Nuclear Warhead Blueprints On Smugglers' Computers 637
imrehg links to a story at the Guardian which begins "Blueprints for a sophisticated and compact nuclear warhead have been found in the computers of the world's most notorious nuclear-smuggling racket, according to a leading US researcher. The digital designs, found in heavily encrypted computer files in Switzerland, are believed to be in the possession of the US authorities and of the International Atomic Energy Agency, in Vienna, but investigators fear they could have been extensively copied and sold to 'rogue' states via the nuclear black market." Reader this great guy links to the New York Times article on the discovery, and asks "Given that
Khan's revelations were made in early 2004, does that mean it took the IAEA
1-2 years to brute-force the encryption?"
Garage Nukes (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:4, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_Atomic_Demolition_Munition [wikipedia.org] are very much real.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
You can also move it in a diplomatic baggage if you are acting as an official of a 'rogue state'.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
Airports are so leaky it isn't even funny, all the window dressing with 'passenger screening' up front is just to reassure you, it doesn't make you any more safe.
Think about it, multiple millions of tons of stuff moves in / out a major airport every day, there is just simply no way to manually inspect each and every bit. Added to that the fact that usually there is major construction going on because of expansion and remodeling, which causes security measures to be changed all the time.
And 70 Kg in your hand luggage may seem like a lot, but on a baggage trolley it's very little and once you're in the airport you could do a serious amount of damage blowing it to bits right there and then. The combination of suicide attacks coupled with small nukes would be pretty effective.
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Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
1) It's a small airport, people know each other, and it's easier to see something or someone that would be unusual. Had you *not* been with your friend, much trouble would have ensued when you set off that alarm, heading out onto the tarmac.
2) You are in the presence of the operations manager. He's told *someone* who you are, and why you are there. Perhaps that has been checked out, or they were already aware of it. (Your words:"...have only the word of my friend that I have no ill intentions." imply he has told someone who you are...)
3) You didn't see them look up when you went thru the detector, but I'd wager they'd looked already, saw him, and that's why they exhibited no reaction *that you could detect* to an alarm going off.
4) You aren't carrying any baggage or other object which could be used to hide/carry explosives/weapons. You probably aren't going to destroy an entire airliner and/or kill everyone aboard it with your bare hands (after all, they can see that you aren't Chuck Norris or Bruce Schneier
I don't think that this compares to you boarding a flight at a major airport along with several hundred other souls, the same as any anonymous stranger. It does show a lack of probable "proper procedure" and likely lax attitudes at your local airport, but what does (fill in name of terrorist organization here) care about blowing up a little airport? They would get some headlines, but for the effort, a better target would be selected, one which would likely further their objectives.
Also, were I one of their planners, I would leave the 'little' airports alone. That helps ensure an easier-going mindset out 'in the sticks', which could be helpful when moving terror agents around...
The breast milk type stuff is stupid enough on it's own, and largely the "security" measures that are all-too rampant in this country the past few years are for show IMO, but I don't think that this story you relate is highly illustrative of that, necessarily.
Just saying...
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Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Funny)
You can bring as much as you like, as long as it's in the original container.
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Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
Not only that, but it's horrible security to boot. There are plenty of crazy white people to go around, all some terrorist group would have to do would be to recruit some crazy white dudes and they're set, because security doesn't pay any real attention.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:4, Informative)
However, it also is very improbable, because manufacturing such munitions require a lot of high tech R&D.
It is also possible to take down a big city with a slightly larger munition, like this one: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W80 [wikipedia.org]
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:4, Interesting)
1) Actually, I'm Russian.
2) I'm not (very) afraid of mini-nukes falling into terrorist hands. There's a lot of other things to be afraid of.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Informative)
It's a kt.. you can pick up the ingredients to make a 1kt bomb from home depot. You won't need a team of nuclear scientists to do it, either.
If you want to level a city, you need at least 10s of kilotons and you need to detonate it at an altitude of about 2,000ft. And even then, you'd only be punching a hole in Manhattan, you'd need a 100kt bomb to level it.
A guy with a backpack bomb on, would likely only be able to carry about a 0.1kt bomb and detonating it at ground level would cause less damage than the Oklahoma City bombing.. and for that kind of bang there's cheaper ways to spend your bucks.
The whole "OMG Backpack Nuke!" hysteria is just a reflection of how poorly the average person understands anything with the word "nuclear" in it and immediately fears it.
