where U.S. Customs Service officials have very
publicly claimed they've made huge improvements to prevent anything
radioactive from getting through.
"We're doing everything we possibly can to keep terrorists and terrorists
weapons out of this country," said Customs Commissioner Robert Bonner.
At 2 a.m. on July 29, the ship carrying this suitcase cleared the Verrazano
Bridge and entered New York Harbor. At this point, no one had asked a
single a question about what was in the container.
A Dangerous Delivery Device
This scenario was too close for comfort for Allison, who explained that a
weapon smuggled in this way could be armed in advance and ready to fire -
and the ship could be the delivery device.
"The ship, I think, is one of the most dangerous delivery devices," said
Allison. "A weapon or material in the belly of a ship has been one of the
nightmare scenarios for people that think about how nuclear weapons might
arrive in the U.S."
The ship carrying the container was tied up at the Staten Island dock in
New York, where the Customs Service says it has a state-of-the-art system
in place to detect even a small, low-level amount of radioactive material.
"We're doing whatever it takes to screen the high-risk containers," said
customs inspector Kevin McCabe, the chief of the contraband enforcement
team, who did not know about the test when he demonstrated the screening
measures to ABCNEWS.
During an interview in August, he gave ABCNEWS the same demonstration he
said he had given to President Bush when he visited the port. McCabe
displayed the small radiation pager used by inspectors, which he said could
detect even a shielded, low-level radiation shipment - like depleted
uranium.
In addition, the customs inspector demonstrated a second screening device,
an X-ray scanning machine on wheels, used on suspect containers to detect
even small items.
"The inspector should see [that] even if it's something small, [of] unusual
density, unusual something . would lead us to strip that container and
look," said McCabe. "If we can't tell exactly what is in that container by
those screenings, we're going to get into that container and find out for
ourselves."
And while the shipping container holding ABCNEWS' suitcase was selected by
customs for this kind of screening, it sailed right through the inspection
and left the port without ever being opened by customs inspectors. And a
few days after its arrival in the United States, the container was on the
back of a truck headed for New York City.
Customs Defends Detection Capabilities
Bonner, the customs commissioner, says his inspectors correctly singled out
the container for screening and would have detected anything truly
dangerous.
"We ran it for radiation detection and we also did a large-scale X-ray," he
said. "Nothing appeared that would indicate that there was a potential for
a nuclear device to be in the container."
When asked why a large piece of metal in the shipment of Turkish horse
carts didn't stand out, Bonner responded, "Well, look I'm not gonna get
into it . We have the X-ray pictures."
Bonner refused to show ABCNEWS what the Customs Service saw on the X-ray
scans taken by its equipment. But when ABCNEWS later put the suitcase
through a much less sophisticated X-ray machine, the outline of the
depleted uranium in its shielded casing was clear. It looked like a pipe
bomb was inside.
The experts ABCNEWS consulted say that with the screening devices custom
officials said they used on the shipping container, without opening the
crate there would be no way for customs inspectors to know whether the
material was the low-level, safe, depleted uranium of the kind used by
ABCNEWS in this investigation, or the highly enriched, dangerous uranium
that could be used in nuclear weapons.
"If you didn't detect this, you wouldn't have detected . the real thing,"
said Cochran. "[Bonner] missed it and he's covering up."
Cochran says the ABCNEWS test demonstrated an important shortcoming of the
customs screening process - that the radiation pagers are essentially
useless unless the pager is placed right on top of the radioactive
material. "U.S. Customs absolutely . missed it," he said.
'We Are Not Safe'
Finally, the container was taken to a New York Port Authority warehouse on
Pier No. 1, just across the river from lower Manhattan, at the foot of the
Brooklyn Bridge.
When the crate was pulled out, it was easy to see it had never been opened
since leaving Istanbul.
Port Authority police are assigned to this warehouse facility, but there
are no radiation detectors there and no one asked about the unusual
shipment in a container full of Turkish horse carts.
"If that were a weapon and you blew it up, you would have very, very
substantial consequences," said Allison.
The material ABCNEWS moved was not dangerous and entirely legal to
transport.
"You provided an illustration, a vivid illustration of the fact that this
could happen tomorrow," Allison said. "We are not safe. Not safe from that."
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