WoT UK: Deadly shipment of uranium seized at Heathrow Airport Dec 29, 2022

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)


NUKE PLOT Counter-terror cops and security services investigating after deadly shipment of uranium seized at Heathrow
Stephen Moyes, Mike Sullivan, Jerome Starkey
Published: 22:00, 10 Jan 2023 | Updated: 22:36, 10 Jan 2023

COUNTER-terror cops and security services are investigating after a deadly shipment of uranium was seized at Heathrow.

The undeclared nuclear material can be used in a dirty bomb.

It was destined for Iranian nationals in the UK, originated from Pakistan and arrived on a flight from Oman.

A source said: “The race is on to trace everyone involved.”

The package suspected of being smuggled to UK-based Iranians arrived in the hold of a passenger jet.

Specialist scanners detected the potentially-lethal uranium as it was ferried to a freight shed, triggering alarms.

Border Force agents swooped and isolated the unregistered shipment in a dedicated radioactive room.

Counter-terror police were alerted and a security probe launched into who sent the cargo.

It originated from Pakistan and arrived at Terminal 4 on an Oman Air jet from Muscat.

Cops were understood to be targeting an Iran-based firm with UK premises where the material was due to go to mystery recipients. No arrests have been made.


The package was destined for Iranian nationals in the UK, originated from Pakistan and arrived on a flight from Oman
The package was destined for Iranian nationals in the UK, originated from Pakistan and arrived on a flight from Oman

Officials will want to rule out any fears that a dirty bomb — a mixture of explosives with radioactive power — was being built here.

The suspected plot was smashed on December 29 and a Heathrow source told The Sun: “The race is on to trace everyone involved with this rogue non-manifested package.

“Security bosses are treating this with the seriousness it deserves. Protocol was not followed and this is now an anti-terror operation.

'Very suspect'

“There are real concerns over what the Iranians living here wanted with non-disclosed nuclear material.”

Former commander of the UK’s nuclear defence regiment Hamish De Bretton-Gordon said: “For uranium to turn up on a commercial airliner from Pakistan to an Iranian address in the UK is very suspect.”

Officials believe they have prevented any immediate threat to the public. They are being assisted by security services as they investigate the suspected plot.

Forensics teams have spent days poring over the shipment which was spotted as it was moved to a freight shed owned by handling firm Swissport.

Strict protocols must be followed to fly dangerous cargo, particularly on passenger flights.

Rules include uranium being loaded on to the base of units in the cargo hold — ensuring a minimum distance is kept between the nuclear material and cabin above.

Expert Mr De Bretton-Gordon added: “The nuclear threat has never been higher. Higher than it has ever been in the Cold War.

“The good news is the system worked and it has been interdicted. Uranium can give off very high levels of poisonous radiation. It could be used in a dirty bomb.”

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has said Iran possesses more than 60kg of uranium enriched to 60 per cent, which puts it within reach of one atomic bomb.

Significant technical hurdles would then have to be overcome to construct a bomb small enough to fit on a missile. But the UK said that Iran was moving quickly on a potential weapon.

In 2015 Iran and six countries including the UK reached a deal to restrict Iran’s ability to develop nuclear weapons in exchange for lifting economic sanctions.

A year later when the IAEA declared Iran was living up to its end of the bargain, all nuclear-related inter-national sanctions were lifted.

But ex-US President Donald Trump withdrew from the deal in 2018.

US allies, including the UK, have since been scrambling for a diplomatic solution.

Last night the Met Police said: “We can confirm officers from the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command were contacted by Border Force colleagues at Heathrow after a very small amount of contaminated material was identified after routine screening within a package incoming to the UK on December 29.

"The material has been identified as being contaminated with uranium."

Commander Richard Smith, head of the Met’s SO15 counter-terror branch, said: “I want to reassure the public that the amount of contaminated material was extremely small and has been assessed by experts as posing no threat to the public.

‘’Although our investigation remains ongoing, from our inquiries so far, it does not appear to be linked to any direct threat. As the public would expect, however, we will continue to follow up on all available lines of enquiry to ensure this is definitely the case.

“However, it does highlight the excellent capability we and our partners have in place to monitor our ports and borders in order to keep the public safe from any potential threats to their safety and security that might be coming into the UK.”

The Home Office said: “We do not comment on live investigations.”

Oman Air were contacted for comment. There is no indication the airline or Swissport is responsible for any wrongdoing.

.

