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Politics : Clinton -- doomed & wagging, Japan collapses, Y2K bug, etc -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: WTCausby who wrote (49)9/2/1998 9:10:00 AM
From: SOROS  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1151
 
International Christian Embassy Jerusalem - 09/02/98

Western experts quoted in US media have voiced concern that the Russian economic crisis could result in the illegal sale by unpaid, desperate military employees of nuclear weapons technology to terror
groups or terror-supporting states.

Joseph Cirincione, director of the Non-Proliferation Project at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told the SAN FRANSISCO EXAMINER (Aug 30) that Russia "has 22,000 nuclear weapons. And
10,000 to 15,000 of them are in storage and, so, are guarded not by elite forces but by regular troops" whose trustworthiness is less certain.

"You've got to be a little concerned ... about how vulnerable those weapons might be to sale or theft. And those concerns are certainly increased by the economic situation."

Arms-control activists have urged President Bill Clinton to make a dramatic gesture during his visit to Russia, like offering to begin talks leading to the lowering of both sides' nuclear arsenals to 1,000
strategic nuclear weapons.

Cirincione urged the administration and Congress to increase substantially the annual US expenditure on an existing programme that tries to ensure that Russian scientists and military personnel don't sell bombs, fissionable materials or know-how to outsiders.

The research director at the Nuclear Control Institute in Washington, Steven Dolley, said he was "less worried about [loose nukes] until the [Russian] situation became decidedly worse over the last few weeks, with concern about national collapse".



To: WTCausby who wrote (49)9/2/1998 1:49:00 PM
From: SOROS  Respond to of 1151
 
Arabic News Daily, August 31, 1998

Tells Allies to Get Ready for Election Season Diplomatic sources in Cairo said they expect the U.S. to direct a military strike at Iraq in October should Baghdad continue its refusal to cooperate with the special international committee, UNSCOM, investigating weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. The sources told ArabicNews.com Saturday that the "U.S.A informed France, Russia, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Egypt that it expect to be supported in military operations against Iraq if Baghdad continued its current status."

The sources added that "Washington has reached an understanding with France and Russia concerning this matter after Washington's approval last February of changing its plan to strike at Iraq and allowing
the United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan to meditate to solve the crisis peacefully."

The sources added, "In case of Iraq's insistence on its current status, the military operations will aim at weakening the Iraqi regime to the utmost degree in order not to defy the Security Council's resolution."