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Gwynne Dyer: Here Come The Islamist Nuclear Terrorists

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  • Gwynne Dyer: Here Come The Islamist Nuclear Terrorists

    GWYNNE DYER: HERE COME THE ISLAMIST NUCLEAR TERRORISTS
    By Gwynne Dyer

    Straight.com
    http://www.straight.com/article-356997/vancouver/gwynne-dyer-here-come-islamist-nuclear-terrorists
    Nov 8 2010

    You probably noticed reports recently about the secret trial in Georgia
    of two Armenian men who tried to sell highly enriched uranium (HEU)
    to a man purporting to be an Islamist terrorist. The apparent buyer
    was actually an undercover policeman and the whole thing was a sting
    operation from start to finish, but it offers some interesting insights
    into the current state of play in the world of counter-terrorism.

    The would-be sellers of the HEU were two naïve losers, a 63-year-old
    failed businessman called Sumbat Tonoyan who had gambled his money away
    and a 59-year-old physicist named Hrant Obanyan who was chronically
    ill. They both wanted to score a big win in order to finance their
    retirement, and they fell right into the Georgian police trap.

    A petty criminal called Garik Dadayan first approached Obanyan
    in 2002 with a packet of metallic powder, asking whether it was
    highly enriched uranium. Obanyan, a scientist at the Yerevan Physics
    Institute, confirmed that it was uranium though he could not say how
    enriched it was-and Dadayan was subsequently arrested trying to cross
    the frontier into Georgia with 200 grams (about 7 oz.) of HEU.

    Dadayan was out of jail again by 2005, so Obanyan knew where to go
    when his friend Tonoyan suggested that they could make a fortune by
    peddling HEU to terrorists. Dadayan told them that he had friends
    in Russia who could supply them with unlimited amounts of HEU, and
    suggested that they start by finding a buyer and selling him a sample
    amount of, say, 100 grams. The poor fools believed him.

    It's almost certain that Dadayan was working for the Georgian
    intelligence service by this time (how else would he get out of jail
    so fast?). The fact that in the end he only gave them 18 grams (half
    an ounce) of HEU to take to Georgia reinforces that suspicion. And
    of course it was the Georgian police who supplied the "buyer", a
    Turkish-speaking undercover policeman who said he was in the market
    for nuclear material on behalf of "serious people".

    Last March the two mugs took the night train from Yerevan to Tbilisi,
    with the 18 grams of HEU hidden in a cigarette box that was lined
    with lead strips to fool the American-supplied radiation detectors
    at the border. When Tonoyan showed up at a Tbilisi hotel the next day
    to close the sale (he was asking $50,000 per gram), the police filmed
    the whole transaction and then arrested him and his partner-in-crime.

    Georgia's motivation in all this is clear. Prime Minister Mikheil
    Saakashvili is trying to rebuild the close relationship he used to
    have with the United States before his rash failed attempt to seize
    South Ossetia by force in 2008. He will do anything he can do to make
    himself useful to the American intelligence services, and this serves
    that purpose.

    Why do the U.S. intelligence services want to emphasize the risk of
    nuclear material falling into the wrong hands? Because that would be
    a bad thing, of course, but also to underline the fact that thwarting
    nuclear terrorism is entirely a job for the intelligence services.

    The alleged threat of nuclear terrorism is used to justify the whole
    U.S. policy of invading countries that might provide "bases" for
    such terrorist attacks. It was the main (although utterly false)
    justification for the U.S. invasion of Iraq, and it continues to
    be used to justify American threats to attack Iran. But what do the
    intelligence people want us to conclude from this episode? That the
    U.S. should invade Armenia? Obviously not.

    They want us to conclude that the military should not be allowed
    anywhere near counter-terrorist operations, partly because the tools
    they use-infantry, artillery, etc.-are entirely inappropriate for
    the job, and partly because invading countries tends to radicalize
    people and turn them into your enemies.

    The little show-and-tell in Georgia serves the purposes of the more
    intelligent American intelligence officers, who know that the military
    must be excluded from their operations but have trouble in fending
    them off. It also helps to justify their budgets, although the threat
    they are seeking to protect us from is smaller than they claim.

    It is smaller because it is almost inconceivable that terrorists could
    assemble a weapon that would result in an actual nuclear explosion.

    The technologies needed are just too challenging, and the amount of
    highly enriched uranium needed is too large: around 50 kg. (110 lbs.),
    or 2,500 times the amount that the Armenian pair were trying to sell.

    A "dirty bomb" that just spreads radioactive material over some part
    of a city is more feasible, but also far less dangerous. It would
    cause widespread panic and make that district inaccessible for a time,
    but a well-placed car bomb would probably kill more people.

    Never mind. I'm happy to have them play their intelligence games,
    because it just might prevent something like a "dirty bomb" from
    exploding in an American city. If that did happen, the popular
    pressure on President Obama to invade some other Muslim country would
    be well-nigh irresistible. That's not what we need right now.




    From: A. Papazian
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