Title: Radiological Terrorism
1Radiological Terrorism
2Overview
- Introduction to Radiological Terrorism
- What is radiological terrorism
- Use of Nuclear Energy and Radioactive Materials
in Everyday Life - Effects of Radiological Terrorism
- Physical and Environmental Effects
- Economic Effects
- Psychological Effects
- History of Radiological Terrorism
- Juno Beach, Florida, United States (1983)
- Cherynobyl, Ukraine (1986)
- Goiania, Brazil (1987)
- Moscow, Russia (1995)
- Saratov, Russia (1996)
- Herat, Afghanistan (2003)
- Terrorist and Radiological Terrorism
- Why Do Terrorists Choose Radiological Terrorism?
- Obstacles to Conducting Radiological Terrorism
- Prevention of Radiological Terrorism
- Efforts to Prevent Radiological Terrorism
3Introduction to Radiological Terrorism
- Radioactivity-the property, possessed by some
substances, to emit energetic particles as their
atomic nuclei disintegrates. - Active and Passive Radiological Terrorism
- Passive-uses radioactive materials plus common
explosives to make a radiation-emitting device
(RED). Most deaths are caused by initial
explosion. - Active-involve the scattering of radioactive
material over a large or confined area using an
RDD, as described below
4Introduction to Radiological Terrorism
- Radiological Dispersal Devices (RDDs)-"weapons of
mass disruption" (rather than "weapons of mass
destruction"). - is not a nuclear bomb and does not result in a
nuclear explosion. - A dirty bomb uses the force of conventional
explosives, such as TNT, to scatter radioactive
material. - An atmospheric RDD is a system in which
radioactive material is converted into a form
that is easily transported by air currents. - to distribute radioactive particles through the
ventilation system of an office building to
poison the workers inside.
5Introduction to Radiological Terrorism
- Radiological Terrorism through Attacks on Nuclear
Facilities - Nuclear facilities include nuclear power plants,
cooling ponds for spent nuclear fuel rods,
nuclear reactors used for research or other
non-electricity purposes, nuclear reprocessing
facilities, and nuclear waste sites. - Another potential scenario for attack is during
the transport of spent nuclear fuel.
6Introduction to Radiological Terrorism
- Use of Nuclear Energy and Radioactive Materials
in Everyday Life - Nuclear Energy
- As of the end of 2006, 442 commercial nuclear
power reactors around the world supply about 16
percent of the world's electricity. - France-79 percent of the country's electrical
needs - United States-20 percent of the country's
electrical needs. Largest number of nuclear
reactors with 103 - There are two primary security threats to
operational nuclear power plants. - One is the threat of outside terrorists attacking
the plant with a large commercial airplane or
truck bombs. - The other threat is sabotage by an insider.
7Introduction to Radiological Terrorism
- Radioactive Materials-Preventing terrorist access
to radioactive materials is difficult because
these materials are widely used throughout the
world. - Medical Uses
- Radioisotopes used in MRIs
- Radiotherapy-is used to destroy cancerous cells,
clean blood for transfusion - Brachytherapy-involves radiation used internally
for the treatment of cancer. - Industrial, Scientific, and Public Uses
- Irradiators-used to sterilize food and medical
equipment or enhancing the color of gemstones - Gamma radiography-check for flaws in pipeline
welds. - Radiocarbon dating
- Long-lived power sources for equipment that is
too remote or inaccessible for replacement.
8Introduction to Radiological Terrorism
- Radioactive Materials-Preventing terrorist access
to radioactive materials is difficult because
these materials are widely used throughout the
world. - Medical Uses
- Radioisotopes used in MRIs
- Radiotherapy-is used to destroy cancerous cells,
clean blood for transfusion - Brachytherapy-involves radiation used internally
for the treatment of cancer. - Industrial, Scientific, and Public Uses
- Irradiators-used to sterilize food and medical
equipment or enhancing the color of gemstones - Gamma radiography-check for flaws in pipeline
welds. - Radiocarbon dating
- Long-lived power sources for equipment that is
too remote or inaccessible for replacement.
