Archived material Access restricted Article
Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of Sun 12/21/2003 View Sat 12/20/2003 View Fri 12/19/2003 View Thu 12/18/2003 View Wed 12/17/2003 View Tue 12/16/2003 View Mon 12/15/2003
1
2003-12-21 Europe
US Bases in Bulgaria in 2 Years?
Archived material is restricted to Rantburg regulars and members. If you need access email fred.pruitt=at=gmail.com with your nick to be added to the members list. There is no charge to join Rantburg as a member.
Posted by Dan (not Darling) 2003-12-21 11:07:52 PM|| || Front Page|| [9 views since 2007-05-07]  Top

#1 Rather than include my personal ramblings in the original posting, I thought this part more worthy of a "comment" posting.

I applaud the Bulgarians for their apparent enthusiasm, but this and the recent increase in "chatter" stokes my constant paranoia concern over "the world's most dangerous nuclear plant."

Bulgaria's Kozloduy Nuclear Plant has six Soviet-built reactors. Most of the concern involves reactors 1 and 2, which went online in the mid-Seventies. Features of reactors 1 and 2 that are below Western standards include, but are not limited to: quality and construction of building materials, operating systems, personnel training, emergency core-cooling systems, and auxiliary water-feed systems.

Reactor 1, considered the most dangerous, was intermittently closed during the Nineties under intense international pressure, but it's been back on the grid since January of '98. Kozloduy provides 40% of Bulgaria's electrical energy, and the energy sector itself accounts for 15% of Bulgaria's GDP, making Kozloduy an economic and industrial sacred cow. The European Union has offered millions of euros in technical assistance and direct aid to Kozloduy over the last decade, but the plant won't be shut down anytime soon. An agreement reached in '98 between Kozloduy's managers and the EU promised to gradually phase out reactors 1 and 4 by '05, but little has since been done to meet this deadline (other than postponing it to '06).

Kozloduy is near the Danube River (the Romanian/Bulgarian border) and less than eighty miles east of the Serbian border. Fallout from a core breach at Kozloduy (potentially four times greater than Chernobyl) would affect all of southern and eastern Europe but mostly three countries:
* Romania (a supporter of the WoT)
* Bulgaria (ditto, only more so), and
* Serbia (fought Muslims in Bosnia and Kosovo during the Nineties)

Best of all, an 18-mile no-fly zone around the reactor is routinely violated.

Keeping in mind AlQ's fondness for using aircraft as weapons, I'd start keeping an extra-close eye on all west- and north-bound flights out of Istanbul, Damascus, etc.
Posted by Dan (not Darling) 2003-12-21 11:11:43 PM||   2003-12-21 11:11:43 PM|| Front Page Top

23:41 Fred
23:11 Dan (not Darling)
23:04 True German Ally
23:01 Steve White
22:59 Zhang Fei
22:44 TS
22:44 Glenn (not Reynolds)
22:35 Alaska Paul
22:33 PBMcL
22:33 TS
22:30 Raj
22:22 4thInfVet
22:19 TS
22:12 Robert Crawford
21:58 rkb
21:47 4thInfVet
21:40 Zhang Fei
21:40 mhw
21:31 Glenn (not Reynolds)
21:20 Glenn (not Reynolds)
21:05 Glenn (not Reynolds)
20:50 Glenn (not Reynolds)
20:48 CrazyFool
20:43 Scooter McGruder









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com