Ping
LMFAO ... free speach in america brought to you by china view and SittinYonder.
My favourite detail is that the UN did only recieve censored material from the same sources that where now spread over the planet.
Don't try and look in the caches of google or anywhere else - somebody really good in erasing data has taken care of this issue.
MSNBC.com now also reporting this.
http://famulus.msnbc.com/famulusgen/ap11-02-221139.asp?t=apnew&vts=11320060709
...had a Physics professor in college (undergraduate) who earned his PhD in nuclear physics (scholarship via air force) I will never forget one day in third semester physics, the topic of a nuclear bomb came up. He draw a conceptual picture of an overview of nuclear bomb. As expected, as curious students of physics, we began asking questions. As details of certain areas of the picture [particularly related to the trigger] were asked about, he would just smile and say, "We can't talk about that part", or "can't discuss that part".
related thread here:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1731413/posts?page=15#15
A Princeton student did a paper on atomic bomb design. When he came to get his paper back to see his grade he was told the paper had been classified. His design, pulled together from unclassified sources, was apparently workable or close enough. This was twenty or thirty years ago, BTW.
This story's getting legs. But not, as we see in other posts, as intended by NYT and MSNBC. Sweet irony, and totally deserved.
ping
Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, University of California, Livermore, "Summary Report of the Nth Country Experiment," W. J. Frank, ed., March 1967. Original classification: secret. [extract of heavily excised document]
This report describes an experiment that took place at a time when policymakers wanted to know how difficult it would be for a non-nuclear power to develop a nuclear weapons capability. Lawrence Livermore Laboratory paid two newly-minted physicists, with no access to or knowledge of classified information, to "produce a credible nuclear weapons design." After three "man-years", the two physicists had a design for an implosion nuclear weapon. The report's conclusions remain classified, but apparently the experiment was a success: it showed that any capable physicist could design a nuclear weapon.
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/nsa/NC/nuchis.html
Regards,
GtG
A dangerous cookbook The deletions, the diplomats said, had been done in consultation with the United States and other nuclear-weapons nations. Mohamed ElBaradei, the director of the International Atomic Energy Agency, which ran the nuclear part of the inspections, told the Security Council in late 2002 that the deletions were "consistent with the principle that proliferation-sensitive information should not be released."
In Europe, a senior diplomat said atomic experts there had studied the nuclear documents on the Web site and judged their public release as potentially dangerous. "It's a cookbook," said the diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of his agency's rules. "If you had this, it would short-circuit a lot of things."
The New York Times had examined dozens of the documents and asked a half dozen nuclear experts to evaluate some of them.
Peter D. Zimmerman, a physicist and former United States government arms scientist now at the war studies department of King's College, London, called the posted material "very sensitive, much of it undoubtedly secret restricted data."
Ray E. Kidder, a senior nuclear physicist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, an arms design center, said "some things in these documents would be helpful" to nations aspiring to develop nuclear weapons and should have remained secret.
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