Abaara topic: Brazil and weapons of mass destruction

 

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Brazil and weapons of mass destruction


Weapons of
mass destruction
By Type
Biological weapons
Chemical weapons
Nuclear weapons
Radiological weapons
By Country
Brazil
Canada
China (PRC)
France
India
Iran
Iraq
Israel
North Korea
Pakistan
Poland
Russia
South Africa
Taiwan (ROC)
United Kingdom
United States
Nuclear weapontry
Nuclear countries
Nuclear proliferation
Nuclear strategy
Nuclear terrorism
Nuclear warfare
Nuclear weapon history
Nuclear weapon design
Nuclear explosion
Nuclear testing
See also
Dirty bomb
Radiological warfare
edit  (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:WMD&action=edit)

Based on Brazil's history, it is believed that the country does not possess significant weapons of mass destruction.

In early 2004, there was an international initiative to enlarge the inspection of installations where enrichment of uranium-238 is made, verifying that the process was not intended for the development of nuclear weapons. The Brazilian authorities, at first, did not allow the inspection of the centrifugal machines, arguing that this would reveal technological secrets. By now, the inspections were already allowed.

The Brazilian authorities said that, as Brazil is not part of any "evil axis", the pressure for full access to inspection - even to universities - was an attempt to pirate industrial secrets. They also claimed that their technology is better than that of the USA and France, mainly because the centrifugal axis is not mechanical, but electromagnetic.

As for Brazilian society, in general, the incident is understood by noticing that the centrifugal axis seems to have cost around US$200 million, while American and French ones, over US$2 billion. This leads to a notion that there was actually an attempt get access to industrial secrets by any means (either pacific, or hostile).

American authorities have stated that a significant improvement using this technique is unlikely to be possible. They still believe the inspection should be made to guarantee there are no nuclear weapons being built.

A small number of Brazilians fear that this incident may be used by the USA to wage a war against Brazil, as happened in Iraq.

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This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 

 
Page topic: Brazil and weapons of mass destruction