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Next Generation Nuclear Security Summit - April 12-13, 2010
Securing the Bomb 2008, Matthew Bunn

Matthew Bunn, an associate professor at Harvard University and co-principal investigator for the Project on Managing the Atom, outlines the danger of nuclear terrorism, assesses what has and has not been done to reduce it, and suggests an agenda of actions that could reduce the risk dramatically in this annual Nuclear Threat Initiative-commissioned report. 

The report details a broad range of progress in efforts to reduce the danger, including programs that have eliminated potential nuclear bomb material entirely from dozens of buildings and have substantially beefed up security for scores of sites. But it warns that major gaps in these efforts remain, and the risk of nuclear terrorism is still unacceptably high. The study provides a frightening survey of incidents around the world, from an armed break-in at a South African site with hundreds of kilograms of highly enriched uranium (HEU), to a Russian colonel arrested for soliciting bribes to overlook violations of nuclear security rules, to increasing terrorist threats amid Pakistan’s ongoing strife, to weak security at many of the roughly 130 research reactors worldwide still using HEU fuel.

Available at: http://www.nti.org/e_research/cnwm/overview/cnwm_h...

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Bunn_Securing_the_bomb_Nov08.pdf1.28 MB
Bunn_release_securing_the_bomb08_Nov08.pdf34.8 KB
Bunn_Preventing_Nuclear_Terrorism-An_Agenda_Nov08.pdf437.71 KB