RE: virus: Antigravity propulsion update

From: Blunderov (squooker@mweb.co.za)
Date: Fri Sep 20 2002 - 22:51:44 MDT


-----Original Message-----
From: owner-virus@lucifer.com [mailto:owner-virus@lucifer.com] On Behalf
Of Hermit
Sent: 21 September 2002 12:48 AM
To: virus@lucifer.com
Subject: Re: virus: Antigravity propulsion update

"Red Mercury." Heh.

Most of the time, for "Red Mercury" read Tritium (used in night-sights,
on
watches and as an accelerator to convert "atom bombs" into Hydrogen
bombs).
In the mid 1980s, Israel was quite happy to provide Tritium to South
Africa
in exchange for weapons grade nuclear materials. The Tritium was shipped
by
Safair in containers labelled "Mercury Oxide" in order to avoid
attention
from the many curious eyes watching transactions between the two
countries.

By the late 80s, South Africa was working on various projects with the
Soviet Union, and a barter deal was established where Tritium was
shipped to
the Soviet Union in payment for other things more useful (mainly
aircraft
engines) to a currency strapped South Africa. For whatever reason (I
suspect
because nobody could be bothered to change the labels), the "Red
Mercury"
label was perpetuated, and possibly due to the propensity of
peripherally
involved BOSS barflies to blab in barter for beer, the by now antiquated
cover story appears to have been picked up by the Russian Mafia. At
which
point the more lunatic fringe confidence tricksters of the Russian
underground began attempting to sell Mercury Oxide, Mecuric Iodide and
Mercury with red colorants to anyone willing to listen - usually agents
of
the MVD, FIB, Minatom or FIS. Naturally the materials they touted was
hyped
in order to improve the market value, and by the time that they were
done
(and the story reached the press sometime in the early 90s), "Red
Mercury"
had become the weapon to end all weapons, Allegedly a substance that
might
do anything from fusing Deutrium and Tritium directly, to causing
explosive
outbreaks of pimples.

In fact, as with almost all of the stories of smuggled nuclear material,
the
value was as imaginary as the Curie count - except to the media - who
hyped
the possible dangers even more than the more honest confidence
tricksters
had done. Which in a bizarre twist resulted in a vast increase in the
value
of Mercury Oxide (commonly used on the backs of mirrors), largely
instigated
by the outrageous prices which Western "intellegence" agencies were
prepared
to pay for it...

Regards

Hermit

----
This message was posted by Hermit to the Virus 2002 board on Church of
Virus
BBS.
<http://virus.lucifer.com/bbs/index.php?board=51;action=display;threadid
=263
14>
[Blunderov]
Thanks for the info. Subsequent to my post I found this most interesting
document.
<snip>
COMMENTARY No. 57
a CANADIAN SECURITY INTELLIGENCE SERVICE publication
SMUGGLING SPECIAL NUCLEAR MATERIALS
Reports of the trafficking of Red Mercury (claimed to have the
composition Hg2Sb207) have been circulating for many years. Red Mercury
was touted as a mediator in nuclear weapons design, particularly as an
essential ingredient in pure-fusion weapons, a view expressed most
recently in International Defence Review (6/94) by Dr. F. Barnaby, a
former Director of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
What is known about Red Mercury is that it was the Russian code name for
the production of Li6D - a legitimate component of thermonuclear
weapons, but not some mystical or magical ingredient for other purposes.
In recent years Red Mercury has been widely discredited, and the
"market" for it appears to be diminishing.
Of the nearly 1000 known incidents of smuggling, all but a handful have
been of isotopes or materials entirely useless to nuclear weapons
manufacture, thus reflecting the technological ignorance of both the
supply and demand sides of the "market". However, four prominent
exceptions were of truly special nuclear materials and all occurred
within the last eight months of 1994. In May 1994, six grams of
plutonium - Pu239 (99.75% purity) - were found in the garage of
businessman Adolf Jaekle, in the southern German village of Tengen. In
another case, six people were arrested in June 1994 in the Bavarian town
of Landshut with 0.8 gram of weapons-grade uranium - U235 - for sale.
Although the isotopes were certainly weapons-grade, the quantities
involved were fortunately minuscule. In August 1994 at Munich Airport,
350 grams of 87% pure Pu239 were discovered aboard a flight from Moscow,
and three couriers arrested; 200 grams of lithium (Li6) were confiscated
at the same time. Both of these materials are required in the
construction of thermo-nuclear weapons, and the amounts are significant.
In the case of the plutonium, this amounts to almost 10% of the
fissionable material required in an (admittedly) efficient weapon
design. Finally, in December 1994, in the largest seizure yet of
weapons-grade uranium, Czech officials in Prague confiscated 2.722
kilograms of U235 enriched to 87.5%, and arrested three men later
identified as "nuclear workers". As in the case of the earlier German
seizures, the materials were believed to have originated in the former
Soviet Union (FSU), although Russian authorities have stridently denied
that any of their weapons-grade material has gone missing. 
<snap> 


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