 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)


Dirty bomb fears as 'several kilos of URANIUM' is found in cargo at Heathrow: Package 'shipped from Pakistan to UK-based Iranians' is at centre of Met Police anti-terror probe after being discovered when it triggered airport alarms
By David Barrett Home Affairs Editor For The Daily Mail and Brittany Chain For Mailonline
Published: 17:34 EST, 10 January 2023 | Updated: 19:04 EST, 10 January 2023
  • Shipment of uranium has been seized at Heathrow airport, sparking terror fears
  • The undeclared material was discovered on December 29 on a passenger flight
  • It was destined for an Iranian business with a premises in the UK, sources say
  • The package originated from Pakistan and arrived on a flight via Oman

A major counter-terrorism investigation has been launched after several kilograms of uranium was seized at Heathrow airport.

The deadly nuclear material - which could potentially be used in a ‘dirty bomb’ - arrived on a flight from Oman, in the Middle East, on December 29.

The shipment was addressed to an Iranian-linked firm in the UK, it is understood.

Sources said the uranium was ‘not weapons-grade’ - and so could not be used to manufacture a thermo-nuclear weapon.

But the security services are understood to be investigating whether the undeclared package could have been destined for an improvised nuclear device, known as a ‘dirty bomb’.

Such a device - which has long been a nightmare scenario for counter-terror experts - combines conventional explosives with nuclear material to disperse a lethal radioactive plume.

The package originated in Pakistan before arriving at Heathrow’s Terminal Four aboard an Oman Air passenger jet from Muscat, sources told The Sun.

Police have not made any arrests.

A source told the Mail: ‘The package contained kilos of uranium - but it was not weapons-grade.'

Separately, a source told The Sun there is an overwhelming 'concern over what the Iranians living here wanted with non-disclosed nuclear material'.

An unnamed source told the publication: 'The race is on to trace everyone involved with this rogue non-manifested package.

'Security bosses are treating this with the seriousness it deserves. Protocol was not followed and this is now an anti-terror operation.'

Specialist scanners picked up on the undeclared parcel as it was transported to a freight shed.


Border Force agents isolated the shipment in a radioactive room and, upon determining it was uranium, called in counter-terror police.

Met Police told MailOnline: 'We can confirm officers from the Met's Counter Terrorism Command were contacted by Border Force colleagues at Heathrow after a very small amount of contaminated material was identified after routine screening within a package incoming to the UK on 29 December 2022.'

Commander Richard Smith said: 'I want to reassure the public that the amount of contaminated material was extremely small and has been assessed by experts as posing no threat to the public.

'Although our investigation remains ongoing, from our inquiries so far, it does not appear to be linked to any direct threat.

'As the public would expect, however, we will continue to follow up on all available lines of enquiry to ensure this is definitely the case.

'However, it does highlight the excellent capability we and our partners have in place to monitor our ports and borders in order to keep the public safe from any potential threats to their safety and security that might be coming into the UK.'

'No arrests have been made at this time and officers continue to work with partner agencies to fully investigate this matter and ensure there is no risk to the public.

'The material has been identified as being contaminated with uranium.'

A Home Office spokesman said: ‘We do not comment on live investigations.’

Hamish De Bretton-Gordon, former commander of the UK’s nuclear defence regiment, said: ‘Uranium can give off very high levels of poisonous radiation. It could be used in a dirty bomb.

‘The good news is the system worked and it has been interdicted.’

Forensic teams are understood to still be examining the nuclear material.

As long ago as 2003 the then head of MI5 warned that it was ‘only a matter of time’ before a dirty bomb or chemical weapons attack was launched on a major Western city.

Eliza Manningham-Buller said intelligence reports suggested ‘renegade scientists’ had given terrorist groups the information they needed to create such weapons.

‘My conclusion, based on the intelligence we have received, is that we are faced with a realistic possibility of some form of unconventional attack that could include chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear attack,’ she said.

‘Sadly, given the widespread proliferation of the technical knowledge to construct these weapons, it will be only a matter of time before a crude version of a CBRN is launched on a major western city.’

In 2004 British security services arrested Dhiren Barot, a Muslim convert who planned to assemble and use dirty bombs in the UK and the US to kill members of the public.

He was jailed for 30 years.

The Home Office-backed ‘ProtectUK’ website, which offers advice on terror threats, currently says: ‘A UK attack plot using a radiological weapon is highly unlikely because there are significant challenges in acquiring suitable radioactive sources, which are subject to controls.’

Last year, Former Washington official Robert Joseph told MailOnline Iran is a nuclear weapons state with enough uranium to build 'one, if not two' bombs.

He said: 'The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has documented that Iran has 60% of enriched uranium, enough for at least one if not two bombs.

'We have been saying for years 'they're approaching this breakout point and we've really got to negotiate with them.' They're there.'

Joseph was the chief negotiator to Libya in 2003 and is credited with convincing Colonel Muammar Gaddafi to give up his nuclear weapons programme.

MP Matthew Offord said at the time Iran were 'regularly testing ballistic missiles, and they are seeking to get enough uranium that they are able to produce a weapon'.
 