9Introduction to Radiological Terrorism
- For example, within the former Soviet Union,
highly radioactive radioisotope thermoelectric
generators (RTGs) were commonly used for remote
power applications, such as naval navigational
systems and other military facilities. Hundreds
of these units remain along Russias northern
coastline. These RTGs are generally difficult to
reach, but inadequately protected. Because
terrorists may be able to get hold of the RTGs,
these pose a security risk. Illustrating the
security risks, in November 2003, there were
press reports that some RTG-powered Russian
lighthouses had been vandalized
10Effects of Radiological Terrorism
- Physical and Environmental Effects
- Dirty bomb factors
- Type and amount of radioactive material
- Type and amounts of conventional explosives used
- Type and amounts of radioactive material
- Area in which the attack took place
- Nuclear power plant factors
- Radiation is successfully released and the amount
released. - Weather conditions, such as wind speed and
humidity, and the level of emergency response
11Effects of Radiological Terrorism
- An attack on a nuclear power plant is unlikely to
result in high numbers of immediate
radiation-related casualties. - In high enough doses, this exposure can slightly
increase the risk of long-term illnesses, such as
lung cancer and leukemia. - People in surrounding areas (extending anywhere
from blocks to miles) will also likely be
affected by the radiation as the radioactive
particles travel downwind. - Radioactive particles could combine with soil in
the area or settle on the ground. This is very
harmful if the area is close to groundwater
sources, in which case the area's water supply
could become contaminated.
12Effects of Radiological Terrorism
- Immediate deaths resulting from a dirty bomb
attack are more likely to be caused by the
conventional bomb blast and the ensuing panic
than from the radioactive material itself. - May appear at first to be simply a conventional
bomb attack, people covered in radioactive dust
may unwittingly spread this material to hospitals
and homes as they try to evacuate the area. - To maximize the effect, terrorists would conduct
a dirty bomb attack in a densely populated city,
such as New York City, Washington, D.C., or
London. - If this occurs, it would contaminate the
buildings surrounding the blast area, chemically
bind to concrete, metal, and other surfaces,
settle in surface cracks in buildings and
sidewalks. - Decontamination-in some cases, the buildings
would have to be completely demolished before the
area is considered safe enough for people to
return.
13Effects of Radiological Terrorism
- Economic Effects
- Decontamination efforts could include treating
and decontaminating people after the attack,
evacuating and relocating people from the
affected area, sandblasting the exterior or
completely demolishing affected buildings, safely
getting rid of the radioactive debris,
decontaminating the emergency vehicles used in
the decontamination process, and many other
activities. - During the decontamination process, buildings in
the affected area would not be functional.
Residents would have to be relocated. Businesses
would have to do the same or simply halt their
activities until completion of the
decontamination. - Fear to move back to area
- Fear of touring the area. No tourist income.
- Fear of using nuclear power plants again.
14Effects of Radiological Terrorism
- Psychological Effects
- Psychological anxiety
- Fear can cause mass public panic
- Frightened at the sight of decontamination crews
in suits and all the machinery being used. - Hospitals may be overrun with an overwhelming
number of people complaining of and possibly
showing symptoms of radiation sickness, even if
they were nowhere near the attack site or the
radioactive plume. - Fear of continuing contamination might lead
residents to move to other areas - Fearful of more terrorist attacks and refrain
from visiting any highly trafficked or densely
populated areas
15History of Radiological Terrorism
- "Federal officials have captured a U.S. citizen
with suspected ties to Al Qa'ida who allegedly
planned to build and explode a radioactive 'dirty
bomb' in the United States, the Justice
Department said Monday.""U.S. authorities
capture 'dirty bomb' suspect"CNN, June 10, 2002
16History of Radiological Terrorism
- Juno Beach, Florida, United States (1983)
- An unidentified person shut the valve for the
back-up feed water cooling system for the two
nuclear reactors at the Turkey Point nuclear
power station in Florida. "Out for maintenance"
signs were placed on the valves. The back-up
system was supposed to be checked twice per
shift, but the situation went unnoticed for five
days. No harm was caused, but could have resulted
in damage to the radioactive core if the main
cooling system had been interrupted. - It is unknown if the shut valve and the signs
were the result of an innocent mistake or the
work of a saboteur. The incident highlights the
potential threat of sabotage by insiders.
17History of Radiological Terrorism
- Chernobyl, Ukraine (1986)
- During an unusual operational test in April
1986, a combination of human error and flawed
reactor design resulted in a massive release of
radiation into the atmosphere. Thirty-one workers
died after receiving lethal doses of radiation as
they performed emergency-response measures.
