PETN Explosive a Favorite of Terrorists
Chemical Explosive Used in Cargo Plane Threats a Small, Powerful Agent Used in Many Recent Terror Attempts
-
Play CBS Video Video Special Report: Obama Addresses Nation on Terror Plot CBS NEWS SPECIAL REPORT: President Obama address the nation about an alleged terror plot involving suspicious packages containing explosives found on cargo planes in England and Dubai. The President says the packages were sent from Yemen.
-
This ink toner cartridge had been converted into a crude bomb using highly-explosive PETN, or pentaerythritol trinitrate. (CBS)
-
Photo Essay Terror in the Air Explosives Found on Two Chicago-Bound Planes
PETN, short for pentaerythritol trinitrate, is a widely available - and easily detected - chemical explosive that has a long history of terrorist use.
Terrorist incidents in recent years involving PETN include:
* The suspect in a failed Christmas Day 2009 airliner bombing attempt. Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab was traveling from Amsterdam when he tried to destroy the plane carrying by injecting chemicals into a package of PETN explosive concealed in his underwear.
* The Saudi government said PETN was used in an assassination attempt on the country's counterterrorism operations chief in August, 2009.
* It was also a component of the explosive that Richard Reid, the convicted "shoe bomber," used in his 2001 attempt to down an airliner.
* PETN was widely used in the plastic explosives terrorists used to blow up airplanes in the 1970s and 1980s.
According to Encyclopedia Brittanica, PETN is a highly explosive, colorless organic compound, and is related to nitroglycerin. Introduced as an explosive after World War I, PETN is "valued for its shattering force and efficiency ... and is the least stable of the common military explosives but retains its properties in storage for longer periods than nitroglycerin or cellulose nitrate (nitrocellulose) does."
Obama Keeps Travel Plans in Spite of Threat
Suspicious UK Item Sparks US Plane, Truck Sweep
Yemen Eyed as Source of Suspicious Packages
Suspicious Packages Probed as Possible Dry Run
Obama Learned of Terror Threat Late Last Night
Suspicious Packages Headed to Jewish Centers?
Gallery: Terror in the Air
PETN is the primary ingredient in detonating cords used for industrial explosions and can be collected by scraping the insides of the wire. James Crippin, a Colorado explosives expert, told CBS last year it's also used in military devices and found in blasting caps. PETN is the high explosive of choice because it is stable and safe to handle, but it requires a primary explosive to detonate it, he said.
Addressing the 2009 Christmas Day bombing use of PETN, Crippin and law enforcement officials told CBS modern airport screening machines could have detected the chemical. Airport "puffer" machines - the devices that blow air onto a passenger to collect and analyze residues - would probably have detected the powder, as would bomb-sniffing dogs or a hands-on search using a swab.
However, most passengers in airports only go through magnetometers, which detect metal rather than explosives.
This would not have applied to Thursday night's attempts, which involved cargo planes rather than passengers carrying the explosive.
©MMX, CBS Interactive Inc.. All Rights Reserved.
-
Play CBS Video
Top Gear's Wild Ride
-
Play CBS Video
Jane Goodall and Her Chimps
-
Play CBS Video
Top Gear: Zero to "60 Minutes"
-
Play CBS Video
Unemployment Benefits: The 99ers
-
Play CBS Video
Jerusalem: City of David
-
Play CBS Video
Jane Goodall: Still Saving the Chimps at 76
-
Play CBS Video
Historic Film: Market Street 1906
-
Play CBS Video
Homeless Veterans: Stand Down
-
Play CBS Video
The Stewart/Colbert Rally: On Target or Overkill?
-
Play CBS Video
Eminem's Road to Stardom
-
Play CBS Video
Nelson Mandela's Memoirs
-
Play CBS Video
Wall Street: The Speed Traders





Like this Story? Share it: