Nuclear Terrorism after 9/11

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11 attacks
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9/11 attacks
911 attacks
A01=Robin M. Frost
Aum
Aum Shinrikyo
Author_Robin M. Frost
Category=GTU
Category=NHW
CIA Report
CIA's Center
counterproliferation strategies
Crude Nuclear Device
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eq_history
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fissile material security
Gun Type Device
HEU
HEU Fuel
improvised fission device risk analysis
IND
Indigenous Nuclear Weapon Capability
Laser Isotope Separation
Leu
Mass Casualty Terrorism
Nationalist Separatist Terrorists
non-state actor deterrence
Nuclear Black Market
Nuclear Munitions
Nuclear Terrorism
Nuclear Warheads
Psychological motivations
Radiation Dispersal Devices
radiological threat assessment
Reactor Fuel
Russian Nuclear Weapons
South African Programme
Terrorist Group
terrorist group psychology
weapons design challenges
Weapons Grade Fissile Materials
WMD Attack

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138466623
  • Weight: 330g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The very mention of nuclear terrorism is enough to rouse strong reactions, and understandably so, because it combines the most terrifying weapons and the most threatening of people in a single phrase. The possibility that terrorists could obtain and use nuclear weapons deserves careful analysis, but discussion has all too often been contaminated with exaggeration, even hysteria. For example, it has been claimed that nuclear terrorism poses anexistential threat to the United States.
This Adelphi Paper develops a more measured analysis of the risk of terrorists detonating a true fission device. The problem is attacked from two perspectives: the considerable, possibly insurmountable, technical challenges involved in obtaining a functional nuclear weapon, whetherhome-made or begged, borrowed or stolen from a state arsenal; and the question of the strategic, political and psychological motivations togo nuclear. The conclusions are that nuclear terrorism is a less significant threat than is commonly believed, and that, among terrorists, Muslim extremists are not the most likely to use nuclear weapons.

Robin M. Frost is an analyst with the Government of Canada. He holds degrees in political science, psychology, and journalism, and has published papers on nuclear terrorism, nuclear proliferation, and other subjects. He previously worked as an academic, as a broadcast news journalist, and in the software industry.

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