I like to point people to the DHS on dirty bombs, because you know the DHS is not in the business of downplaying national security risks.
It is very difficult to design an RDD that would deliver radiation doses high enough to cause immediate health effects or fatalities in a large number of people. Therefore, experts generally agree that an RDD would most likely be used to:
Contaminate facilities or places where people live and work, disrupting lives and livelihoods.
Cause anxiety in those who think they are being, or have been, exposed
That last point is obviously correct: people still act terrified of radiation and “exposure”. This year I got a solid dose of ~20 mSv for a single medical test. The way a lot of people talk about radiation, that’s a huge exposure. But if it’s administered by a doctor instead of a hypothetical dirty bomb, I expect people don’t worry too much about it.
But let’s look at the terrorists we know about. How many terrorist groups do you know of that are less interested in killing people and more interested in causing anxiety and inconvenience?
I mean, I guess if someone disrupts the power grid by blowing up some transformers, or puts a carcinogenic substance in our drinking water (hot dogs? kidding), we might call them terrorists, but that’s not a normal terrorist M.O., right?
But also, if the “terrorist”’s goal is to just disrupt and not kill, there must be easier ways to do that than to steal used nuclear fuel. Used fuel is protected by security guards, containment buildings and containment casks, right? I’m not an expert on this, but couldn’t somebody just buy various carcinogens from a Home Depot and spray them into a reservoir?
I like to point people to the DHS on dirty bombs, because you know the DHS is not in the business of downplaying national security risks.
That last point is obviously correct: people still act terrified of radiation and “exposure”. This year I got a solid dose of ~20 mSv for a single medical test. The way a lot of people talk about radiation, that’s a huge exposure. But if it’s administered by a doctor instead of a hypothetical dirty bomb, I expect people don’t worry too much about it.
But let’s look at the terrorists we know about. How many terrorist groups do you know of that are less interested in killing people and more interested in causing anxiety and inconvenience?
I mean, I guess if someone disrupts the power grid by blowing up some transformers, or puts a carcinogenic substance in our drinking water (hot dogs? kidding), we might call them terrorists, but that’s not a normal terrorist M.O., right?
But also, if the “terrorist”’s goal is to just disrupt and not kill, there must be easier ways to do that than to steal used nuclear fuel. Used fuel is protected by security guards, containment buildings and containment casks, right? I’m not an expert on this, but couldn’t somebody just buy various carcinogens from a Home Depot and spray them into a reservoir?