Redleg

Veteran Member
Could be a test to see how they handle this problem. They could be watching how it is investigated to
find a way around.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Last week the Germans caught some Jihadis about to try and poison a city water supply, I am not sure where they were from things could be heating up a bit on the Jihadi and/or Iran front.
 

ChicagoMan74

ULTRA MAGA
Great...just friggin great.

And specifics on whether it was U-234 or U-235? Or any other U isotope? Not all uranium is equal.
 
Last edited:

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB

British police arrest man on terrorism charges after uranium is found in package at London airport
Paul Best
2 - 3 minutes

Police in the United Kingdom arrested a man on terrorism charges Saturday after trace amounts of uranium were discovered in a cargo package at Heathrow Airport in London two weeks ago.

The suspect, a man in his 60s whose identity has not been released, was arrested at a home in northwestern England. He was booked at a police station and released on bail today.
Trace amounts of uranium were found in a package at Heathrow Airport in London on Dec. 29, 2022.

Trace amounts of uranium were found in a package at Heathrow Airport in London on Dec. 29, 2022. (iStock)

"The discovery of what was a very small amount of uranium within a package at Heathrow Airport is clearly of concern, but it shows the effectiveness of the procedures and checks in place with our partners to detect this type of material," Richard Smith, the head of the Metropolitan Police Service's Counter-Terrorism Command, said in a statement on Sunday.

"I want to be clear that despite making this arrest, and based on what we currently know, this incident still does not appear to be linked to any direct threat to the public."


The UK's Border Force originally detected a "very small amount of uranium" in a cargo package containing scrap metal during a routine screening at Heathrow Airport on Dec. 29.
British police emphasized that there is no ‘direct threat to the public.’

British police emphasized that there is no ‘direct threat to the public.’ (AP Photo/Max Duncan)

A search of the suspect's home address did not turn up any material that could be a threat to the public, according to police.

The package arrived at Heathrow Airport on a passenger flight from Oman, The Guardian reports. It was bound for an "Iranian business with premises in the UK," according to the British newspaper.
 

Doc1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
From the OP: “The good news is the system worked and it has been interdicted. Uranium can give off very high levels of poisonous radiation. It could be used in a dirty bomb.”

Pure, unadulterated bullshit and another obvious attempt by the security state to turn a mole hill into a mountain. As Marsofold said in post #10, "Uranium that has not been inside a reactor is not radioactive enough to be dangerous."

Marsofold is correct. You can safely hold Uranium in your hand. It is only slightly radioactive. The two most common isotopes are U-238 and U-235. U-235 - which is used in some nuclear weapons - is less than one percent of natural Uranium. Extracting and collecting that tiny amount requires massive industrial plant. It's not the sort of thing terrorists can do on a kitchen table. The purified U-235 product is known as enriched Uranium. It may be of low enrichment, which is used in commercial nuclear reactors or it may be of high, weapons grade material, which is referred to as HEU (Highly Enriched Uranium).

Guess what. If you could find a small chunk of highly purified HEU - which you can't because it's a highly controlled material - you could also safely hold that in your hand. U-235 is four times as radioactive as U-238, but that is only four times a very low level, leaving you with what is still only weakly radioactive!

Note that in large amounts, U-235 is very dangerous because it could be used to build a nuclear weapon. All Uranium-based weapons, in one way or another, rely on explosives to either force two chunks of U-235 into a super critical mass, or use explosives to crush a sphere of U-235, also creating a super critical mass. Also, if there were bars or chunks of U-235 in a lab setting, someone could accidentally push some of them together to create a critical mass. This wouldn't cause an explosion,but would immediately release tremendous amounts of gamma radiation, a possible blue light and a wave of heat, injuring or killing anyone in the immediate vicinity.

Accidentally produced critical mass episodes are known as criticality accidents. There have been many of these, involving both U-235 and Plutonium 239. Wikipedia has an accurate and fairly short entry on criticality accidents:


After U-235 is removed from natural Uranium, what is left - the U-238 - is known as depleted Uranium. This is used in some kinetic weapons and is also used as weights installed in some aircraft. While it is a heavy metal poison that you wouldn't want to eat, the same can be said of a lead bar or fishing weight you might hold in your hand.

The bottom line is that if the security people had found U-235 they would be screaming it from the rooftops. You can be sure that all they found was some U-238 depleted Uranium. That, and even U-235, would be virtually useless in a dirty bomb because they are too weakly radioactive.

That doesn't stop TPTB from tooting their own horn and getting the public terrified over something which is essentially a nothing burger.

Best
Doc
 

WildDaisy

God has a plan, Trust it!
They also need to track down all the people who were on that flight for they have been exposed for 20+ hours to the radiation if it wasn't protected (which it obviously wasnt since it triggered alarms)

And hopefully they already have the perps, because if they didnt, they are in the wind now.
 
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