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TATP: Countering the Mother of Satan Monday, November 06, 2006 - Iddo Genuth & Lucille Fresco-Cohen Home >> Articles >> Defense and Security
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TATP - One of the most elusive explosives used in many deadly terrorist acts of the last few decades can now be identified by a recently developed, simple, and cost-effective pen-like device.
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Although modern terrorism preceded 9/11, many see it as turning point in what may be considered the greatest threat to world security at the start of 21st century. Though 9/11 was perpetrated without the use of explosives, nearly all terrorist acts since have involved explosive devices of one type or another, and tremendous amounts of funds and research have been dedicated to finding new ways to counter this emerging threat. Types of explosivesChemical explosives have been employed for hundreds of years for a variety of applications ranging from fireworks to mining to various military uses. Chemical explosives are classified as low or high explosives. Low explosives are characterized by a relatively slow deflagration (combustion) speed of up to 400 m/s (meters per second). Examples of low explosives are propellants such as those used to fire artillery projectiles, as well as pipe bombs, gunpowder, most pure petroleum-based bombs such as Molotov cocktails, and fireworks. High explosives have a very fast deflagration rate ranging from 1,000 to 9,000 (and above) m/s. Typical high explosives such as TNT and RDX are very powerful and used for mining and military purposes. High explosives are produced by industrial processes and are usually strictly controlled and monitored. Although some acts of terrorism in recent years were carried out using illegally obtained standard high explosives, the strict control over these substances have led terrorists to develop an ever growing cache of improvised explosives. These terrorist bombs, sometime referred to as improvised explosive devices (IEDs), are relatively simple to produce, easy to use, and essentially as deadly as conventional high explosive-based weapons.
Entropic Explosion
The Mother of SatanThe tremendous devastative force of TATP, together with the relative ease of making it, as well as the difficulty in detecting it, made TATP one of the weapons of choice for terrorists since its rediscovery by Palestinian terrorist organizations in the West Bank in the early 1980's who have since used it to carry out numerous suicide bombings against Israel. Other acts of terror including two London car bombs (for which two Palestinian students were convicted of conspiracy) in July 1994 outside the Israeli embassy and a Jewish Philanthropic Institution, as well as an explosion onboard the December, 1994 Philippines Airlines flight 434 to Japan (on which was Ramzi Yousef was a passenger) were perpetrated using TATP. The infamous radical Islamic "shoe bomber", linked to al Qaeda, Richard Reid, tried to ignite a TATP fuse hidden in his shoes with a match to trigger a larger explosion. He was eventually subdued by some fellow passengers and cabin crew aboard American Airlines flight 63, but other terrorists have managed to use TATP with deadly results. The July 7th, 2005 London bombings, for instance, were carried out by four radical Islamic terrorists using 4.5 kg (10 lb.) of homemade TATP explosives, killing 52, injuring around 700, and terrorizing a nation (Some suspect the Madrid train bombers in 2004 used TATP, although this is disputed). Most recently, on September 5, 2006, TATP was discovered during the arrest of seven suspected terrorists in Vollsmose, Denmark and the foiled August, 2006 plot to simultaneously down numerous Transatlantic flights originating from Heathrow was allegedly to have involved TATP, to have been mixed on board from liquid precursors. In some cases security forces found a white, sugar-like substance in suspected terrorist hideouts but, since no simple, accurate method exists for identifying TATP (which is highly unstable) in the field, some of these incidents ended with law enforcement casualties. Actually, the instability of TATP, which was the cause of many a "work accident" that maimed or ended the lives of various "engineers" in Islamic militant organizations, is one reason terrorists have dubbed TATP "the Mother of Satan". Detecting Explosives
Neither existing commercial EDS, nor ETD systems, nor even dogs are able to detect with any great accuracy peroxide-based explosives (such as TATP), which lack metal or nitro groups that would make them amenable to detection by standard screening or rapid identification methods. Furthermore, since no electrical charge or wires are required to ignite TATP, the "problem" of setting off metal detectors is avoided. Until now, there has been no simple way to identify TATP whose detection has been heretofore limited to time-consuming biophysical techniques such as IR/Raman spectroscopy and mass spectrometry, coupled with chromatographic methods that must be carried out in a laboratory. TATP, which usually appears as a white crystalline substance resembling sugar, is extremely sensitive to shock, heat, and friction, making it dangerous to handle, emphasizing the need for a simple, cheap, and accurate identification and screening systems. ACRO-P.E.T. – Identifying the Mother of Satan
