By Kelly Hearn
March 19, 2008
Scientists studying a purported proposal by Colombian rebels to sell uranium for about $1 million a pound say the plan sounds like a scam.
The reason: Ordinary uranium can't be used in a nuclear weapon; it is a poor choice for a terrorist "dirty bomb"; and it is worth only about $100 a pound.
Colombian forces earlier this month seized a computer during a raid in Ecuador, in which an e-mail from a midlevel leader in the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) claimed to have access to "50 kilos of uranium," — about 110 pounds — from an arms supplier, and proposed to sell it at the exorbitant price.
Matthew Bunn, a nuclear specialist at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, and other scientists expressed skepticism about the proposal.
Mr. Bunn said the e-mail contains "considerable indications that a scam of some kind was involved, since the quoted price of $2.5 million per kilogram is roughly 10,000 times more than natural uranium is worth."
"To me, this suggests the FARC people dealing with the issue knew little about the subject," he said.
Mr. Bunn said the uranium likely available in Colombia or Ecuador is worth about $100 a pound.
The e-mail, dated Feb. 16, 2008, and translated by The Washington Times, is reportedly written by Edgar Tovar, a regional FARC commander, to Raul Reyes, a FARC leader who was killed in the March 1 raid.
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