You should know better.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:4, Informative)
It's probably possible to make one that can fit in a small car easily, but not possible to make a suitcase/backpack nuke. And certainly not one the size of a soccer ball. Unless it was a soccer ball made entirely from uranium-235 that just happened to surreptitiously materialize all in the same spot.
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Designing for small size requires the use of Plutonium, as even fully enriched Uranium devices fail to scale to sizes which can be carried by even a pair of human strong, physically fit beings.
239Pu does not occur in nature, and its production even in quantites of a few kilograms requires large industrial scale operations o
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
The reality of nuclear weapons (and biological ones alluded to above) is that while it is technically possible to make one it is exceedingly difficult. And I don't mean 'kids today don't know how to solder' difficult. Entire countries spend hundreds of millions of dollars to fake the possibility that they might have the theoretical capability to build a low yield device, because actually building one would cost hundreds of billions. The idea that a terrorist group could do it on their own is preposterous. Doubly so considering the actual geographic footprint the facilities they'd have to build have.
Of course there is still the possibility that they could steal one from the few places that actually have them. That can't be proven false, or even nearly as hard as building one from scratch, but based on the fact that no one has done it yet it must be pretty damn hard. I was in Afghanistan 3 years ago and most of the roadside bombs were gunpowder and shrapnel. I'm told by people who are there now that this is the case in Iraq as well. A bomb like this is many many levels less sophisticated than even the typical HE bombs the Army uses to clear obstacles in roads and even with their Swiss cheese stockpile guarding you don't see their shit for sale on every street corner.
None of this means nuclear proliferation shouldn't be policed. It does mean that actively fretting over backpack nukes is silly.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:4, Interesting)
A 150kt bomb weights about 130kg - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W80 [wikipedia.org] Are you ready to bet that it can't be scaled down further? And in any case, 130kg is still within range for 'baggage nuke'.
And I'm not afraid of 'anything nuclear'. In fact, I now work at the Chernobyl power plant.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Informative)
That said, there's a lot of things I fear way more than a backpack nuke as modern-city-life-ending threats, such as ebola[1]. Even those "more likely" threats are remote, and the nuke attack is more movie plot than reality. However, it is not correct to say a man-portable nuke is not possible, when they have already existed for some time. Do you also not believe in weaponized smallpox?
[1] Ebola in different forms has been airborne (Virginia outbreak between monkeys) or highly fatal to humans (most other outbreaks). It's only a matter of time before a strain manages both.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Garage Nukes (Score:4, Informative)
I was in Artillery in the Marines and was trained as a Nuke Tech. Our largest yield (circa 80-86, 155mm) was 2kt. It was designed for area denial. Not a lot of damage, but a lot of irradiation. The main reason they don't go higher is because you can't get the round far enough downrange to not get hit yourself with the blast or the radiation. They keep them small so that when you fire that thing 10-15 miles downrange there is little chance of the blast or the fallout/radiation coming back to hit you and your allies.
Yes, that one picture shows a small warhead, with a yield of 72tons and weight of 58kg. Hardly a city destroying capable device. The larger devices capable of destroying a small city were on the order of 4ft+ and 800+ lbs. Even the 2kt one I worked with was too large to realistically be man-portable.
Can you get a nuke into a backpack? Probably, but don't fool yourself that you will be able to destroy any cities with it and it is still going to be extremely heavy. You will be able to do something similar to 9/11 with such a device and cause a lot of terror, which might be the whole point. Of course, a dirty bomb might have the same effect and you need far less tech to actually get it to detonate.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Interesting)
23 Kg small enough for you ? Maybe by 'taking out' you mean to level the whole thing but I think just exploding one of these from the top of a high building would be enough to destroy Manhattan in an economical sense.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Interesting)
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Fundamental problem.. the problem underneath almost every problem is that the world population is already probably double what it should be.
We are pretty much doomed so just enjoy the ride until the end.
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Re:Garage Nukes (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Garage Nukes (Score:4, Insightful)
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Watch Japan. T Minus ~5-10 years and counting. The only way to grow the working population when the birth rate is low and declining, is to extend the useful, healthy, mentally-able life of productive elders. Efforts are underway, so we'll see if technology can overtake the problem.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:4, Informative)
So maybe instead of disease, famine and war we could stabilise world population by actually rising the quality of life of those much less fortunate (e.g. by eliminating famine, diseases and war...). Of course, killing them en masse is also a solution and it is also much more profitable, especially if we can cleverly organise that they kill each other while paying us from both sides for the weaponry to do it efficiently. Alas, since they are usually quite poor, they can't really afford the best stuff, so often they have to (literally) hack throgh each other, but at least we can make shocking documentaries with nice washing powder (guaranteed to make your socks 7.3% more pleasant!) advertisement revenues.
