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Conference Pledges to Curb Dirty Bomb Danger
International leaders, meeting in Vienna March 10-13, called for
cradle-to-grave control for materials that could be
used to create a radioactive dispersal device, otherwise known as
a dirty bomb. In particular, the conference urged stepped-up
measures to protect the potentially lethal materials, particularly
orphan sources that remain unprotected in countries
without the means to monitor or secure the material.
The conference, co-sponsored by the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA), Russia, and the United States, drew more than 700
people from more than 120 countries to tackle the issues surrounding
the possession, monitoring, and transport of high-risk radiological
material. U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham called for the meeting
in November 2002, stressing a need to develop the international
framework for dealing with the specific threat posed by dirty bombs.
After the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States,
governments have become increasingly concerned that terrorists might
construct a dirty bomb, which incorporates radioactive material
in a conventional explosive bomb. Security for the material has
taken on a new urgency, IAEA Director-General Mohamed ElBaradei
said March 11.
On March 11, Abraham announced a $3 million U.S. contribution to
the IAEAs new Radiological Security Partnership, a program
that will help developing countries secure their abandoned radiological
materials. This project will provide U.S. financial and technological
support to the IAEA, similar to an IAEA-Russian-U.S. initiative
agreed in June 2002 to secure radiological sources in the former
Soviet Union. (See
ACT, July/August 2002.) According to Abraham, It
is my hope that this model, which is working so well in the former
Soviet Union, will become global in scale.
Priorities for the partnership will include assisting member states
with developing national programs to monitor and secure high-risk
materials, locate and dispose of orphan radiological sources, and
prevent illicit trafficking of the material by targeting key shipping
hubs for monitoring and control efforts. An IAEA official, however,
said he was unclear on the details of the program, and the Energy
Department did not return calls asking for explanation.
The IAEA has long pushed for increased funding for measures to
prevent theft or acquisition of nuclear materials for terrorist
acts. In November 2001, ElBaradei outlined a plan to increase its
annual nuclear security spending by $30-50 million, which the Board
of Governors approved in June 2002. ElBaradei said that the IAEA
would need another $20 million per yearon top of the current
$12 million budgetfor its Nuclear Security Fund in order to
respond to crises involving radioactive materials.
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