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Obama Highlights Threat Of Nuclear Terrorism

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  • Obama Highlights Threat Of Nuclear Terrorism

    OBAMA HIGHLIGHTS THREAT OF NUCLEAR TERRORISM

    Independent/uk
    Monday, 12 April 2010

    President Barack Obama said yesterday that efforts by al-Qa'ida to
    acquire atomic weapons posed the biggest threat to global security,
    and world leaders meeting this week must act with urgency to combat
    this danger.

    Obama, speaking on the eve of an unprecedented 47-nation summit in
    Washington aimed at thwarting nuclear terrorism, said he expected
    "enormous progress" at the conference toward the goal of locking down
    loose nuclear material worldwide.

    "The central focus of this nuclear summit is the fact that the single
    biggest threat to US security - both short-term, medium-term and
    long-term - would be the possibility of a terrorist organization
    obtaining a nuclear weapon," Obama told reporters.

    "We know that organizations like al-Qa'ida are in the process of trying
    to secure a nuclear weapon - a weapon of mass destruction that they
    have no compunction at using," Obama said before talks with South
    African President Jacob Zuma.

    Nuclear non-proliferation experts say there are no known instances of
    terrorist groups obtaining highly enriched uranium or plutonium that
    could be used to make a crude nuclear bomb but note there have been
    18 cases of nuclear material being stolen or going missing since the
    early 1990s.

    "This is something that could change the security landscape of this
    country and around the world for years to come," Obama said, warning
    of the potential consequences if a nuclear bomb were detonated.

    Obama's goal at the two-day summit is to get nations to agree to
    secure vulnerable nuclear material within four years and to take
    specific steps to crack down on nuclear smuggling.

    The US president held talks yesterday with the prime ministers of
    nuclear-armed foes India and Pakistan, Kazakh President Nursultan
    Nazarbayev and South Africa's Zuma. He will see Chinese President Hu
    Jintao, Jordan's King Abdullah and the leaders of Malaysia, Ukraine
    and Armenia on Monday.

    Signaling the US-led push for new sanctions on Iran is on leaders'
    minds even if not on the summit agenda, the White House said Obama
    told Zuma a "strong and unified international response" is required
    over Tehran's nuclear program.

    The West wants further sanctions to deter Iran from what is seen as
    a covert nuclear weapons development drive, while Tehran says it has
    only peaceful nuclear ambitions.

    Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani "indicated his assurance that Pakistan
    takes nuclear security seriously and has appropriate safeguards in
    place," the White House said. It said Obama reasserted to Gilani
    "the importance of nuclear security, a priority he has reiterated
    for all countries."

    Nuclear non-proliferation experts say Pakistan's nuclear arsenal and
    stockpile of weapons-grade nuclear material is heavily guarded but
    the threat from al-Qa'ida and the Taliban make the country one of
    the areas of greatest concern.

    Pakistan is still trying to move out from the shadow cast by scientist
    Abdul Qadeer Khan, who was at the center of the world's biggest
    nuclear proliferation scandal in 2004. He has confessed to selling
    secrets to Iran, North Korea and Libya.

    In his 50-minute meeting with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh,
    Obama heard a litany of concerns about India's neighbor Pakistan,
    according to Indian Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao, who briefed
    reporters.

    Singh talked to Obama about the activities of Lashkar-e-Taiba, the
    Pakistan-based militant group responsible for the 2008 Mumbai attacks,
    "and also the fact that unfortunately there was no will on the part
    of the government of Pakistan to punish those responsible for the
    terrorist crimes in Mumbai," Rao said.

    India and Pakistan have fought three wars since 1947 and several
    smaller conflicts, including one in 1999. Both nations conducted
    nuclear tests in 1998 and are not signatories to the Nuclear
    Non-Proliferation Treaty.

    White House officials said Obama praised Kazakhstan's Nazarbayev
    as a model leader in their meeting for the steps he has taken to
    denuclearize his central Asian nation.

    The former Soviet Union carried out nearly 500 atmospheric and
    underground nuclear test explosions in Kazakhstan between 1949 and
    1989. Nazarbayev closed the testing site in 1991 and has disposed of
    more than 100 nuclear warheads.

    The Kazakh government has erected posters around Washington ahead
    of the summit highlighting the country's decision to get rid of its
    nuclear arsenal, once the world's fourth largest.

    White House officials said Obama would also meet Turkish Prime Minister
    Tayyip Erdogan on the sidelines of the summit. A US congressional
    committee last month voted to label the World War One-era massacres of
    Armenians by Turkish forces as genocide, angering Ankara and prompting
    it to recall its ambassador from Washington.
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