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Golden age... equal people having more kids... equal end of golden age with an even larger die off.
You make this statement quite confidently, but have you any evidence that it is the case? Looking at birth rate statistics, there's a pretty clear negative correlation between quality of life and birth rate in a given country. There would probably be a single generation or so rise in growth rate as birth rates take some time to equalise to the new longer life expectancies and better quality of life, but the world's population running away if quality of life improves globally does not seem like a forgone co
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:4, Funny)
You are obviously too mature, perceptive, and reasonable to be on Slashdot. Please leave immediately, before you ruin the site's reputation.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
Fight for their right to say it?
Or take the UK option, and place the entire population under surveillance.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
You mean, like Christian missionaries did ?
> When they demand that you force your women to cover themselves?
Oh, yeah, just like Christian missionaries did
> there are people who hate you just for who you are
7 years passed since sept 2001 and you still haven't got a clue. They don't hate us for what we are, they hate us for what we've done to them. Read some history books. Read Iran's shah history. Read afghanistan history. Read about the ties between saddam and the CIA. Learn that bin laden was a cia agent. Learn how petroleum empires were built, by whom, and with whose blood.
Those people don't "hate our freedom", that is 100% bullshit. The fucking HATE WHAT WE DID TO THEM. And after 100 thousands of civilian death in Iraq plus new huge american bases over there, THEY WILL HATE US EVEN MORE. With a reason.
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Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
The knowledge on how to build a nuke is by no means much of a secret. Yes, the design for more recent fusion-based and otherwise advanced nuclear weapons is surrounded by a lot of hush-hush but a simple fission-based nuke could probably be designed and built by students from any university engineering department, the theory behind it is available in most libraries, as is the basic design of some of the earlier nuclear weapons.
What is hard to get a hold of is the fissible material needed to manufacture a working bomb.
/Mikael
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, I don't want to sound like a fearmonger but compact isn't much of a problem as long as your definition of compact is "smaller than a freight container". Reliability might be a bit harder for your average garage nuke to have though...
/Mikael
Freight container is exactly right! (Score:5, Insightful)
These containers travel worldwide, are rarely inspected if the paperwork seems to be OK, and they can easily stay in a harbor area of a major city for many months.
The only trigger you need is a cell phone, so you can preplace them wherever you like and blow up any coastal city in the world, whenever you want to.
Stopping this scenario is probably (or should be) the real nightmare for most of the three-letter agencies in the world.
Terje
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Yes, already at that size it would be difficult to protect yourself from, but as I pointed out in my previous post, reliability would also be important and if you're building your nuke in some warehouse in an unstable country chances are you'll a bit of a problem building a nuke that will go off reliably instead of being just a "fizzle" (although that could be pretty bad as well), and if you want a predictable yield then it's definitely something that takes a lot of resources.
/Mikael
Reliability vs yield & efficiency (Score:4, Informative)
The problem is that gun bombs are an obscene waste of an extremely rare material; Little Boy had about five times as much uranium as Fat Man did plutonium (~100 vs ~20Kg) but a significantly inferior yield (~15 vs ~20KT). It's estimated that maybe 1/10 of Little Boy's uranium had fissioned when it disassembled.
* YMMV depending on isotopic impurities, but terrorists aren't going to be the ones refining the metal.
Re:Freight container is exactly right! (Score:4, Informative)
(There's some argument about whether U-235 would have been detected by equipment that missed the U-238).
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With 140 bytes (160 7-bit chars), you can make the detonation key arbitrarily un-guessable.
For extra credit, add a dead-man switch: An encrypted message which must be received every day (hour/week/whatever) to delay detonation.
At this point you really wouldn't want to experience a longterm cell phone outage.
Terje
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Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Informative)
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For example, I could probably build a jet bomber. I know the theory behind jet engines. I know a little about aerodynamics, fabrication, welding, electronics, and the physics of aiming an aerial bomb. Whatever I don't know, I know how to look up. But building it would take a long time, cost a lot of money, involve a lot of trial-and-error, and the end result would be an impractical piece of junk compared to any real military aircraft. Same goes for buildin
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Interesting)
Building nukes, especially advanced ones in quantities over a single test weapon still requires (in addition to the plans) a large and relatively modern industrial base -- for the components, for the various explosives, for the wealth of rare materials necessary etc. etc.
