By Meredith Buel
Washington
A group of nuclear weapons specialists has issued ominous warnings
before members of the U.S. Congress that terrorist groups like al-Qaida
could launch a massive attack on the United States and currently there
is little to deter or defend against such a strike. VOA correspondent
Meredith Buel has details from Capitol Hill.
Sidney Drell, an arms control specialist and physicist at Stanford
University, told members of the Senate Armed Services Committee the
United States has entered, what he calls, a "dangerous time."
"I view us on the precipice of entering a new and more dangerous
nuclear era with the spread of technology, which means, in particular,
the enrichment of uranium, which makes it possible for more societies
to enter the nuclear club," he said. "That raises the danger of nuclear
weapons getting in the hands of terrorist groups and others
unrestrained by the norms of civilized behavior as we know it and
therefore these weapons become more likely to be used."
The dean of Georgetown University's school of Foreign Service, Robert
Gallucci, agrees.
Gallucci, a former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for
Political-Military Affairs, says the most dangerous threat is that a
terrorist group will smuggle a nuclear weapon into the United States.
"The most likely is that a terrorist group, al-Qaida or an al-Qaida
cousin would acquire a nuclear weapon and introduce it into the United
States," he explained. "It seems to me that that is a threat against
which we have neither a defense nor a deterrent."
Gallucci says a maximum effort needs to be made to prevent terrorists
from acquiring or manufacturing a nuclear weapon.
He says this should be done by convincing countries with nuclear
materials to secure them.
"If we discover that a country has purposely transferred fissile
material or a nuclear weapon to a terrorist group, we ought to be
telling them in advance that we will treat them as though they were the
one who launched the attack and they should expect devastating
retaliation," he added.
Gallucci says he is especially concerned about unauthorized transfer of
nuclear materials from Russia and Pakistan and the intentional transfer
from North Korea and eventually Iran.
Original
Source
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