Decontamination efforts at the plant are still
continuing today, and radioactive contamination
spread beyond Ukraine to Russia and Belarus. More
than 100,000 people were permanently evacuated
from their homes. Many others lost jobs and
suffered from heavy depression. About 1800 cases
of thyroid cancer have appeared in the population
surrounding Chernobyl, although of these, few
deaths have occurred. Economic costs resulting
from the Chernobyl accident total more than 100
billion. - Following the Chernobyl accident, a number of
safety improvements were made in reactors all
over the world. These measures have decreased the
chance that an accident of this size will happen
again. However, this incident illustrates the
potential risks and consequences associated with
nuclear reactors lacking adequate safety and
security measures. Chernobyl is also important
because it was a major contributing factor to the
general public's fear of radiation that continues
throughout the world today. It is this fear that
terrorists may try to exploit through the use of
radiological weapons or attacks on nuclear
facilities.
18History of Radiological Terrorism
- Goiania, Brazil 1987
- In September 1987, a canister of cesium-137 was
taken by scavengers from an abandoned medical
clinic. The canister was subsequently broken into
parts and pried open. The blue radioactive powder
was distributed throughout the community of
Goiania, Brazil. Wind and rainwater runoff also
helped to spread the radioactive contamination.
The incident resulted in four deaths, one
amputation, 28 people with radiation burns, and
monitoring of more than 112,000 people (most of
whom experienced no contamination). The physical
decontamination effort covered about one square
kilometer (roughly 40 city blocks), demolished
seven homes and some other buildings, and
produced about 3,500 cubic meters of radioactive
waste. Economically, the clean-up costs
themselves amounted to 20 million, and up to
hundreds of millions of dollars were estimated to
have been lost with collapses in tourism and
business. Many people left the area due to fears
of remaining contamination, and although not
contaminated, prices of manufactured products
fell by 40 percent and stayed at that level for
30 to 40 days. - This incident provides some sense of the possible
physical and economic effects of a radiological
attack.
19History of Radiological Terrorism
- Moscow, Russia (1995)
- In November 1995, Chechen rebel field commander
Shamil Basaev claimed to a Russian television
crew of the rebels' ability to build and explode
a radiological bomb. He informed the crew that a
container with radioactive material had been
partially buried in Moscow's Ismailovsky Park.
The crew found the container and its contentsa
small quantity of cesium-137. The Russian
Interior Ministry indicated that the material
might have come from a nuclear facility in the
Chechen capital. -
- This incident did not result in the actual use
of a radiological dispersal device. It does,
however, illustrate the potential of terrorist
groups to obtain radioactive material and use it
to cause public fear
20History of Radiological Terrorism
- Moscow, Russia (1995)
- In November 1995, Chechen rebel field commander
Shamil Basaev claimed to a Russian television
crew of the rebels' ability to build and explode
a radiological bomb. He informed the crew that a
container with radioactive material had been
partially buried in Moscow's Ismailovsky Park.
The crew found the container and its contentsa
small quantity of cesium-137. The Russian
Interior Ministry indicated that the material
might have come from a nuclear facility in the
Chechen capital. -
- This incident did not result in the actual use
of a radiological dispersal device. It does
illustrate the potential of terrorist groups to
obtain radioactive material and use it to cause
public fear
21History of Radiological Terrorism
- Saratov, Russia (1996)
- Gosatomnadzor, the Russian nuclear regulatory
agency, was warned of movement towards the
Balakovo Nuclear Power Plant by an armed group
from Chechnya. The nuclear power plant houses
four nuclear reactors. Russian special forces
were called in to guard the plant, and other
security measures were taken. In addition, the
Rosenergoatom Crisis Center issued an alert for
all Russian nuclear power plants to be on guard
against a possible terrorist attack. - The attack ultimately did not occur, and the
Chechen group was found to have stopped well
before reaching the Balakovo plant. It remains
unclear whether the group really intended to
attack the nuclear power plant. However, Chechen
rebels have made repeated threats against Russian
nuclear power plants. These threats are only one
illustration of the real potential for nuclear
power plants to be targeted by terrorists
22History of Radiological Terrorism
- Herat, Afghanistan (2003)
- In January 2003, British intelligence agents and
weapons researchers uncovered evidence in Herat,
Afghanistan, that led them to believe that Al
Qaeda had succeeded in building a small dirty
bomb. The evidence included detailed diagrams and
documents stored on computers. Neither the actual
device nor details on the radioactive material
used to make the bomb have been found. However,
captured Al Qaeda lieutenant Abu Zubaydah also
claimed that the device existed. - IAEA and UN experts previously recovered several
unguarded radiation sources, including a powerful
cobalt source, from a former hospital and
university labs in Kabul. Afghanistan's Taliban
regime could have provided Al Qaeda with
radioactive sources from these types of medical
devices. In addition, the idea of Al Qaeda
pursuing a radiological bomb is not new. In June
2002, Jose Padilla was arrested in the United
States. Suspected of having ties to Al Qaeda,
officials believe Padilla was conducting research
and scouting potential dirty bomb targets.