Having such an industry USSR style -- for the purpose of nukes only -- is quite expensive, and out of reach of almost any country. Hence you don't see many succeeding, especially when there is resolute opposition from the superpowers to such efforts.
So, no, the nuclear cat isn't quite out of the bag yet, the weapons are out of reach of mostly every state, and those countries who make them profit very little from having them per se.
And, thankfully, nuke-building capability tom-clancy style is so far quite out of reach of any kind of terrorist group.
International forums and inspections as those that exist under the NPT regime are still the most important, effective and relevant way to keep your "nuclear cat" in the bag.
Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
Funny how India suddenly respected Pakistan when Pakistan demonstrated they could also make nukes.
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Garage nuke ? You probably mean GNUke ! (Score:5, Funny)
GNUke is an sophisticated and compact nuclear warhead - and more. At its core is are two pieces of piece of sub-critical material that can be combined into a supercritical mass for civil and military use alike.
GNUke is a GNU project which is similar to the Little Boy Bomb which was developed at Manhattan Project Laboratories by J. Robert Oppenheimer and colleagues. It can be considered as a different implementation of Litte Boy. There are some important differences, but much destruction wreaked through Little Boy can be achieved unaltered with GNUke.
One of GNUke's strengths is the ease with which well-produced fission-quality material can be included. Great care has been taken over the defaults for the minor design choices in the nuclear fission process, but the user retains full control.
GNUke blueprints are available as Free Documentation under the terms of the Free Software Foundation's GNU Free Documentation License in source code form. It can easily be set up and functions on a wide variety of launch vehicles and similar systems (including B-29 Superfortresses and ICBMs).
Re:Garage nuke ? You probably mean GNUke ! (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Garage Nukes (Score:5, Insightful)
Imagine cleaning up after a nuclear cat...oy...
Seriously, it will happen, and sooner than we think. Either a state-sponsored or aided group stealing a nuke or paying off enough disgruntled Russian scientists and engineers to make a decent one, or some independent cell with a sufficient amount of knowhow and enough reasonably enriched uranium to create a big honkin', crude and ugly, but deadly Hiroshima-style boomer. I'm not as worried about the physical effects -- such a device would, indeed, kill thousands and devastate part of whatever city it's set off in, but is likely for financial and physical reasons to be a one-off event. What scares me is this: if you thought our freedoms have already been eroded, compromised, or plain out negated to an uncomfortable degree after 9/11, just wait until some group sets off a nuke somewhere on U.S. soil. When that happens, prepare to live under the Fourth Reich. Even a so-called "dirty bomb" that would merely spread some radiation around will be sufficiently alarming (the very word "radiation" scares the hell out of the masses) will mean more draconian laws, more intrusive surveillance, and more suspensions of Constitutional rights. But that is the victory terrorists hope for -- it's not so much the actual carnage that they seek, but the subsequent panic and overreaction of the populace and their government. "Terror" consists of far more than a body count.
Well, (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, come on, this is secret? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh, come on, this is secret? (Score:5, Funny)
Oh great. It's one thing for terrorists to have nukes, but even scarier for rabid web trolls to own nukes. Emacs vs. vi may be about to ramp it up...
Let me be the first to say: (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Let me be the first to say: (Score:5, Funny)
Why is it (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Why is it (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why is it (Score:4, Interesting)
Investigators said the evidence that the Khan network was trafficking in a tested, compact and efficient bomb design was particularly alarming, because if a country or group obtained the bomb design, the technological information would significantly shorten the time needed to build a weapon. Among the missiles that could carry the smaller weapon, according to some weapons experts, is the Iranian Shahab III, which is based on a North Korean design.
I disagree with your first sentence. The article[the NY Times article excerpted above], according to my reading comprehension, does not clearly state that the design "belongs to Pakistan" in the sense that the design is of Pakistani origin. The Khan network was trafficking bomb designs. It specifically mentions the other design of being Chinese in origin.
I would guess that a compact design would have to be tested in order for it to be trusted.
My guess is that US and Soviet designs are on the black market. Once there, they found themselves on the Khan network. How many persons have this knowledge, or have access to this information? Extrapolate from there.