ACRO is already considering the next generation of TATP identification devices that would perform multiple diagnostic tests and function in mass screening of people and items. ACRO has also begun to look into the possibility of adapting its unique technology to stand-off detection of explosives. Interview with ACRO Security TechnologiesTFOT recently interviewed ACRO founder, Professor Ehud Keinan, as well as Yami Tarsi, CEO of ACRO, to learn more about the development of the ACRO-P.E.T. and the company, as well as its plans for the future . Ehud Keinan
Q: How did you come to start working on TATP? A: My involvement with TATP and other improvised explosives is a long story that started more than twenty years ago with a midnight telephone call from an old friend, Dr. Kirson of an Israeli security organization, who is no longer with us. These were the early days when TATP was a new threat that presented a tough challenge to all of the Israeli security organizations. Knowing my long experience as both chemist and an officer in the IDF, he asked me to help their effort to meet the challenge and I volunteered to do so. Although my scientific areas of research (biocatalysis, drug discovery, organometallic chemistry, molecular machines, and molecular computing) are pretty remote from anything related to explosives, I decided to help the national war against terror. It is a natural continuation of my many years of military service in a combat unit. The many research projects related to TATP that we carried out in my lab over the past twenty years were classified for obvious reasons. Nevertheless, two years ago I decided to change this approach completely and started to publish our work and to give public lectures and TV interviews on terror using improvised explosives and expose it to the media. Q: Which of your research discoveries led to the development of the ACRO-P.E.T.?
Q: Was there a Eureka! moment along the way, either during the research stage or later in the development of the ACRO-P.E.T.? A: There were several Eureka moments throughout this research, although there were many more moments of frustration and disappointment. From that respect, this research was not different from any other research project we have been doing over the years. Yet, the overall result is very pleasing. The first Eureka moment was to see for the first time the blue-green color that appeared on the first enzymatic experiment with TATP. Yami Tarsi
Q: What makes TATP (and other peroxide-based explosives) so dangerous and difficult to detect? A: The area of improvised explosive devices (IEDs) is of great concern to the authorities responsible for the protection of the public against terrorist acts. Some IEDs are based on standard, illegally-obtained explosives, but most of them are made of improvised explosives. In the last few years, their use has become more and more apparent worldwide. Most available EDSs can handle the identification of the standard explosives (TNT, RDX, C4, etc.) fairly reliably, based on their nitrate and nitro content. Detecting, let alone identifying, the improvised explosives that do not contain nitrate and nitro elements is still a very difficult task. Hence, this task is very high on the priority list of the authorities in their search for technologies and systems that can provide a solution to this problem. Q: What is the ACRO-P.E.T. and how does it work? A: The ACRO-P.E.T. provides an immediate answer to whether a suspicious material that has been discovered somewhere, such as in a passenger screening line at an airport or train station, a warehouse, or at an entrance to a building, etc., contains even minute quantities of a peroxide-based explosive. The P.E.T. has a removable cap that is used to collect a sample from the suspected material and a chemical process is then used to identify the explosive. The P.E.T. has been tested with a number of other similar-looking materials and has been found to offer a very high level of selectivity, i.e., will only react to the explosive. Q: What makes your technology better than other identification and detection technologies on the market that claim success against peroxide-based explosives? These costs can be justified when one understands the technologies that they use. Our technology is based on the chemical identification of the components that make up these explosives in a simple-to-use, proprietary enzymatic process. Our technology, as opposed to the systems mentioned above, does not require any continuous maintenance or periodic calibration, which automatically means very high life cycle costs associated with the other systems. Our technology has a low identification threshold level and a high selectivity level. The unit is simple to operate and disposable. When disposed, it is totally “green” and does not require any special waste storage facility besides basic security requirements to be decided upon by the users themselves. Q: What is the potential market for the ACRO-P.E.T. and how will it be used? A: The ACRO P.E.T. provides an immediate solution to any homeland security, civilian, and military authorities or organization responsible for securing indoor and outdoor facilities. These are:
We have no doubt that the ACRO-P.E.T. would provide the above-mentioned authorities with a simple-to-use, disposable, reliable, accurate, and inexpensive solution, and may even provide them with additional tactical solutions to problems that they have difficulties in dealing with at present. Q: How much will the ACRO-P.E.T. cost? A: The ACRO-P.E.T. will be available for a few tens of dollars per unit.
Q: When was ACRO founded, what does it do, and what are its plans for the future?
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