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RETURN OF THE NUCLEAR THREAT



The attached article is just as bad a terrorism itself.

The Press must stop doing pieces such as this one. It's

actually helps the terrorist. 



Gerry Blackwood...



-----------------------------



February 2004: RETURN OF THE NUCLEAR THREAT 



Fear of a nuclear attack on American soil is back – and

with good reason – as WND documents conclusively in its

newest issue of Whistleblower magazine, titled "RETURN

OF THE NUCLEAR THREAT." 



The signs are everywhere: 



Congressional hearings on "dirty bombs" and "suitcase

nukes." 



Reports of stolen "radioactive warheads" and Osama bin

Laden purchasing Soviet-era nuclear weapons on the

black market. 



Recent deployments of "Nuclear Incident Response Teams"

to scour Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New York, Washington,

D.C., and other cities for nuclear terror weapons. 



The Department of Homeland Security's distribution of

radiation detectors to police in Chicago, Detroit,

Houston, San Diego, San Francisco and Seattle – as well

as to Bureau of Customs and Border Protection agents

nationwide – to screen for terrorist activity, whether

a dirty bomb, suitcase nuke or other source of

radiation. 



Vice President Dick Cheney's chilling assessment that

nuclear terror is "the major threat" facing America:

Calling a WMD attack on the U.S. "one of the most

important problems we face today," Cheney added: "To

contemplate the possibility of them unleashing that

kind of capability – of that kind of weapon, if you

will, in the midst of one of our cities – that's a

scary proposition."

And that's just the terror threat. Across the oceans

loom other gorgon's-heads of the nuclear monster –

perhaps even more threatening. 



Where once the nuclear club was very elite – comprising

the U.S., U.S.S.R., China, France and just a few others

– today, laments International Atomic Energy Agency

chief Mohamed ElBaradei, the number of nations now

believed by the IAEA to be able to create nuclear

weapons "is estimated at 35 or 40." 



And among the furthest along, unfortunately, are the

world's most notorious terror-sponsor and pariah states

– Iran, North Korea, Syria, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan

among them. All of this far-flung reality comes

crashing home with stunning precision in "RETURN OF THE

NUCLEAR THREAT." 



"There is an air of unreality in many people's minds

when it comes to nuclear weapons," said WND and

Whistleblower Editor Joseph Farah. "After all, a

nuclear weapon hasn't been deployed in war since World

War II, when the U.S. dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima

and Nagasaki. Add to that the failure so far of

coalition forces to find any nuclear weapons in Iraq.

Such factors, combined with the inherent difficulty in

facing up to a subject so horrific, and you can

understand people's tendency to bury their heads with

respect to the looming nuclear threat of 2004." 



This special Whistleblower edition is more than a

wake-up call. It's a crash course in the current,

growing – and very real – nuclear threat facing

America. 



"This issue of Whistleblower will provide a strong dose

of reality by presenting the known facts about the

nuclear genie, and about the furious quest for the

ultimate weapon of mass destruction by the world's

madmen," said Farah. 



IMPORTANT NOTE: Even though the last edition of

Whistleblower, titled "KILLER CULTURE," is dated

"December 2003," this issue, "RETURN OF THE NUCLEAR

THREAT," is dated "February 2004." There is no issue

dated "January 2004." The purpose of this change in how

we date our issues is simply to ensure Whistleblower's

timely delivery. All subscribers will, of course, still

receive 12 issues of Whistleblower. 



Contents include: 





"The major threat" by Joseph Farah, who clearly lays

out an overview of the threats Americans face in 2004. 



"The terror ahead" – an authoritative, in-depth and

spine-straightening look at the world's nuclear scene,

aptly subtitled "A nuclear attack? Be very afraid" – by

Gabriel Schoenfeld. 



"35 or 40 countries can make nuclear arms," in which

the U.N.'s chief nuclear inspector, Mohamed ElBaradei,

confides that the situation is way out of control. 



"Nukes in the Mideast" by Joseph Farah, where the

Middle East expert shows why, despite recent apparent

concessions by Libya, Iran and others, the nuclear

threat is greater than ever. 



"The Libya ruse," an eye-opening page-turner in which

Joseph Farah unmasks the developing campaign to

pressure Israel to give up nuclear weapons. 



"Nuclear weapons production in Iran," Kenneth R.

Timmerman's mind-boggling look at how the Iranians have

bamboozled international arms inspectors for the past

18 years while building up stunning nuclear capability. 



"Nuclear terrorism – how real?" David Kupelian's

in-depth primer on "suitcase nukes," "dirty bombs" and

other terror tools, the real prospects of their use on

U.S. soil, and what can and must be done to defend

America. 



"Dozens of 'dirty-bomb' warheads missing," documenting

the recent discovery that dozens of Cold-War-era

radioactive Soviet warheads have been lost, stolen or

purchased. 



"Does al-Qaida have 20 suitcase nukes?" in which an FBI

terror consultant confirms our worst fears, claiming

Osama bin Laden purchased the weapons – each with an

explosive potential equivalent to the Hiroshima A-bomb

– from ex-KGB agents for $30 million.

"In a few short years," warns Farah, "today's

terror-sponsoring nations may not need to send

terrorists with backpack nukes to wreak devastation on

the West because they will be capable of hitting New

York or Los Angeles with warheads mounted on ICBMs. 



"The Cold War is long over. It's a new world with new

enemies for America – and they have, or are soon going

to have, nuclear weapons. If we're going to defend

America, we need to start by facing up to the return of

the nuclear threat." 



http://wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=36654



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