President Obama told a gathering of world leaders that the possibility of terrorists getting nuclear material and scientists would be catastrophic.
“ISIL has already used chemical weapons — there is no doubt if these madmen ever got their hands on a bomb or nuclear material they would use it to kill as many as possible,” Obama told world leaders meeting in Washington Friday for the Nuclear Security Summit.
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Over the past two days, 50 world leaders have huddled on the best ways to keep terrorists from gathering materials for a dirty bomb and keeping nuclear weapons away from dangerous political regimes. The meeting comes on the heels of new information that some of the suspects in the Brussels’ attacks were tracking and recording the movements of a top Belgian nuclear scientist.
On Friday, Obama referenced those videotapes.
“It would change our world. We cannot be complacent. We have to build on our progress,” the president said.
U.S. officials estimate there’s some 2000 metric tons of material being housed in civilian and military programs around the world that could be used to craft nuclear weapons. In an op-ed published this week in the Washington Post President Obama underscored the need to work with world leaders in preventing terrorist groups like ISIS from getting that material.
“Given the continued threat posed by organizations such as the terrorist group we call ISIL, or ISIS, we’ll also join allies and partners in reviewing our counterterrorism efforts, to prevent the world’s most dangerous networks from obtaining the world’s most dangerous weapons,” Obama wrote.
The president met earlier on Friday with leaders from nations that worked, alongside the U.S., to reach a historic accord aimed at curbing Tehran’s nuclear program. Those efforts, the president said, involved intense negotiations and are backed by strong sanctions.
“The countries represented in this room achieved what decades of animosity and rhetoric did not — a long-term deal that closes off every possible path to building a nuclear weapon, and subjects Iran to the most comprehensive nuclear inspections ever negotiated,” Obama said.
The summit, and by extension Obama’s efforts at shoring up his legacy on nuclear policy, began early in his presidency during a 2009 speech on the need for a global effort to secure nuclear material and atomic weapons.








