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The Dirty Bomb Distraction
The biggest danger from radiological weapons is the misplaced panic that
they would cause.

By Richard A. Muller
Technology for Presidents
June 23, 2004

Terrorists might attack the U.S. homeland again this summer, the Justice
Department and the FBI warned last month. The same day, the Department of
Energy announced a $450 million plan to counter terrorist nuclear weapons
and dirty bombs. And shortly afterwards, the Justice Department released
some details about Jose Padilla, the one-time street thug who had received
extensive al Qaeda training and had hoped to explode a dirty bomb in the
United States.

But according to the Justice Department announcement, al Qaeda had doubted
that Padilla's proposal to build a dirty bomb was practical. They directed
him instead to blow up two apartment buildings using natural gas. They
apparently felt that such an action would have a greater chance of spreading
death and destruction than would a radiological weapon.

Al Qaeda was right. Perhaps that should scare you. Al Qaeda appears to
understand the limitations of these devices better than do many government
leaders, newspapers, and even many scientists.

Our experience with radiological weapons-the fancier name for dirty bombs-is
limited. They do not require a chain reaction like fission or fusion
weapons, but instead use ordinary explosives to spread pre-existing
radioactive material. Saddam Hussein reportedly tested such a weapon in
1987, but abandoned the effort when he saw how poorly it worked. In 1995,
Chechen rebels buried dynamite and a small amount of the radioactive isotope
cesium-137 in Moscow's Ismailovsky park. They then told a TV station where
to dig it up. Perhaps they recognized the truth: that the bomb's news value
could be greater if it were discovered before it went off. For such weapons,
the psychological impact can be greater than the limited harm they are
likely to cause.

I don't mean to suggest that radioactive materials are harmless. Indeed,
consider the story of scavengers in Goiania, Brazil, who found and
dismantled an abandoned radiotherapy machine in 1987. The machine contained
1,400 curies of cesium-137. (A curie is the radioactivity of one gram of
radium.) Two men, one woman, and one child died from acute radiation
poisoning; 250 additional people were contaminated. Several of the 41 houses
evacuated could not be cleaned adequately and were demolished.

Imagine now if that radiation weren't confined to a few houses, but were
spread over the city by an explosion. Wouldn't fatalities be higher? The
surprising answer is: No. If the radioactivity were dispersed in that way,
larger area would have to be evacuated, yet in all probability no specific
deaths could be attributed to the event.

To understand the details, let's walk through the design of a dirty bomb
similar to what Padilla wanted to build. I'll assume the same amount of
radioactive material as was in Goiania: 1,400 curies of cesium-137.
Radiation damage is measured in units called rem, and if you stand one meter
from that source, you'll absorb 450 rems in less than an hour. That's called
LD50, for lethal dose 50 percent. Untreated, you'll have a 50 percent chance
of dying in the next few months from that exposure.

To try do enhance the damage, let's use explosives to spread our 1,400
curies over a larger area, say a neighborhood one kilometer square. That
will result in a radioactivity of 1.4 millicuries per square meter, and a
careful calculation shows that residents will get a dose of 140 rems per
year. But radiation illness is nonlinear. For extended exposures, the lethal
dose increases by the fourth root of time, to approximately 1,250 rems for a
one-year exposure and 2,500 rems for a 16-year exposure. So 140 rems per
year is not enough to trigger radiation illness, even if you stayed there
24/7 for a decade. Radioactive contamination may be the one case for which
the solution to pollution really is dilution.

There will be no dead bodies at the scene, unless someone is killed by the
explosion itself. I suspect that's why al Qaeda instructed Jose Padilla to
abandon the dirty bomb concept and try to plan a natural gas explosion
instead.

But even a dirty bomb without casualties could spread nuclear panic, based
on the danger of long-term cancer. For doses in the 100-rem range, results
from historical exposures suggest the increased risk of cancer is about 0.04
percent per rem. That's a 6 percent increase in your chance of dying from
cancer for each year you spend in the square kilometer. If the radioactivity
were spread over a larger area, e.g., a 10- by 10-kilometer square, then the
dose would be lower (12.6 rems per year) and so would the added risk of
cancer: 0.06 percent per year of exposure. (I am assuming, conservatively,
that risk is proportional to dose, even at low doses.
With such contamination, would I evacuate my home? Not if I were allowed to
stay. To me, the increased risk-from the pre-existing average risk of cancer
of about 20 percent per year to, say, 20.06 percent-is not significant.

But I wouldn't be given the choice. The exposure of 12.6 rems per year is
126 times more than the yearly limit allowed to the public. In fact, the
Environmental Protection Agency decontamination standard is 0.025 rems per
year, meaning that 98 percent of the radioactivity would have to be removed
before I would be allowed to return to my home.

In the September 11 attacks, the terrorists took advantage of U.S. policy
and prejudices. They knew they didn't need guns to take control because
pilots had been instructed to cooperate with hijackers; nobody expected
hijackers to turn planes into weapons. Similarly, a terrorist today might
use a radiological weapon, not because of its actual damage, but in
anticipation the out-of-scale panic and ensuing economic disruption that the
weapon could trigger.

Could other radiological attacks be more potent than our hypothesized
cesium-137 example? Electrical generators powered by the decay of
radioisotopes, found in abandoned lighthouses in Russia, held 400,000 curies
of strontium-90. But strontium-90 emits virtually no gamma rays; it is
harmful only if you breathe it or ingest it. A cloud of aerosolized Sr-90
can kill-but it does not stay in the air for long. For the same reason, even
a radiological bomb made using plutonium is unlikely to be dangerous.
Anthrax would be deadlier, and much easier to obtain and transport. Nuclear
waste storage facilities and nuclear reactors contain vastly more
radioactivity, and the danger from them is substantial, if their
radioactivity can be released.

If small dirty bombs threaten so little harm, why are they lumped in with
true weapons of mass destruction? The reason is: it's the law, as written
in the 1997 National Defense Authorization Act (Public Law 104-201) and
other places, including California penal code 11417. Defining them this way
was a mistake that could lead to misallocation of resources and a general
overreaction if such weapons were used. I hope, and expect, that most of the
$450 million to be spent on the anti-nuclear initiative announced last month
will be used to protect us from nuclear explosives and attacks on nuclear
storage areas, and not specifically from radiological weapons.

If terrorists do attack this summer using a dirty bomb, the resulting death
might come from automobile accidents as people flee. Dirty bombs are not
weapons of mass destruction, but weapons of mass disruption. Their success
depends on public and government overreaction. Beware not radioactivity but
nuclear panic. The main thing we have to fear from a dirty bomb is fear
itself.

http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/wo_muller062304.asp
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