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HOMELAND INSECURITY
U.N. sponsors Arab tours of U.S. nuclear reactors
'Field trips' part of training course
taught by Energy Department lab

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By Paul Sperry
© 2001 WorldNetDaily.com


WASHINGTON -- To help fight nuclear terrorism, Energy Secretary Spencer
Abraham last month pledged $1.2 million in additional funds to a United
Nations agency that sponsors foreign nationals -- including some from Arab
terrorist states -- to tour U.S. nuclear reactors.

The tours are part of a little-known federal course that trains foreign
nationals in security techniques used at U.S. nuclear sites.

Security experts from Sandia National Laboratory, one of the Energy
Department's three nuclear-weapons research labs, teach the two-week course
every other spring.

Despite the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the course will be offered again this
spring, a lab spokesman told WorldNetDaily.

"Plans remain in place for the International Training Course to be offered
April 28 through May 16," said Rod Geer of Sandia.

Under a nuclear nonproliferation law signed by President Carter, Energy is
obligated to share physical-protection technology with the 133 member states
of the U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency, which is headed by Mohamed
el-Baradei and based in Vienna, Austria.

Six of IAEA's members -- Iraq, Iran, Syria, Libya, Cuba and Sudan -- show up
on the State Department's terrorist blacklist. Afghanistan also is a member.

Since 1978, Albuquerque, N.M.-based Sandia has presented the course 14 times
to more than 400 participants from 57 countries, Geer says.

Islamic countries represented include Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Indonesia,
says Sandia's Basil Steele, a course instructor.

"We have everybody coming here," he said, with the last group passing through
in May 2000.

The international security classes, which used to run three weeks, are held
at the Marriott Hotel in Albuquerque. They cover sensors, cameras, entry and
access controls, response-force communications and other methods to protect
nuclear facilities and materials from sabotage or theft.

After classes, participants are taken on "field trips" to some of the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission's facilities, Steele says.

"They go out to an NRC site to tour it, to see security there, and understand
how they practice security," he said.

Steele would not name the nuclear-reactor sites they visit, other than to say
they're west of New Mexico.

Palo Verde nuclear-power plant in Arizona is the closest to New Mexico. It's
one of 86 nuclear sites protected by a no-fly zone recently ordered by the
Federal Aviation Administration in the wake of the hijackings.

A spokeswoman in IAEA's New York office acknowledges the risk of sharing
security techniques with potential Arab terrorists, who may be using the U.N.
invitation only to scout U.S. nuclear facilities for weak areas to penetrate.

But she says the agency weighs that against the benefit of helping foreign
nationals safeguard nuclear materials in their countries from terrorists
(even though some of the countries themselves sponsor and harbor terrorists).

She says IAEA does not blackball any member from participating, and provides
rosters of participants to Energy.

"We encourage our member states who host such meetings to allow entry for all
nationalities," she asserted.

Steele says Energy does not vet the rosters for suspected terrorists.

"It's up to IAEA to screen their participants," he said.

The IAEA spokeswoman demurred that the State Department is the final check,
since it grants visas to those on its roster.

Steele says that, to the best of his knowledge, federal authorities haven't
scrubbed the roster of 400-plus foreign nationals who have participated in
the course over the past 23 years, for matches to terrorist watch lists.
Authorities recently audited another Energy training program, started by the
Clinton administration, that teaches Yemenites, among other Arabs, security
techniques at Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque.

Former Energy security officials say they repeatedly expressed their
reservations about letting "rogue-state types," as one put it, inspect
security systems at U.S. nuclear sites under the IAEA program.

"We objected on a number of occasions to the kinds of things they were
training these guys," said a former senior Energy official, who says his
warnings fell on deaf ears at Energy's headquarters during the Clinton
administration.

He says the course materials overlap with a lot of the security procedures in
place at Sandia and other nuclear labs.

"The labs pulled heavily from the procedures in the books that they prepared
for the course. So when you went through that course, you pretty well knew
what was going on with security at the labs," he said. "I mean, you could see
the procedures and overlays."

He said a supplement to the basic course includes "identifying weaknesses and
vulnerabilities" in commercial security systems.

"We raised some issues about training some of these foreign nationals,
particularly ones from the Middle East," the official said. "They were
teaching them to black out systems, which they could use against us at the
labs."

Steele says Washington OKs all materials used by Sandia, which is run by
Lockheed-Martin Corp. Its subsidiary, Sandia Corp., runs security at the lab.

"We scrub materials with DOE," he said. "We say, 'This is what we want to
teach the international world. Is everything cool?' And they say, yes or no."




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without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior interest
in receiving the included information for nonprofit research and educational
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