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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dorine Essey who wrote (4620)9/17/2002 5:58:42 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Even a "box cutter" can be turned into a weapon of mass destruction. If the 9/11 terrorists had
hit a nuclear reactor, thousands of people might have been killed.

We have enough nuclear waste in this country that could harm or kill many people. The Hanford
site in Washington State is very dangerous. Waste is stored in old cannisters that could explode
spraying deadly chemicals on the people here in the North West.

So, we don't need to go to Iraq to look for weapons of mass destruction. They exist here in the United
States and it may be more likely that we, as opposed to terrorists, will to blow ourselves to bits.



To: Dorine Essey who wrote (4620)9/17/2002 6:00:10 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
U.S. Nuclear Manufacturing and/or Waste Sites

cqs.com

These are sites where nuclear materials have been manufactured and/or where waste has been stored, and
where massive leaks, toxic emissions, or unexplained losses have occurred in the processing of nuclear and
other toxic materials. Listed with the site is the type of toxic or radioactive leak or "loss."


Oak Ridge, TN - mercury, other heavy metals, nuclear (uranium, waste), dioxin
Barnwell, SC - nuclear (waste)
Hanford, Richland, WA - nuclear (plutonium, waste)
Rocky Flats, Colorado - nuclear (plutonium)
Idaho Falls, ID - nuclear (plutonium)
Pantex, TX - nuclear (tritium)
Maxey Flats, KY - nuclear (waste)
West Valley, NY - nuclear (waste)
Nuclear Metals, Concord, MA - nuclear (uranium)
Kerr-McGee, Cimarron, OK - nuclear (plutonium)

The Oak Ridge and Hanford facilities stand out among them as being among the largest leaks of toxic and/or
radioactive waste in the world.
At Oak Ridge, literally millions of pounds of mercury have leaked into the
ground, the aquifer, and a streambed that then winds many miles through the Tennesee countryside and
through several towns. In addition, Oak Ridge maintains a hazardous waste incinerator on site, which has
been used to "incinerate" nuclear waste and toxic wastes which produce dioxin when incinerated. At the
Hanford Works, large amounts of plutonium and other wastes have leaked into the Columbia River, which
then winds its way across the entire state of Washington.



To: Dorine Essey who wrote (4620)9/17/2002 6:06:12 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Dorine, I don't know very much about the fellow Ritter but he was a weapons inspector in Iraq at one time. M


Ex-Inspector's Stance on Iraq Sparks Storm
Weapons: Scott Ritter says U.N. teams rid 95% of Saddam Hussein's arsenal. Critics and colleagues question the depth of his knowledge.


latimes.com

By JOHANNA NEUMAN and BOB DROGIN, TIMES STAFF WRITERS
September 16, 2002

E-mail story


WASHINGTON -- When former United Nations arms inspector Scott Ritter
got home from Baghdad Tuesday night, he was greeted by a flood of e-mail
messages.

Some applauded his courage in standing up to the Bush administration's war
rhetoric by telling Iraq's National Assembly that the U.S. had no "hard facts"
that Baghdad possesses weapons of mass destruction. Others, saying he'd
been brainwashed by President Saddam Hussein, suggested that he turn in his
U.S. passport and move to Iraq.

"People who call me a
traitor are
disrespecting
American democracy,"
Ritter said in an
interview, one of
dozens he juggled in
the days after his
return. "It's
mind-boggling."

Mind-boggling is a
word often applied to Scott Ritter these days. As a
weapons inspector, he pioneered new techniques
to ferret out Hussein's most virulent weapons.
When Ritter resigned in 1998, he was hailed by
conservatives in Congress for standing up to what
he saw as lack of spine in the Clinton administration and the U.N. Security Council.


"Iraq today is not disarmed and remains an ugly threat to its neighbors and to world peace," Ritter told a
Senate committee in September 1998. "Americans who think that ... something should be done about it
have to be deeply disappointed in our leadership."

Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), called him "a true American hero." Democratic Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr.
of Delaware was less kind, faulting Ritter for reaching "above his pay grade" in presuming to tell White
House officials how to conduct foreign policy. "That's why they get paid the big bucks," Biden said.
"That's why they get the limos, and you don't."

These days, Ritter is sounding a different warning. Concerned about the White House's drumbeat for
"regime change," he argues that 95% of Hussein's arsenal was disarmed by the U.N. inspection teams
between 1991 and 1998. The only way to determine whether Iraq has rearmed in the last four years, he
says, is to let inspectors back in.

"There is no hard evidence, no hard evidence whatsoever," Ritter told CNN on Friday. "I'm not saying
Iraq doesn't pose a threat. I am saying that it has not been demonstrated to pose a threat worthy of war."

So this former Marine, a tough-guy Republican with a taste for intelligence work and a knack for media
splash, has been embraced by the anti-war movement. He says he has little in common with his latest
allies--"they're tree-huggers and I'm for chopping down the forests," he explains--except for an
understanding that war without provocation is wrong.

His passion for inspections is born of adrenalin-pumping days in Iraq. There were the "dog ate my
homework" excuses Iraqi officials used to deter detection: Books were missing; documents had been
destroyed during the war; the key to the office was lost. There were confrontations in parking lots when
inspectors refused to leave after being denied entry to a building. Shots were fired over their heads.

'Underdogs' in the Game


"It was a great game, and we were the underdogs," recalled another weapons inspector, who asked that
his name not be used to avoid a personality clash with Ritter. "We were like hotel thieves, cooking up all
kinds of creative methods to get in." Being on the inspection team, he said, "was the highlight of all of our
lives."

If some see Ritter's obsession with inspections as nostalgic, others ridicule him for taking a 180-degree
turn and for demonstrating--as former Marine Lt. Col. Oliver L. North did in embroiling the Reagan
White House in an arms-for-hostages swap with Iran--that Marines are sometimes better at "taking the
hill" than understanding it.

"This is the classic Marine problem," said Patrick Clawson, deputy director at the Washington Institute for
Near East Policy. "It's building a bridge over the River Kwai, when it's not apparent that a bridge is what
is needed."

Since 1998, Ritter has earned his living as a lecturer. He wrote "Endgame," which Simon & Schuster is
reissuing in paperback. With $400,000 from an Iraqi American businessman, Shakir Alkhafaji, he
produced a documentary about Iraq, "In Shifting Sands," which will also be the title of his next book.
Ritter bristles at the comparison to North, who invoked his 5th Amendment rights before Congress
granted him immunity. Ritter also insists that he has done no 180-degree turn, being a fan then and now of
the power and efficacy of inspections. And he is quite angry about accusations that he has become
Hussein's lobbyist.

"I despise what Saddam has done to his people, I wish ... he'd drop dead," he said.

The trip to Baghdad--funded in part, he says, by peace groups--was not meant as propaganda for Hussein
but as a counter to the White House media blitz against Iraq. "I used the address to the Iraqi National
Assembly to put my message before the American public," he said. "I knew Bush was meeting with
[British Prime Minister] Tony Blair. I knew the administration would have its voice on the Sunday talk
shows. I decided to launch a preemptive strike."

A Born Military Man

Ritter is the youngest of four children--and the only son--born into a military family. His father was in the
Air Force. His mother was a military nurse. The formative high school years, he says, were spent in
Hawaii, Germany and Turkey.

As a kid, he had a special fondness for history, painting Napoleonic toy soldiers in uniforms researched
for accuracy. Ritter remembers enjoying the combat simulation games in "Strategy & Tactics," a military
history magazine.

He became a Marine, then a weapons inspector sent to the Soviet Union to enforce the
Intermediate-Range Nuclear Force Treaty. There he met his future wife, Marina Khatiashvili, a translator
from the Soviet republic of Georgia. His marriage raised eyebrows in intelligence circles, where Soviet
translators were assumed to be working for the KGB.

