Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Authorization of Matrix 5 Saboteurs - Stuxnet Virus - Bombs Triggered in Fukushima Nuclear Plant? - Al Jazeera .TV Spin - Support Phony Green Agenda

June 22, 2011

Sam-Cam Lauvergeon Matrix 5 and the Fukushima Stuxnet bomb

Abel Danger believes that Crown Agents’ Sisters Samantha Cameron and Anne Lauvergeon authorized Matrix 5 saboteurs to use a Stuxnet virus to trigger bombs in the Fukushima nuclear plant and ‘spin’ associated al Jazeera .tv news to support a phony ‘Green’ agenda.

Matrix 5 Sisters
Abel Danger Mischief Makers - Mistress of the Revels - 'Man-In-The-Middle' Attacks

Prequel
Destruction de Fukushima à l’aide d’armes nucléaires? – séisme de magnitude 6,67 non pas 9,0 – attaque sous fausse bannière délibérée

Stuxnet phony simulation on al Jazeera .tv


“[Spoliation inference from the use of Entrust PKI indicates Crown Agents’ Sister Samantha Cameron has extorted her husband in his man-in-the-middle position to make an ultra vires delegation of power over HMG Armed Forces to a traditional enemy - France] UPI.com Security Industry [The Worshipful Company of Security Professionals] Britain, France to bolster defense pact Published: Jan. 7, 2011 at 7:03 AM PARIS, Jan. 7 (UPI) -- The defense ministers of France and Britain are to meet in Paris next week to look into closer defense cooperation between the two countries. The French Defense Ministry said the meeting was designed to "put into effect" treaty agreements signed recently between the two countries in the field of military cooperation. Among the treaties is the creation of an Anglo-French rapid reaction force of around 6,500 troops from both countries, intended for missions ranging from humanitarian relief work to full war-fighting operations. The force is due to include units from the Parachute Regiment, the Royal Marines and Special Forces including the SAS, as well as their French counterparts [Delegated through Entrust PKI with responsibilities for the phony mission to kill the Osama bin Laden doppelganger in Abbotabad and stage it to look like a success for Barack Obama]. The agreement was the centerpiece pact signed by British Prime Minister David Cameron and French President Nicolas Sarkozy at a meeting two months ago. The security cooperation will include potential air and naval assets and an operational alliance based on sharing aircraft capabilities. British Defense Minister Liam Fox and his French counterpart will discuss details of the pact at their meeting next Thursday, the French Defense Ministry said. Officials said the defense deal would also coordinate work on nuclear weapons and raising the prospect of ultimately developing a joint deterrent [such as the Thales QRS 11 flight boxes used by Matrix 5 saboteurs on 911 to guide decoy and drone maneuvers, destroy strategic targets and extort concessions from the United States]”

