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The threat of marginalized terrorist organizations using nuclear weapons (especially very small ones, such as suitcase nukes) has been a threat in American rhetoric and culture since at least the 1970s. In June 2002, U.S. citizen Jose Padilla was arrested for allegedly planning a radiological attack on the city of Los Angeles; Padilla is currently (as of 2006) under military arrest as an "illegal combatant". In August 2002, the United States launched a program to track and secure enriched uranium from 24 Soviet-style reactors in 16 countries, in order to reduce the risk of the materials falling into the hands of terrorists or "rogue states". The first such operation was Project Vinca, an operation in Serbia "to remove a quantity of highly enriched uranium, sufficient to produce 2-1/2 nuclear weapons from a research reactor near downtown Belgrade" [1].
Pakistan's disgraced chief nuclear scientist A.Q. Khan admitted of nuclear proliferation from Libya to North Korea and it is believed that some of the centrifuges and nuclear technology he sold might still be available in the nuclear blackmarket. Recently, the MI5 has warned that Islamic terrorists, specifically the al-Qaida were planning on nuking cities in the United Kingdom by obtaining the bombs via clandestine means.[2] There also concern that pro Taliban military generals in Pakistan might also take command of nuclear missiles and unleash damage in a worst case scenario.[3]
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