Worries mount about 'dirty bomb' plots
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, Sept. 8 (UPI) -- Islamic terrorists are
trying to take advantage of political chaos in Pakistan to obtain
radioactive materials for a so-called "dirty bomb," sources say.
Citing unnamed intelligence officials, The Daily Telegraph
reported Monday al-Qaida, which is based in Pakistan's restive North
West Frontier Province tribal areas, is known to be trying to obtain
nuclear technology for use against the West.
Security officials reportedly say political instability in
Pakistan, where President Pervez Musharraf was forced to resign in a
corruption scandal, will help al-Qaida and the Pakstani Taliban in
their aims to a develop a bomb in which radioactive material is
placed inside a conventional explosive.
"Islamist militant groups want to carry out terror attacks
on a massive scale, and there is no better way for them to achieve
that objective than to develop some form of primitive nuclear
device," an unnamed senior U.S. security official told the
Telegraph.
The newspaper says there is growing concern among Western
intelligence circles that Islamic terror groups will gain enough
nuclear know-how from sympathetic Pakistani military officials to
eventually construct a dirty bomb.
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