23Terrorist and Radiological Terrorism
- Terrorists are influenced by their organizations
goals - spurring an apocalypse to cleanse the world of
evil - creating an Islamic caliphate, which would
establish Islamic law throughout Muslim-majority
countries - Most terrorist groups do not seek to cause mass
death to accomplish their goals. - Weapons that would cause disruption, confusion,
and mass panic could help gain notoriety for the
terrorists and their objectives.
24Terrorist and Radiological Terrorism
- Radiological terrorism is a more attractive
option than nuclear terrorism because of the
relative ease with which a radiological weapon
can be made and used. - Radioactive materials are used everyday in many
places throughout the United States and the
world. - Thousands of "orphan sources" located throughout
the world. Orphan sources are radioactive sources
that were lost, abandoned, stolen, or
unregulated. - The portability of certain types of radioactive
sources.
25Terrorist and Radiological Terrorism
- Nuclear terrorism requires obtaining or
constructing a nuclear weapon that produces a
nuclear explosion. - Either of these options requires great technical
expertise and access to high-security facilities.
26Terrorist and Radiological Terrorism
- Groups with interest in radiological terrorism
- Terrorist groups that lack a high level of
technical and scientific expertise - Ideal for groups that seek publicity for their
name and their cause, without causing widespread
devastation. - Chechen rebels
- Saddam Hussein
- Evidence uncovered in Afghanistan in January 2003
has led British authorities to believe that Al
Qaeda already possesses a dirty bomb - Aum Shinrikyo
- some radical environmental groups have threatened
and have attempted attacks on nuclear power
plants to demonstrate their anti-nuclear beliefs
27Prevention of Radiological Terrorism
- April 2004-The United Nations Security Council
adopted Resolution 1540 requires states to
criminalize the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction and related materials to enforce
export controls and secure sensitive materials
within their borders. - Before commissioning of nuclear power plant
- Possible terrorist attack methods
- Weapons possible to be used
- In-depth background checks on employees
- Inside and outside video surveillance
- Security crews
- Auto shutdown safety protocols
- Regulation and tracking of usable materials
28Emergency Preparedness for a Radiological
Terrorist Attack
- The U.S. government and several major cities have
run simulated attacks. - Led to prepared plans to prevent, deal with, and
clean up in case of attack - CDC has information to recognize symptoms and
help the treatment in case of an attack - Individuals near nuclear plants are to receive
information, government requires this to be
provided to them, of the dangers and what to do
under various circumstances
29Works Cited
- "CDC Radiation Emergencies Radiological
Terrorism Just in Time Training for Hospital
Clinicians." Radiation Emergencies. 10 May 2006.
CDC Emergency Preparedness Response Site. 31
Mar. 2009 lthttp//www.bt.cdc.gov/radiation/gt. - "NTI Radiological Terrorism Tutorial Intro to
Radiological Terrorism." Radiological Terrorism
Tutorial. 2004. Nuclear Threat Initiative Home
Page. 31 Mar. 2009 lthttp//www.nti.org/h_learnmore
/radtutorial/index.htmlgt. - "Radiological Terrorism - Center for the Study of
Bioterrorism - Saint Louis University, School of
Public Health." Radiological Terrorism. Institute
for Biosecurity - Saint Louis University. 31 Mar.
2009 lthttp//www.bioterrorism.slu.edu/radiological
.htmgt. - "Radiological Terrorism Public Health Emergency
Preparedness New York City AWARE NYC DOHMH."
Public Health Emergency Preparedness. NYC
Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. 31 Mar.
2009 lthttp//www.nyc.gov/html/doh/html/bt/bt_radio
.shtmlgt. - "Radiological Terrorism." Radiological Terrorism.
2007. California Emergency Management Agency. 31
Mar. 2009 lthttp//www.oes.ca.gov/WebPage/oeswebsit
e.nsf/Content/CE572620554ADAC88825740C0063C1D3?Ope
nDocumentgt. - "Radiological Threats." Radiological Threats.
Apr. 2004. New York State Department of Health.
31 Mar. 2009 lthttp//www.health.state.ny.us/enviro
nmental/emergency/radiological.htmgt. - "Risk Communication for Radiological Terrorism
Preparedness." Risk Communication for
Radiological Terrorism Preparedness. School of
Public Health at Johns Hopkins - Home. 31 Mar.
2009 lthttp//www.jhsph.edu/preparedness/training/o
nline/radiologicalterror_riskcomm.htmlgt.