
#17
Rocky Mountain News
February 22, 2003
At Mayak, Lax Security Worries U.S.
By Ann Imse
(for personal use only)
Imagine these news stories coming out of Rocky Flats:
A security guard kills two colleagues and flees with their guns and
ammunition.
Three guards desperate to get drunk poison themselves with antifreeze.
Thieves steal a ton of metal from the high-security site, then try to sell it
at a scrap yard that notices 500 times the normal level of radioactivity. The
crooks dump their "hot" commodity into a river.
Other thieves attempt to pilfer enough weapons-grade uranium for a nuclear
bomb. Officials say they disrupted the plot, but release no further details.
All of these security breaches have occurred during the past four years at
Mayak -- the Russian version of Rocky Flats -- a nuclear weapons complex hidden
deep in a forest in the heart of Russia.
Tucked behind trees and fences, partially buried under earth and lakes, the
77-square-mile complex was once so secret even the neighbors didn't know what it
did.
Today, Mayak's Russian neighbors still aren't allowed inside the company
town, Ozersk. Signs warn foreigners they could be arrested just for coming
within miles of the place, although residents say it's easy to bribe a guard to
break the rules.
Security is weak inside Mayak, too.
Rose Gottemuller, the Clinton administration's deputy undersecretary of
energy for non-proliferation, has seen pails of plutonium stored in a Mayak
warehouse with broken wooden doors and glass windows.
"They bent down and pulled out a bucket of plutonium and handed it to
me," she said, still shocked.
The contradictory security -- incredibly tight yet unbelievably lax --
resulted from the collapse of the dictatorship that ran the Soviet Union until
1991.
Security was simple when no foreigner could get near the place, and every
insider informed on his neighbor, said Laura Holgate of the Nuclear Threat
Initiative, a Ted Turner-funded program aimed at reducing the threat of weapons
of mass destruction.
But now Russians and foreigners alike can travel the country without being
stopped every few miles for a document check. And Mayak employees -- poorly paid
and susceptible to bribes from drug runners feeding the closed city's growing
narcotics problem -- are seen by the United States as the weakest link in the
security chain.
Mayak security has improved since 1998, when Russia's financial meltdown saw
unpaid nuclear plant guards leaving their posts to forage for food and refusing
to patrol because they didn't have winter coats, said Matthew Bunn, a Harvard
expert on nuclear non-proliferation.
The Russian government says guards are now paid about $300 a month. But Bunn
is still worried. He said the theft of a ton of steel from inside the plant
"suggests that it wouldn't be that hard to steal plutonium."
Ministry of Atomic Energy spokesman Nikolai Shingarev dismisses the security
breakdowns at Mayak. "Such incidents happen everywhere," he said.
The worries about security have prompted American officials to intervene.
U.S. taxpayers are spending $458.2 million at Mayak to prevent allies of Osama
bin Laden and Saddam Hussein from hiring someone to snatch a nuclear weapon or
the critical ingredients.
Much of the money is going to securing the world's largest store of
plutonium, a nuclear bomb ingredient coveted by dictators around the world.
At least $350 million is going to the U.S. construction company Bechtel and
its Russian subcontractors for a huge high-security warehouse, which Americans
call the "plutonium palace."
American security strategy is designed to slow thieves long enough for them
to be stopped, according to Gottemuller. The plutonium she saw in easily
snatched pails in a Mayak warehouse is now covered with huge slabs of concrete.
"They can't be moved without a crane," she said. But Congress has only
barely supported the program to improve Russian security, even though half of
Russia's weapons-grade plutonium and uranium is still considered insecure.
Since the budget of the Ministry of Atomic Energy remains secret, some
members of Congress fear that the Russians are spending American dollars on
weapons research.
Mayak also is one of several Russian nuclear plants involved in a program
that dilutes weapons-grade uranium so that it can be used as nuclear power plant
fuel, but not in bombs.
American power plants are committed to buy $12 billion of this fuel over 20
years, and effectively burn up Russian nuclear bombs to make U.S. electricity.
Altogether, the program has eliminated weapons-grade plutonium for 6,000
warheads.
Pavel Oleinikov, who grew up in a closed city near Ozersk and now works in
non-proliferation in the United States, worries that the U.S. programs will
leave gaping holes in Russian nuclear security.
"A high-level manager can supersede all regulations, and say, 'Let's
ship it to our new commercial partner in North Korea,' " he said.
"It's unlikely anyone would challenge him. For every low-level soldier
to perform his duty, there must be a spirit of democracy."
American officials say that even as American taxpayers spend huge sums on
Mayak, the Russian government has repeatedly hassled those sent to check on the
program. In 1999, Americans were stopped 25 times.
Recently, the ministry barred a Rocky Mountain News team from the plant, the
town, and even the U.S.-financed construction site.
"You're not the only one with these problems. No one is allowed
in," said ministry spokesman Shingarev.
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