Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Leaders warn of harrowing risk of nuclear-armed terrorists

- By Josh Lederman and Darlene Superville Associated Press writers Bradley Klapper, Matthew Lee and Matthew Pennington contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON >> World leaders declared progress Friday in securing nuclear materials worldwide but warned of a persistent and harrowing threat: terrorists getting their hands on a nuclear bomb. “It would change our world,” President Barack Obama said.

Obama, addressing a nuclear security summit, said there was no doubt that if “madmen” in the Islamic State group obtained nuclear material, they would use it to kill as many people as possible. He urged fellow leaders not to be complacent about the risk of catastroph­e and called IS the most active extremist group currently menacing the planet.

So far, no terrorists have gotten a nuclear weapon or a dirty bomb, Obama said, crediting global efforts to secure nuclear material. But he said it wasn’t for lack of trying: Al-Qaida has sought nuclear materials, IS has deployed chemical weapons and extremists linked to the Brussels and Paris attacks were found to have spied on a top Belgian nuclear official.

“I’m the first to acknowledg­e the great deal of work that remains,” Obama told a news conference at the summit’s close, adding that the vision of disarmamen­t he laid out at the start of his presidency may not be realized during his lifetime. “But we’ve begun.”

At this year’s summit — Obama’s last major push on denucleari­zation — deep concerns about nuclear terrorism have tempered other, more positive signs of the world coming together to confront the broader nuclear threat.

The U.N. Security Council members who brokered a sweeping nuclear deal with Iran held up that agreement as a model for preventing nuclear proliferat­ion, as they gathered on the summit’s sidelines to review implementa­tion of the deal.

Obama also spent part of the summit huddling with the leaders of South Korea and Japan about deterring nuclear-tinged provocatio­ns from North Korea, in a powerful show of diplomatic unity with two U.S. treaty allies. Similarly, Obama’s sitdown with Chinese President Xi Jinping offered the two strategic rivals a chance to illustrate their mutual concern about the North, a traditiona­l Chinese ally.

Undeterred, North Korea only hours later fired a short-range missile into the sea and tried to jam GPS navigation signals in South Korea — precisely the kind of act that South Korean President Park Geun-hye had warned would trigger even tougher sanctions and more isolation.

Aiming to show concrete action to strengthen nuclear security, leaders came to the nuclear summit with commitment­s in hand, known in diplomatic-speak as “gift baskets.” The White House spelled them out in a flurry of fact sheets.

Latin America and the Caribbean are now free of highly enriched uranium, the White House said, praising Argentina by name for converting its remaining stockpile into a less dangerous form. Fissile materials like highly enriched uranium and separated plutonium are necessary ingredient­s to make nuclear bombs.

The United States, in newly declassifi­ed statistics, said its own national inventory of highly enriched uranium has dropped from 741 metric tons two decades ago to 586 metric tons as of 2013. And the U.S. and Japan announced they’d finished removing hundreds of kilograms of weaponsgra­de material from a Japanese research reactor, and pledged to do the same at another.

On the global front, a strengthen­ed nuclear security agreement was finally poised to take force, extending protection­s for nuclear materials being used, stored and transporte­d while enacting new criminal penalties for nuclear smuggling. Those tweaks were approved in 2005, but have sat dormant awaiting ratificati­on from a critical mass of nations, reached only in the past few days.

Still, frustratio­n over the slow pace of reducing nuclear stockpiles shadowed the summit. The absence of key players — especially Russia — further underscore­d the lack of unanimity confrontin­g global efforts to deter nuclear attacks.

After six years of prodding by Obama and others before him, the global stockpile of fissile material remains in the thousands of metric tons. What’s more, security officials warn that the ingredient­s for a “dirty bomb,” such as cesium and cobalt, are alarmingly insecure in many parts of the globe.

Ahead of the summit, fewer than half of the countries participat­ing had agreed to secure their sources of radioactiv­e substances, which are widely present in hospital, industrial and academic settings. Obama said as the Islamic State is squeezed in Syria and Iraq, the world must anticipate it will lash out elsewhere, citing recent attacks in Belgium and Turkey as examples.

Obama has held four such summits in hopes of advancing the disarmamen­t goals he set at the start of his presidency, when he declared in Prague that nuclear weapons were “the most dangerous legacy of the Cold War.” Yet in a joint communique, the leaders announced that this year’s summit will be the last.

“This summit is not the end of our quest to make the world safe from nuclear terrorism,” Prime Minister Mark Rutte of the Netherland­s said. He said the assembled leaders were passing the baton to internatio­nal organizati­ons. “Should the need arise, I know that everybody here will be ready to return.”

President Vladimir Putin of Russia, whose nuclear weapons stockpile is rivaled only by the stockpile in the U.S., declined to attend this year’s summit. Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif of Pakistan, another nucleararm­ed country, canceled his trip following an Easter bombing that killed 72 people.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Barack Obama speaks during a news conference at the conclusion of the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, Friday.
JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Barack Obama speaks during a news conference at the conclusion of the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, Friday.

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