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Bush Administration To Prevent Foreigners From WMD Building: Report

no more 101s in WMD

 Washington (AFP) April 10, 2002
The Bush administration could prevent foreign nationals from studying certain subjects that could bear on the development of weapons of mass destruction, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.

The daily reported that a team working in the office of Homeland Security directed by Tom Ridge was weighing this and other potential limitations to be placed on student visas, as part of a ramping up of government oversight on foreign student programs.

A spokesman told the daily that the restrictions program was only in the planning stage, and was just one of the suggestions being bandied about.

One of the 19 presumed hijackers involved in the attacks September 11 had entered the United States on a student visa, and two others were granted student visas after the attacks, which elicited a rebuke from US President George W. Bush last month.

Some educators were cited by the daily as expressing concern that foreign students would be restricted from taking courses in fields such as nuclear technology and biotechnology, though Ridge's spokesman Gordon Johndroe denied that was an option.

Last week, the US Immigration and Naturalization Service announced new restrictions on its student visa program -- which granted an estimated 659,000 in 2001.

Foreign nationals will no longer be allowed to begin a course of study without an approved student visa, and will no longer be allowed to even apply for a student visa while in the United States on a tourist visa -- unless the desire to do so was expressed prior to arriving on US soil.

The number of foreign nationals studying in the United States exceeds two million, the INS has said.

However, the difficulty of keeping the nuclear genie back in the bottle was highlighted when declassified documents from the UK ministry of defence can be consulted by any terrorist for an explaination on how to make an atomic bomb, the Daily Telegraph reported earluer this month in London.

The documents, which came into the public domain over the past five years, give details of the making of Britain's first nuclear bomb, called "Blue Danube", at the end of the 1940s and start of the 1950s, the daily said.

They give a list of the ingredients for such a weapon, including the amount of plutonium and how to spark off a chain reaction.

A former engineer who worked on Britain's military nuclear programme said the instructions could enable a terrorist to construct a rudimentary atomic bomb.

The main difficulty would be to get the plutonium, but several "outlaw" states like Iraq might have some and terror organizations like al-Qaeda have tried to obtain some, the Telegraph said.

"These documents should never have been declassified and since the events of September 11 there is a case for removing them from public access," the engineer, Brian Burnell, was quoted as saying.

Opposition Conservative party defence spokesman Bernard Jenkin immediately called for explanations from the Labour government, calling the documents "a monstrous free gift to terrorists," the Telegraph said.

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Critics Of US Say Nuclear Bunker-Buster Would Not Be Clean Bomb
New York (AFP) April 9, 2002
Critics of US nuclear policy said that bombs designed to destroy targets deep underground would spew enough radioactive fallout to kill tens of thousands at street level.







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