Via FoxNews -
American mom Marisa Ann Sketo-Kirsh appeared in a South African court Jan. 28 for negotiating the sale of spark plugs. Yes, you read right — spark plugs. Her charge: importing and exporting “components of nuclear devices.”
It may be surprising to some that a common, everyday spark plug — or the igniter of a spark plug to be more precise, called a trigger spark gap — could be a weapon of mass destruction. Here’s why:
A spark gap is a cylinder set on a 4-inch square black box that emits an intense electrical pulse, whose timing and duration are controlled to the microsecond.
Hospitals use the devices to power lithotripters to deliver an electrical pulse that breaks up kidney stones.
These triggered spark gaps, however, also have another use: to detonate a nuclear bomb. Each of the switches could be installed into an enriched uranium casing, which could be mounted on a ballistic missile — with a consequence of … well, you know the rest.
This South African case is a sneak peak into murky and sometimes dangerous world of black-market nuclear weapons proliferation, teeming underworld movers and shakers, and maybe even terrorists. Items being sold here are not the stuff of Hollywood — glowing bits of enriched nuclear material — but dull-looking industrial parts, having viable commercial value but can be used for military purposes. The U.S. government calls these “dual use” items.
Police in South Africa allege the 46-year-old Sketo-Kirsh, aka Marisa Sketo, ordered 66 spark gaps from the U.S. firm PerkinElmer Optronics. She is believed to be working for and with Asher Karni, owner of Top Cape Technology company in South Africa. Sketo-Kirsh is thought to have sent the spark gaps to a Pakistani company without first obtaining a permit from South Africa’s WMD Nonproliferation Council.
According to the U.S. Justice Department, Karni, an Israeli Orthodox Jew, was cutting a deal with Humayun Khan from Islamic Pakistan in summer 2003 to export 200 spark gaps. These devices are easily concealed as they are small enough to fit into a coat pocket. The innocuous looking switches combined can pack enough punch to detonate 3-10 nuclear bombs, according to experts.
Its intended users, according to prosecutor Jay Bratt, were Pakistan and its arch rival, India.
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