1: US -> Soviet
2: Soviet -> ???
3: ??? -> Khan network
Or:
1: US -> Israel
2: Israel -> ???
3: ??? -> Khan network
Wait, I left out Profit!
Re:Why is it (Score:5, Insightful)
A strawman.
I know it's comforting to read the news and be able to believe what they say
There is always a fine line between questioning news and the denial. In this particular instance you are claiming that "David Albright, a physicist, former UN weapons inspector and authority on the nuclear smuggling ring" is lying to the whole world, though other IAEA scientists saw the materials and could expose him. I'd listen to David, though, he just might know about the subject a little more than an average slashdotter. If you insist on using fuzzy logic, fine - David's statement has weight of 0.9999 and your opinion has weight of 0.0001.
We can find plans of nuclear weapons, but we can't find Osama?
Yes, and I am not surprised. Khan's network was captured intact - did you read how much data they got? More than a terabyte of documents. Even if none of that is encrypted it takes an army of specialists and linguists to go through them, which is probably what happened. On the other hand, Osama was never captured. I'd be amazed if, for example, the US Army captures a large building and Osama keeps running and hiding *inside* of that building. But Osama - if he is still alive, of course - hides somewhere on Earth, and even if he is merely in Pakistan it's plain impossible to find him, considering that a good deal of Pakistani land is not under control of the central government.
May I be the first to say.. (Score:4, Interesting)
I have no solution, but to think that this is a major issue is not to understand politics.
Re:MAD is Dead (Score:5, Insightful)
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And even leaders may be mad. Hitler, for example, played for all-or-nothing (ending up with nothing, luckily).
Hitler stood a chance, more than a chance. The Axis damn near conquered all of Europe, and if he'd either finished the battle for Britain or not gone after Russia he would probably have won. The German war machine was completely unsurpassed and it was only a massive alliance that overpowered them. Sure he was mad with power, but not the level of "let's try to nuke the US from a banana republic" kind of mad.
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Oh Crap! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh Crap! (Score:4, Insightful)
But it's worth looking at another way of describing our wonderful nation which is, of course, completely "right" because it's "us" not some other "bad guys":
Do we really want a country that's... invaded two other nations in the last decade (at times against the UN's will); set off civil wars in other nations; ignores the Geneva Convention when it doesn't suit it; has a long history of providing arms to nations/factions it later fights (Vietnamese during WWII, Taleban against the Russians, F-14s and nuclear plants to pre-revolutionary Iran, "We know they have WMDs, we still have the receipts" for Iraq); best of all, was one half of the nuclear arms race that was the greatest threat to all life on our planet for the last sixty years; and finally a nation that's stated its intent to ignore weapons treaties and start testing a new breed of tactical nukes... to have more nuclear plans?
Why (Score:5, Insightful)
Why am I not surprised? (Score:4, Insightful)
Laptop searches at the border: good
reason: TERRERISTS!!!
WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION!!!
THE AXIS OF EVIL!!!
let me guess once, what laws will soon be proposed (which will by the way legalize some more of the unconstitutional actions of the bush-regime...)
Encryption key (Score:3, Funny)
Given that Khan's revelations were made in early 2004, does that mean it took the IAEA 1-2 years to brute-force the encryption?
The IAEA were pretty pissed when they found out that the key was 0xDEADBEEF
brute-force the encryption? (Score:4, Funny)
fearmongering (Score:3, Insightful)
See, nukes aren't that complicated. Most of us learn the basics at school. Assuming the blueprint is genuine, and of a tested design, that's a piece of valuable work, but not groundbreaking. There is no threat of any living-in-caves terrorists coming up with a nuke due to some blueprints. Funny how all this fearmongering always forgets the amount and quality of equipment you need to actually turn a blueprint into a working bomb.
It's roughly comparable to having a blueprint of a machine gun (available in most libraries, and Google will probably give you a hundred of them at least), and an actual working machine gun. You just can't build one in your garage, there's a little bit more specialised precision equipment required. And then you'd still need the ammo.
So who is trying to get a bigger budget for what? That's the question we should be asking.
Re:fearmongering (Score:5, Informative)
Nuclear weapons are a completely different matter the theory is (relatively) simple, but the practice is complicated, lengthy and requires a lot of technical expertise
Brute force and brute force (Score:3, Insightful)
However, bruteforcing a passphrase usually takes considerably less time.