Ritter later applied to the CIA but was derailed by a lie detector test in which he admitted sharing
intelligence with Israel while an inspector in Iraq--one of his tactical maneuvers to outsmart Hussein, he
says. In two interviews before he left for Iraq, Ritter argued that the U.N. teams destroyed all the
weapons and fundamentally disarmed Iraq before Hussein barred further inspections in late 1998.

"There was nothing left that we were aware of that we hadn't destroyed," he said. "We had suspicions.
We had concerns. But we had no hard evidence."

One reason, he asserts, was his own success as an inspector. "You wouldn't believe how thorough we
were," he said. "In 1992, I went through Iraq like Attila the Hun."

He dismisses concerns that Baghdad retains several highly sophisticated devices, called lenses, used to
help trigger nuclear explosions. Iraqi troops tossed the lenses into a truck and then onto the ground, he
said. "Whatever they had was smashed."

He challenges assertions that Iraq has reserves of VX, a deadly nerve agent, and the means to make
more. "The R&D is destroyed. The major production equipment is destroyed. The warheads are
destroyed. So they don't have the capability to produce VX."

And he ridicules fears that Iraq could deliver anthrax, smallpox or other deadly biological agents via a
long-range missile. "The only way an Iraqi biological bomb would kill you is if it hit you on the head," he
said.

As for Iraq's nuclear program, "absolutely nothing is going on in nuclear," he said. "Everything was
destroyed. They'd have to be buying new stuff [from abroad], importing it, installing it, putting in electricity
feeds. We'd see it. We'd know it."


Ex-Inspectors Skeptical


Ritter's statements have stunned other former U.N. weapons inspectors. Richard Spertzel, the chief
biological weapons inspector in Iraq from 1994 to 1998, ridiculed Ritter's assertions during a Senate
subcommittee hearing Tuesday.

"How does he know what 100% is?" Spertzel asked. "I don't. And how many biological sites did he visit?
The answer is none. He has no knowledge of those sites."

David Kay, the chief nuclear inspector in Iraq from 1991 to 1993, agreed. He said Ritter sharply criticized
the ability of U.N. inspection teams to disarm Iraq when he testified before Congress.

"Either he lied to you then or he's lying to you now," Kay said. "He's gone completely the other way. I
cannot explain it on the basis of known facts."

So Long, Baghdad


But Ritter says he has been more consistent than critics allow, favoring inspections instead of either war
or a shrug of indifference. Sobered by the intensely angry reaction over his trip to Iraq, Ritter says he has
no plans to visit Baghdad again.

But he does plan to keep speaking out. This fall he will be in Britain for the Labor Party conference, and
in Berlin, Vienna and Copenhagen to talk to anti-war groups.

"People who call me a traitor today cheered me wildly when I resigned," he said. "But I can't let them
fabricate the facts for war. If we want to sell American democracy, by God we have to live it."

latimes.com



To: Dorine Essey who wrote (4620)9/17/2002 6:35:51 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
A nuclear power explosion could occur anywhere in the world without the help
of terrorists
- Mephisto

>>>>>>>>>>>>>

TEPCO officials may have had role in
cover-up-paper

Reuters Company News

Sunday September 8, 4:07 am ET

biz.yahoo.com

TOKYO, Sept 8 (Reuters) - Officials at the headquarters of Japan's biggest power firm
may have been involved in the falsifying of records of repairs at its nuclear plants,
Japanese media said on Sunday.


Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO)
(Tokyo:9501.T - News) said two
weeks ago that evidence of cracks at
nuclear reactors was covered up
during inspections in the late 1980s
and early 1990s.

TEPCO is suspected of 29 cases
involving falsified repair records at
nuclear reactors, and the company's
headquarters was searched by
officials for evidence on Friday.

Quoting company sources, the daily
Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper said an
in-house investigation had found that
as many as 30 to 40 officials,
including some at a senior level, may
have been involved in the falsifying of records over a 16-year period.


The sources added that the results of the company investigation, including
announcement of possible disciplinary actions, might be released as early as
September 20, the Yomiuri added.

A TEPCO spokesman declined to comment, saying the matter was still under
investigation.

