Later comes the fallout.....

And now, for something more frightening than Michael Moore, or George Soros (or Dennis Hastert's remarks about the latter)....

Reza Bayegan, described as "a commentator on Iranian politics who was born in Iran and currently works for the British Council in Paris" says Iran is just about ready to launch the Big One:

The Islamic Republic already has stockpiles of chemical weapons and has told the EU three (Britain, Germany and France) 'that it could possess nuclear weapons within three years. The real time limit the mullahs need to obtain a nuclear bomb however is less than 11 months.

The danger we face from the regime in Tehran acquiring the nuclear bomb cannot be exaggerated. Our democratic values and the very survival of Western civilization are at stake. In particular such an eventuality would be the worst nightmare scenario for the state of Israel and an unprecedented blow to peace and liberty throughout the world.

Since September 11, we have seen how terrorists are able to strike anywhere they choose and hijack Western democratic processes by intimidating the public as they did during the recent Spanish election. With a nuclear bomb at their disposal they can do this without risking their own lives and by pushing -- or just threatening to push -- a button.

With or without WMDs, the danger the clerical regime poses is far greater than the other members of the 'axis of evil' i.e. Iraq during Saddam Hussein and North Korea. This danger is rooted in a ruthless anti-Western ideology that manipulates the religious belief of the masses and justifies any means for reaching its deadly objectives. If the mullahs get their hands on a nuclear bomb we might as well assume that Hamas and other terrorist organizations have access to it also.

On August 15 2004, the military chief of the Islamic Republic declared that the entire Zionist territory 'is within the range of Iran's new advanced ballistic missiles'. The mullahs are counting the days until they can arm these missiles with nuclear or biological warheads. Experts believe that although due to their inherent inaccuracy the Iranian Shahb-3 and the planned for Shahab-4 missiles make no military sense if armed with conventional warheads, they can become immensely effective as terror weapons against civilian targets.

In other words, the dictators in Tehran gaining weapons of mass destruction would impose the same or worse state of terror on the rest of the world as they have imposed on the Iranian people for the last quarter of a century.

Those inclined to dismiss the thoughts of an Iranian exile might also read a rather unsettling piece by George F. Will, in which he recites some very grim data:
  • A dirty bomb — conventional explosives dispersing radioactive materials that are widely used in industry and medicine — exploded in midtown Manhattan could make much of the island uninhabitable for years. As many as one in every 100 Manhattanites might develop cancer. Perhaps even more people would die in the panic than would be killed by radiation. But even dirty bombs are relative pinpricks.
  • In 1993, U.S. officials used ordinary bolt cutters to snip off the padlock that was the only security at an abandoned Soviet-era facility containing enough HEU for 20 nuclear weapons.
  • In 2002, enough fissile material for three weapons was recovered from a laboratory in a Belgrade suburb. Often an underpaid guard and a chain-link fence are the only security at the more than 130 nuclear reactors and other facilities using HEU in 40 countries.
  • Allison says that at least four times between 1992 and 1999 weapons-useable materials were stolen from Russian research institutes but recovered. How many thefts have not been reported? The U.S. Cold War arsenal included Special Atomic Demolition Munitions that could be carried in a backpack. The Soviet arsenal often mimicked America's. Russia denies that "suitcase" nuclear weapons exist, so it denies reports that at least 80 are missing. Soviet military forces deployed 22,000 tactical nuclear warheads — without individual identification numbers. Who thinks all have been accounted for? Russia probably has 2 million pounds of weapons-useable material — enough for 80,000 weapons.
  • In December 1994, Czech police seized more than eight pounds of HEU in a parked car on a side street. A senior al Qaeda aide's proclaimed goal of killing 4 million Americans would require 1,400 9/11s, or one 10-kiloton nuclear explosion — from a softball-sized lump of fissionable material — in four large American cities.
  • There's much more, and most of it comes from Graham Allison's Nuclear Terrorism: The Ultimate Preventable Catastrophe -- which Will is reviewing.

    My fear is not an if fear but a when fear, because I don't think it's possible in the long run to stop the nuking of Manhattan. It may not be this year, but its chances of happening within the next ten years strike me as about as likely as the chance of another earthquake in California.

    Unpredictably inevitable.

    I experienced many earthquakes (the October 17, 1989 quake was especially unforgettable). There's something about not being able to take for granted the ground under your feet which takes some getting used to.

    We all take our freedom for granted. September 11 reminded me that we shouldn't, because there are lots of people with lots of reasons to destroy it. What might happen to American freedom after the Big One could be more destructive than the bomb. My ultimate fear is that the non-nuclear fallout will be worse than the real thing.

    posted by Eric on 09.03.04 at 11:04 AM





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    This is what I've been thinking about lately: The failure of the United States, and the West, to take substantive action against real terrorism. We spend far more time scapegoating "liberals" or "conservatives" and initiating proxy battles against unin... [Read More]
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    Comments

    "...such an eventuality would be ... an unprecedented blow to peace and liberty throughout the world."

    Gee, I wish someone had told Bush that BEFORE he got our forces bogged down in Iraq! Or did he misspell the name of the country he thought was the biggest threat?

    Also, I wouldn't trust George Will's assertion about the effects of a dirty bomb in Manhattan. I've heard far less dire predictions on that subject, and Will is not a scientist of any sort.

    Raging Bee   ·  September 3, 2004 01:58 PM

    Bear in mind that Will was reviewing a book, so most of the claims were not his.

    The Machiavellian in me wonders whether, in the event of a Doomsday-type scenario, we might end up losing more freedom under Kerry than Bush.

    Eric Scheie   ·  September 5, 2004 11:27 AM


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