Bruteforcing an interrogation subject can be very quick indeed.
Hollywood Encryption? (Score:3, Insightful)
"Heavily encrypted?" What does that mean? Couldn't be all that heavy if the encryption was broken, right?
Oh, perhaps they mean Hollywood-style encryption! In nearly every Hollywood movie you ever see that contains anything about encryption, the encryption is always "heavy" and yet broken long before the movie ends. Since this is probably the only exposure to "encryption" most of the public sees, the public must have a very warped idea of what encryption is all about!
It always amazes me that encryption that should take longer than the Age of the Universe to break is "broken" in just a few minutes by some "super" kid that can barely even spell the word!
Maybe I should do a website on "Hollywood Mathematics" along with the one I want to do on "Hollywood Physics"...
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And of course being able to blow up a 240x320 jpeg image of a football stadium to be able to read not only the license plate number but also the serial number of the annual registration tag of the cool red Porsche that just happens to have the rear end pointed toward the camera. Now tha
Blueprints are easy to get (Score:3, Interesting)
Nothing new here... move along... (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.amazon.com/Mushroom-True-Story-Bomb-Kid/dp/0671827316/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1213618717&sr=1-2 [amazon.com]
I think I have seen these blueprints before (Score:3, Funny)
Pakistani.Nuke.Blueprints.2004.REPACK.READNFO.KHaNDOX.torrent
Re:Sheesh (Score:4, Interesting)
I am not an engineer, but as I understand it one of the more difficult engineering challenges of designing an implosion type device is getting the arrangement of the explosive lenses just right to compress the plutonium pit into a critical mass symmetrically. Just wrapping the pit in a plain sphere of explosives won't do the job - there will be parts of the explosive that will fire later than others and the compression will be non-symmetric. If the implosion is non-symmetric, the fission primary will fling itself apart before substantial energy from the chain reaction can be generated.
Another design challenge is the electronics needed to fire all the explosive lenses with timing tolerances of less than a few millionths of a second, and switching devices that can switch hundreds of amps of current at those speeds. Needless to say, manufacturers do their best to control who gets their hands on them, though they are "dual use" and probably could be sourced indirectly.
Of course a gun type weapon would be substantially easier to get to work with wider tolerances than an implosion type, but they are so inefficient that they require a relatively huge amount of fissile material to make; perhaps an impractically large amount for a terrorist group to get their hands on without being easily noticed.
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Designing the bomb is easy (Score:5, Interesting)
Forty years ago a couple of physics students designed a working A bomb.
Re:NSA, anyone (Score:5, Interesting)
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You Been Played by The CIA (Score:4, Interesting)
The task of this piece [washingtonpost.com] on the front page of today's Washington Post is to establish the believe that Iran has a nuclear weapon design.
The Swiss 'businessmen', Friedrich Tinner and his two sons, are alleged to have sold several nuke related stuff to Lybia and other countries.
There is more to the Tinner story, but for now let me concentrate on the date. The WaPo says the laptop has been discovered in 2006. But Tinner was under CIA control [armscontrolwonk.com] at least since the 2003 bust of nuclear related stuff on board of the 'BBC China'.
The German magazine Der Spiegel had a big story [spiegel.de] about this in March 2006:
Tinner was flipped [armscontrolwonk.com] by the CIA at least since the 'BBC China' event but likely even earlier. Another man taking part in the alleged smuggling was also [armscontrolwonk.com] turned by the CIA or has worked for the CIA all along.
Indeed it somehow seems like everybody involved in the issue was somehow related to the CIA.
The usual story is that the Pakistani scientist A.Q. Kahn was the one who ran a smuggling network. That may not be true at all. Khan denies [blogspot.com] having been involved in such. A new book asserts [washingtonpost.com] that it was then Prime Minister of Pakistan Bhutto who personally gave Pakistani nuclear secrets to North Korea in exchange for North Korean No Dong missiles for the Pakistani army.
A Dutch court somehow 'lost' [sify.com] legal files about the Khan case and the CIA likely had a hand in this too. The CIA also successfully pressed [tagesspiegel.de] (link in German) the Swiss government to destroy information it had about the Tinner case. Tinner will thereby never be convicted.
Now please explain to me how people arrested in 2003 and flipped by the CIA at least since then managed to keep nuclear plans on a laptop that were somehow found only in 2006?
This whole story stinks from A to Z
Re: (Score:3, Funny)