July 10, 2014
(CNN) – Militants in Iraq have taken hold of nuclear materials at university science facilities near the northern city of Mosul, the Iraqi government has said in a letter to the United Nations.
But two U.S. officials told CNN on Wednesday that the small amounts of uranium aren’t enriched or weapons-grade, prompting only minimal concern.
The letter from Iraq’s U.N. ambassador about the uranium compounds asks for help “to stave off the threat of their use by terrorists in Iraq or abroad” as the country struggles with a deadly insurgency.
In the letter, obtained Wednesday by CNN, Iraqi Ambassador Mohamed Ali Alhakim said that “terrorist groups have seized control” of nearly 40 kilograms (90 pounds) of uranium compounds at science departments at the University of Mosul after the sites “came out of control of the state.”
Earlier June, ISIS claimed they have nuclear weapons already and will soon wipe-out Israel
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Comments
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While talking about Pakistan i just say that Pakistan’s command over its nuclear weapons is compartmentalized and includes strict operational security. But one can figure out India as in India nuclear security is the worst one.




Dikchini