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Britain could be paralyzed by bioweapons, radioactive attack: think-tank
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Pastor Dale Morgan  
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 More options Feb 8 2007, 6:58 am
From: Pastor Dale Morgan <dgrmor...@telus.net>
Date: Thu, 08 Feb 2007 03:58:17 -0800
Local: Thurs, Feb 8 2007 6:58 am
Subject: Britain could be paralyzed by bioweapons, radioactive attack: think-tank
*Perilous Times*

Thursday February 8, 4:03 PM  

*Britain could be paralyzed by bioweapons, radioactive attack: think-tank*

The devastating impact of a terrorist attack in Britain using bioweapons
or radioactivity could be further amplified by the panicked reaction and
"alarmist media," a leading think-tank has warned.

To counter this, authorities should provide calmly-presented information
about possible scenarios before any attacks take place, said Paul
Cornish, head of London-based Chatham House's international security
programme.

His report looked at the threat from chemical, biological, radiological
and nuclear (CBRN) weapons here and said they could be used by extremist
groups "from the largest to the smallest... from the poorest to the best
funded."

"A good deal of the effect of a terrorist attack in the United Kingdom
using CBRN could prove to be self-inflicted by the victims of the attack
-- the general public, business leaders, and government officials -- or
magnified by alarmist media," Cornish wrote.

"The United Kingdom might prove to be rather brittle in the face of a
CBRN attack...and it seems reasonable to assume that terrorists might
hope for such brittleness in order to expand the effect of their attack."

The findings come after Dame Eliza Manningham-Buller, head of the MI5
domestic intelligence agency, warned in November that her agents were
investigating nearly 30 terror plots and tracking over 1,600 suspects.

She also stressed that future terror attacks could involve chemical,
bacteriological, radioactive and nuclear material.

Cornish echoed this view, writing that "a highly committed terrorist
group" might have uncomplicated aims and view the risks of using CBRN as
relatively low.

"The desired 'effect' might be no more than some hundreds or thousands
of deaths or the destruction of a few buildings, all of which would be
magnified by the terrorists' 'propaganda of the deed,'" he added.


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