Nuclear and Other Threats
I do not understand the decision by the United States nor do I trust the North Koreans. -- However, the U.S. has pledged
to remove the North Korean regime from its list of state sponsors of terrorism
and lift some trade sanctions. Can anyone believes the North Koreans? They have submitted an inventory
of nuclear plants and materials. (Bloomberg)
The information was required under a September 2005 agreement by the government in Pyongyang and the U.S., China, South Korea, Japan and Russia to rid the Korean peninsula of atomic weapons. North Korea's refusal to submit the declaration on its programs had stalled the negotiations for months.
``The United States has no allusions about the regime in Pyongyang,'' President George W. Bush said in the White House Rose Garden. ``Yet we welcome today's development.''
The U.S. and other nations involved in the disarmament talks will review the document to see how much plutonium North Korea has produced and try to gain insight into the extent of North Korea's weapons' program, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said in Japan today.
According to the International Herald Tribune:
The declaration was believed to provide a partial, though important, view of North Korea's nuclear capability, and it marked a significant step forward in a multinational effort to end the country's drive to build nuclear weapons.
On Iran, which most of us see as the real and present danger, "The head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency Mohamed ElBaradei, said
Iran could create a nuclear weapon in six months. Yes, this is the same
guy that a couple of months ago said we have a few years before Iran
would have that capability." (WBC.STV via National Terror Alert) Yet ElBaradei went on to say, " ... that he will resign as chief of the UN nuclear agency if Iran is attacked by any country."
The word moron comes to mind when reading ElBaradei's comments.
Terrorists Could Launch Satellite Strikes In 12 Years
The
Defense Intelligence Agency believes that terrorists could be able to
“disrupt” American satellites by 2020 and that states like China could
have “robust destructive capabilities” in space around the same time.
The question is, how good are the Pentagon’s spies at figuring out our
enemies’ space programs, really?
In a presentation obtained by DANGER ROOM, Randy Jones, the associate technical director of the Defense Intelligence Agency’s Missile & Space Intelligence Center, warned that terror groups could use lasers, radio frequency jammers, and even nuclear weapons to knock out U.S. satellites. Countries like China might launch anti-satellite [ASAT] ballistic missiles or position weapons in orbit. These states might be “hesitant,” at first, to start blasting American orbiters, Jones observes, “but [would] probably be willing under appropriate conditions” to attack. (Danger Room, via National Terror Alert)
Saudi Arabia Disrupts Planned Terror Attacks on Oil Facilities - Arrests Hundreds
During the last six months, Saudi security forces have arrested 701 militants for allegedly plotting to carry out terrorist attacks on oil facilities and other vital installations across the Kingdom, the Interior Ministry announced yesterday.
“Some of the arrested suspects were planning to stage terrorist attacks on oil fields and installations,” Maj. Gen. Mansour Al-Turki, spokesman for the ministry told Arab News.
He said the militants — Saudis and foreigners — were trying to regroup and strengthen the Al-Qaeda terror network in Saudi Arabia. (Arab News via National Terror Alert)










































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