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Britain boosts nuclear bomb research

Hundreds of extra scientists will maintain the UK arsenal but some fear the nation risks being drawn into US work on "mini-nukes"

Hundreds of extra scientists are being sought to work on Britain鹿s nuclear bomb programme. Their job will be to maintain Britain鹿s Trident warheads, to help ensure that new weapons can be designed in the future and to conduct joint research with the US.

But the recruitment drive has raised fears that Britain risks being sucked into fresh US research on low-yield nuclear weapons 颅 so-called 鈥渕ini-nukes鈥 颅 for use as bunker busters on the battlefield.

Britain 鈥渋s being dragged down the slippery slope towards new nuclear weapons and nuclear testing by the US,鈥 says Kathryn Crandall, an analyst with the British American Security Information Council, an independent think tank in Washington DC.

A spokesman for Britain鹿s Atomic Weapons Establishment (AWE) at Aldermaston, Berkshire, confirmed to 快猫短视频 that it is planning to increase its workforce from 3500 to 3800 鈥渙r even higher鈥 by 2008. It hopes to hire up to 80 physicists, materials scientists and systems engineers in 2003 alone.

No detonation

The AWE says the increase is needed because it is having to adopt new skills to enable it to work on nuclear bombs without detonating them. Britain and the US agreed to cease their joint underground nuclear testing programme in 1996, though there are fears that the US now wants to start testing again.

The new recruits will service the 200 warheads for the Trident missiles carried by four British submarines. They will also help 鈥渕aintain the capability鈥 to design a replacement for Trident, if that is ever required.

The AWE says that some recruits are 鈥渉ighly likely鈥 to be involved in research with the US under a 1958 Mutual Defence Agreement. This research includes a joint investigation into the properties of plutonium in a series of subcritical tests at an underground laboratory in the Nevada desert, the first of which took place in February 2002.

There are more than 200 visits a year to the US by AWE staff and there are some 16 joint working groups, including one on nuclear weapons engineering and another on nuclear warhead physics.

And the Bush administration鹿s request to conduct research into mini-nukes 颅 weapons with a yield of less than five kilotons 颅 is due to be considered by Congress this week.

Creative and curious

If this mini-nuke research goes ahead, some believe it鹿ll be tough for British researchers not to become involved.

鈥淭hese are creative, curious scientists who want to explore new concepts. They will obviously be interested in any new US research,鈥 says Ivan Oelrich, director of the strategic security project at the Federation of American 快猫短视频s.

So while AWE says it is not currently working with the US to produce 鈥渁ny kind of nuclear weapon鈥, its denials have failed to dispel suspicions in the antinuclear camp.

Rachel Western of Friends of the Earth believes Britain will eventually investigate mini-nukes, because she says it is on the same weapons production 鈥渢readmill鈥 as the US.

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