“[Evidence that Crown Agents’ Sister Anne Lauvergeon, the CEO of Averna, had access to, custody of and responsibilty for, Stuxnet-like process control and simulation technology needed for virtual man-in-the-middle deception of Fukushima operators] New York Times [Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspapermakers] From Afar, a Vivid Picture of Japan Crisis By WILLIAM J. BROAD Published: April 2, 2011 For the clearest picture of what is happening at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, talk to scientists thousands of miles away. .. Thanks to the unfamiliar but sophisticated art of atomic forensics, experts around the world have been able to document the situation vividly [for the Worshipful Company of Spectacle Makers]. Over decades, they have become very good at illuminating the hidden workings of nuclear power plants from afar, turning scraps of information into detailed analysis. For example, an analysis by a French energy company revealed far more about the condition of the plant’s reactors than the Japanese have ever described: water levels at the reactor cores dropping by as much as three-quarters, and temperatures in those cores soaring to nearly 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit, hot enough to burn and melt the zirconium casings that protect the fuel rods. Scientists in Europe and America also know from observing the explosions of hydrogen gas at the plant that the nuclear fuel rods had heated to very dangerous levels, and from radioactive plumes how far the rods had disintegrated. At the same time, the evaluations also show that the reactors at Fukushima Daiichi escaped the deadliest outcomes — a complete meltdown of the plant. Most of these computer-based forensics systems were developed after the 1979 partial meltdown at Three Mile Island, when regulators found they were essentially blind to what was happening in the reactor. Since then, to satisfy regulators, companies that run nuclear power plants use snippets of information coming out of a plant to develop simulations of what is happening inside and to perform a variety of risk evaluations. Indeed, the detailed assessments of the Japanese reactors that Energy Secretary Steven Chu gave on Friday — when he told reporters that about 70 percent of the core of one reactor had been damaged, and that another reactor had undergone a 33 percent meltdown — came from forensic modeling. The bits of information that drive these analyses range from the simple to the complex. They can include everything from the length of time a reactor core lacked cooling water to the subtleties of the gases and radioactive particles being emitted from the plant. Engineers feed the data points into computer simulations that churn out detailed portraits of the imperceptible, including many specifics on the melting of the hot fuel cores. Governments and companies now possess dozens of these independently developed computer programs, known in industry jargon as “safety codes.” Many of these institutions — including ones in Japan — are relying on forensic modeling to analyze the disaster at Fukushima Daiichi to plan for a range of activities, from evacuations to forecasting the likely outcome .. One of the first safety codes to emerge after Three Mile Island was the Modular Accident Analysis Program. Running on a modest computer, it simulates [stimulates] reactor crises based on such information as the duration of a power blackout and the presence of invisible wisps of radioactive materials. Robert E. Henry, a developer of the code at Fauske & Associates, an engineering company near Chicago, said that a first sign of major trouble at any reactor was the release of hydrogen — a highly flammable gas that has fueled several large explosions at Fukushima Daiichi. The gas, he said in an interview, indicated that cooling water had fallen low, exposing the hot fuel rods. The next alarms, Dr. Henry said, centered on various types of radioactivity that signal increasingly high core temperatures and melting. First, he said, “as the core gets hotter and hotter,” easily evaporated products of atomic fission — like iodine 131 and cesium 137 — fly out. If temperatures rise higher, threatening to melt the core entirely, he added, less volatile products such as strontium 90 and plutonium 239 join the rising plume. The lofting of the latter particles in large quantities points to “substantial fuel melting,” Dr. Henry said. He added that he and his colleagues modeled the Japanese accident in its first days and discerned partial — not full — core melting. Micro-Simulation Technology, a software company in Montville, N.J., used its own computer code to model the Japanese accident. It found core temperatures in the reactors soaring as high as 2,250 degrees Celsius, or more than 4,000 degrees Fahrenheit — hot enough to liquefy many reactor metals. “Some portion of the core melted,” said Li-chi Cliff Po, the company’s president. He called his methods simpler than most industry simulations, adding that the Japanese disaster was relatively easy to model because the observable facts of the first hours and days were so unremittingly bleak — “no water in, no injection” to cool the hot cores. “I don’t think there’s any mystery or foul play,” Dr. Po said of the disaster’s scale. “It’s just so bad.” The big players in reactor modeling are federal laboratories and large nuclear companies such as General Electric, Westinghouse and Areva, a French group that supplied reactor fuel to the Japanese complex. The Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque wrote one of the most respected codes. It models whole plants and serves as a main tool of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the Washington agency that oversees the nation’s reactors. Areva and French agencies use a reactor code-named Cathare, a complicated acronym that also refers to a kind of goat’s milk cheese. On March 21, Stanford University presented an invitation-only panel discussion on the Japanese crisis that featured Alan Hanson, an executive vice president of Areva NC, a unit of the company focused on the nuclear fuel cycle. “Clearly,” he told the audience, “we’re witnessing one of the greatest disasters in modern time.” Dr. Hanson, a nuclear engineer, presented a slide show that he said the company’s German unit had prepared. That division, he added, “has been analyzing this accident in great detail.” The presentation gave a blow-by-blow of the accident’s early hours and days. It said drops in cooling water exposed up to three-quarters of the reactor cores, and that peak temperatures hit 2,700 degrees Celsius, or more than 4,800 degrees Fahrenheit. That’s hot enough to melt steel and zirconium — the main ingredient in the metallic outer shell of a fuel rod, known as the cladding. “Zirconium in the cladding starts to burn,” said the slide presentation. At the peak temperature, it continued, the core experienced “melting of uranium-zirconium eutectics,” a reactor alloy. A slide with a cutaway illustration of a reactor featured a glowing hot mass of melted fuel rods in the middle of the core and noted “release of fission products” during meltdown. The products are radioactive fragments of split atoms that can result in cancer and other serious illnesses. Stanford, where Dr. Hanson is a visiting scholar, posted the slides online after the March presentation. At that time, each of the roughly 30 slides was marked with the Areva symbol or name, and each also gave the name of their author, Matthias Braun. The posted document was later changed to remove all references to Areva, and Dr. Braun and Areva did not reply to questions about what simulation code or codes [Owned by the Worshipful Company of Information Technologists] the company may have used to arrive at its analysis of the Fukushima disaster. “We cannot comment on that,” Jarret Adams, a spokesman for Areva, said of the slide presentation. The reason, he added, was “because it was not an officially released document.” A European atomic official monitoring the Fukushima crisis expressed sympathy for Japan’s need to rely on forensics to grasp the full dimensions of the unfolding disaster. “Clearly, there’s no access to the core,” the official said. “The Japanese are honestly blind [or have been dishonestly blinded by Stuxnet.” .. This article has been revised to reflect the following correction: Correction: April 10, 2011 An article last Sunday about long-distance assessments of Japan’s nuclear crisis by experts in atomic forensics misspelled the surname of an executive vice president of Areva NC, who is a nuclear engineer and visiting scholar at Stanford University. He is Alan Hanson, not Hansen. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/03/science/03meltdown.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1