The utility stoked public anxiety over nuclear safety in Japan after announcing two
weeks ago that evidence of cracks at nuclear reactors was covered up during
inspections in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

The scandal came to light late in August, more than two years after an employee at the
unit of U.S.-based General Electric Co (NYSE:GE - News), which conducted the safety
checks, told authorities that there appeared to be problems with TEPCO's reports.

Senior executives at TEPCO said last Monday they would resign to take responsibility
for the attempt to hide the existence of the cracks.

The company planned to shut down for safety checks five reactors thought to have
been operating with cracks in their shrouds, the stainless steel envelope that helps to
encase and support the core reactor.

Two have already been closed, with the remaining three to be shut down by the end of
October, a company spokesman said.

Public faith in the nuclear power industry, which provides about one-third of
resource-poor Japan's energy, was already low after a 1999 accident at a plant at
Tokaimura, 140 km (90 miles) northeast of Tokyo.

Japan's worst ever nuclear accident exposed hundreds of residents, plant workers and
emergency personnel to radiation. Two plant workers died.


Email this story - Set a News Alert



To: Dorine Essey who wrote (4620)9/17/2002 7:03:05 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
U.S. Nuclear Accidents

The following is an excerpt from the website:
lutins.org

Introduction

"If you set aside Three Mile Island and Chernobyl, the safety record of nuclear
[power] is really very good.

-Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill," June 2001


"Contrary to Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill's assessment, nuclear power
and nuclear devices have not enjoyed a safe history at United States
facilities. At least 50 nuclear weapons lie on the ocean bottom due to U.S.
and Soviet accidents.
A large number of incidents mar the safety
record of nuclear plants, facilities, bombers and ships, of which Three Mile
Island is only the best remembered. Numerous deaths and injuries
resulted from these incidents. In addition to accidents, the day-to-day
operations related to nuclear materials processing and handling have led
to massive contamination of this country's landscape.

The U.S. Department of Energy spends over $4 billion each year for the restoration and
management of sites contaminated by nuclear materials. Their 2000 Federal budget noted"
"The Environmental Management (EM) program is responsible for addressing the environmental
legacy resulting from the production of nuclear weapons. The nuclear weapons complex
generated waste, pollution, and contamination that pose unique problems, including
unprecedented volumes of contaminated soil and water,
radiological hazards from special nuclear material, and a vast
number of contaminated structures. Factories, laboratories, and thousands of
square miles of land were devoted to producing tens of thousands of nuclear weapons.

Much of this is largely maintained, decommissioned,
managed, and remediated by the EM program, which is sometimes
referred to as the "cleanup program." EM's responsibilities include facilities
and sites in 30 states and one territory, and occupy an area equal to that
of Rhode Island and Delaware combined - or about 2.1 million
acres."

On 23 October 1999 directors of the Radiation and Public Health Project
released a report which found that the cancer-causing radioisotope
Strontium-90 has been found in the teeth of children born in the 1980's
at levels equal to those of the middle 1950's, when the U.S. and the
former Soviet Union were conducting routine above-ground bomb tests.


The elevated levels were attributed to accidents such as those at Three
Mile Island (in 1979) and Chernobyl (in 1986),
with contributions
from ongoing releases at other nuclear reactors. Dr. Ernest Sternglass,
Professor Emeritus of Radiological Physics at the University of
Pittsburgh School of Medicine, noted, "Strontium-90 is a known carcinogen and a
marker for other shorter-lived fission products and simply should not
be present at all in our children's teeth.

The following is a compilation of some known events involving nuclear devices
and facilities under U.S. jurisdiction. If you can document items
which i've yet to include, or have corrections or comments regarding this page,
please send them to me!"

lutins.org



To: Dorine Essey who wrote (4620)9/18/2002 6:10:08 PM
From: Raymond Duray  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
FLORIDA - KUNST SPEAKS OUT ABOUT ELECTION FRAUD

Dorine and all,

Here's an amazing web-radio interview

Message 18007433

[[Available free until tomorrow morning 9/19, fee for archive after that.]]

Kunst Website:
kunstforgov.com