Credit Card Sized WMD Labs
Credit card-size reactors that pump out potent toxins could render international chemical weapons bans impotent, a U.S. military weapons expert said Aug. 11.
Efficient âmicro-reactorsâ make it easy for stockpiles of chemical weapons to be secretly produced, according to Tuan Nguyen of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratoryâs Center for Global Security Research.
âThe inherently small physical size of the equipment and small space required make it attractive for clandestine operations,â Nguyen wrote in a paper to be published in the Aug 12 edition of the journal Science.
âThe ability to produce chemicals of interest in a safer and more feasible manner, with little signature produced, could encourage their application for malicious intent,â he explained.
Reactors ranging in size from a notebook to a credit card produce inexpensive, high-grade toxins, according to Nguyen.
Among the chemicals already produced by mini-machines are hydrogen cyanide, phosgene, and methyl isocyanate, he wrote.
Micro-reactor technology was recently put to use in China to make explosively volatile nitroglycerine as quickly as 22 pounds per hour, according to Nguyen.
âAnother danger created by the growing use of micro-reactors is that chemical weapon precursors could be synthesized rather than purchased, making it more difficult to discover the preparation of chemical weapons,â he wrote.
Micro-reactors threaten enforcement of the 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention, a treaty banning production, stockpiling and use of toxic arsenals, according to Nguyen.
The treaty has been signed by 170 nations.
âThe key issue with these advancements in science and technology is that itâs going to make it more difficult to monitor and verify compliance of the Chemical Weapons Convention,â Nguyen said.
Nguyen urged the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons to form alliances with not only with technology innovators to assess the dangers and find solutions.
He also called for implementation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1540, which would tighten controls on chemical weaponry and criminalize proliferation activities.
The lab where Nguyen works is a U.S. weapons research center. The labâs compound about 45 miles southeast of San Francisco is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy and managed by the California university system.
Posted by: Anonymoose 2005-08-12 |