Anne Lauvergeon (possibly bred for Matrix 5 through SOS Children’s Villages) [École Normale Supérieure Agrégation in physics (1978); Corps des Mines vocational courses (1983 Usinor then 1984 Commissariat à l'énergie atomique chemical safety in Europe – Chernobyl saboteur?); l'Inspection générale des carrières (1985-1988); in charge of French President François Mitterrand’s mission for international economy and foreign trade in 1990; 1991 assistant secretary general; “sherpa”, i.e. personal representative (sexual extrtionist?) to the president; charged with preparing international meetings such as the G7 summit; managing partner of Lazard banking (Matrix 1) in 1995; general director of Alcatel 1997 before becoming part of the group's executive committee; CEO Cogema June 1999, succeeding Jean Syrota, who was extrorted from office by The Greens; merged Cogema, Framatome and other companies to create Areva in July 2001; American magazine Fortune, ranked her as the 2nd most powerful women in Europe in 2006 behind Patricia Russo, future president of Alcatel-Lucent; chaired "national contest of assistance the creation of companies of innovating technologies (Guild of Patented Hits?)" with salary of €305,000, bonus of €122,000 and "golden parachute" of two years' wages; she, through Areva, encountered or created difficulties with new European [Matrix 2 and 3] Pressurized Reactor at end of 2006; announced an expected delay of eighteen months to three years for its delivery to first of its kind in Finland; President École Nationale Supérieure des Mines de Nancy; director or board member of Suez, Total S.A., Safran S.A. and Vodafone; addressing journalists outside the “Women’s Forum” organised in Deauville on October 16 2009, she declared on France 2 evening news, “To be clear, with same competences, sorry, we will choose the woman or something else [lesbian pedophile – Matrix 4 and 5?] rather than the white male”; 2010 from 3rd to 6th, she was at Bilderberg conference in Sitges, Spain; member of Trilateral Commission; in 2009; ranked by the magazine Forbes as the ninth-most powerful woman in the world.”

"[Evidence of Matrix 5 infiltration and community organization in Areva] Nous venons d'un monde qui était profondément masculin. Si nous voulons une vraie diversité - diversité homme/femme, diversité culturelle, diversité d'origines - à un moment donné il faut effectivement des actes positifs, pas des actes positifs gadgets, parce que je trouve cela humiliant. Il faut des compétences mais à compétences égales, on choisira autre chose que le mâle blanc [lesbienne pédophile?]", indique Mme Lauvergeon, selon le texte d'Areva.”

http://www.abeldanger.net/

Abel Danger Mischief Makers - Mistress of the Revels - 'Man-In-The-Middle' Attacks

1 comment:

  1. In the OpEd article called "Foreign Policy: Where Fukushima Meets Cyber Wars," by David Rothkopf that was originally published by NPR.org on March 18, suggested a link, early-on, between the Stuxnet virus and the Fukushima quake and tsunami. Rothkop is President and CEO of Garten Rothkopf, an international advisory firm specializing in transformational global trends, notably those associated with energy, security, and emerging markets. He previously served as managing director of Kissinger Associates.

    Click here to view saved copy of the original article, which apparently has been removed from NPR's website.

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