US accidentally releases secret list of nuclear sites
 


3 Jun 2009, 1412 hrs IST, IANS 
 
 
WASHINGTON: The US government mistakenly released a secret report giving 
detailed information about hundreds of the America's civilian nuclear sites 




and programmes, including maps showing the precise locations of stockpiles of 
fuel for nuclear weapons, the New York Times reported Wednesday. 

The publication of the 266-page document 
with its pages marked "highly confidential" was revealed Monday in an online 
newsletter devoted to issues of federal secrecy, according to the influential 
US daily. 

The document was withdrawn from a Government Printing Office website on Tuesday 
evening after inquiries from the Times, it said. 

The information, considered sensitive but not classified, was assembled for 
transmission later this year to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). 

President Barack Obama sent the document to the Congress on May 5 for review 
and possible revision, and the Government Printing Office subsequently posted 
the draft declaration on its website. As of Tuesday evening, the reasons for 
that action remained a mystery, the Times said. 

Several nuclear experts cited by the daily argued that any dangers from the 
disclosure were minimal, given that the general outlines of the most sensitive 
information were already known publicly. 

But Steven Aftergood, a security expert at the Federation of American 
Scientists in Washington, who revealed the existence of the document on Monday 
expressed bafflement at its disclosure, calling it "a one-stop shop for 
information on US nuclear programmes". 

In his letter of transmittal to Congress, Obama characterised the information 
as "sensitive but unclassified" and said all the information that the United 
States gathered to comply with the advanced protocol "shall be exempt from 
disclosure" under the Freedom of Information Act. 

The report details the locations of hundreds of nuclear sites and activities. 
Each page is marked across the top "HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL SAFEGUARDS SENSITIVE", 
with the exception of pages that detailed additional information such as site 
maps. 

In his transmittal letter, Obama said the cautionary language was a 
classification category of the IAEA's inspectors. 

The report lists many particulars about nuclear programmes and facilities at 
America's three nuclear weapons labs - Los Alamos, Livermore and Sandia - as 
well as dozens of other federal and private nuclear sites, the Times said. 

One of the most serious disclosures appears to centre on the Oak Ridge National 
Laboratory in Tennessee, which houses the Y-12 National Security Complex, a 
sprawling site ringed by barbed wire and armed guards. It calls itself the 
nation's "Fort Knox" for highly enriched uranium - a main fuel of nuclear arms.


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