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UK aims to halt trafficking of nuclear material

U.S. President Barack Obama, centre, talks with British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, before the leaders' dinner at the Nuclear Security Summit at the Coex Center, in Seoul, South Korea.

LONDON (AP) — Britain plans to share previously secret expertise on detecting the illegal trafficking of radiological material and halting potential nuclear terrorism, the country’s deputy prime minister told a security summit Tuesday.

Speaking at an international nuclear security conference in Seoul, South Korea, Nick Clegg said Britain would work with law enforcement agencies from across the world to offer help on limiting the spread of illicit nuclear material.

Disclosing previously classified details of Britain’s work against nuclear terrorism, he said that since 2001 the country had used high-tech equipment to detect radiological and nuclear material being moved into the U.K. — though he did not offer specifics on the type of technology used.

Clegg also told delegates that Britain’s military maintains emergency teams ready to respond to dirty bombs — crude weapons intended to create a radioactive cloud in an urban setting — or other improvised nuclear devices which could potentially be used by terrorists.

“We have for some time had specialist teams ready to deploy, detect and … defuse a terrorist nuclear device,” Clegg said.

Clegg told the summit that he was publicising the previously secret work because Britain planned to open a new nuclear forensics laboratory aimed at sharing techniques with allies.

Britain had “been using cutting edge technology for over a decade to guard our borders against a nuclear terrorist threat. It is time to share that information so we can all raise our game,” he said.

Although he did not offer specifics on the type of technologies involved, Clegg said Britain would open the laboratory at the U.K.’s main atomic weapons research center in Aldermaston, southern England.

Britain is regarded as a world leader in work to trace the source of nuclear or radiological material from so-called fingerprints gleaned from specific chemical or physical characteristics.

British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg dressed in a taekwondo uniform poses during his visit to Kukkiwon, the Seoul-based headquarters and academy of world taekwondo martial art, in Seoul, South Korea.

The new centre will advise other countries on the techniques, and on how to recover conventional forensic evidence — such as fingerprints or DNA — from radiologically contaminated items.

“Nuclear terrorism is a very real and global threat. Dangerous material must never be allowed to fall into the hands of terrorists — a successful attack would have catastrophic human and environmental consequences,” Clegg told the summit.

Defense officials said Britain has had a capability to detect radiological and nuclear material arriving into the U.K. since 2001, and had last year installed additional detection measures at ports of entry into the U.K.

Britain’s government said it could not immediately confirm whether the U.K. has ever successfully foiled an attempt to smuggle nuclear or radiological material into the country.

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