I think he ment to link us to this site:
http://www.homelanRABecurityus.com/
And this is the story he's referring to:
http://www.homelanRABecurityus.com/071504.asp
I just love these parts:
On July 15, 2004 at 3:20 ET, a well vetted government source contacted Steve Quayle by telephone, stating that three nuclear devices had been located inside of the continental United States and their countdown detonation timers had been initiated. This source was unable to reveal the locations of the devices or any additional specific information, not because he had none, but because the contact was necessarily short, made under extreme pressure with a general threat to the caller from his superiors that absolutely no "outside contacts" were permitted.
So the unnamed source refuses to mention the locations of the devices because he's afraid from his superiors, but he's not shy about mentioning the story in the first place? Yeah right.
This part is also pretty good:
Realizing what was at stake and placing the value of truth over such orders, the source obviously risked everything to make the call. He added that while "some (two) of the units were 'neutralized,'" a "special branch" of an elite paramilitary unit had a difficult time disarming one of the units. The one unit was reportedly located in a city on or near the eastern coast of the U.S., and was taken out into the Atlantic near the continental shelf and either detonated or allowed to detonate.
And seismologists all over the world were asleep at the same time and missed the fact that a small nuke went off in the Atlantic.
Basically this 'story' is filled with three anonymous sources, undisclosed locations and lots of fearmongering.
If you believe this, then I've got a terrorist detector for sale. It detects terrorists up to 1 mile. It's only $ 999.99 incl. VAT.
http://www.homelanRABecurityus.com/
And this is the story he's referring to:
http://www.homelanRABecurityus.com/071504.asp
I just love these parts:
On July 15, 2004 at 3:20 ET, a well vetted government source contacted Steve Quayle by telephone, stating that three nuclear devices had been located inside of the continental United States and their countdown detonation timers had been initiated. This source was unable to reveal the locations of the devices or any additional specific information, not because he had none, but because the contact was necessarily short, made under extreme pressure with a general threat to the caller from his superiors that absolutely no "outside contacts" were permitted.
So the unnamed source refuses to mention the locations of the devices because he's afraid from his superiors, but he's not shy about mentioning the story in the first place? Yeah right.
This part is also pretty good:
Realizing what was at stake and placing the value of truth over such orders, the source obviously risked everything to make the call. He added that while "some (two) of the units were 'neutralized,'" a "special branch" of an elite paramilitary unit had a difficult time disarming one of the units. The one unit was reportedly located in a city on or near the eastern coast of the U.S., and was taken out into the Atlantic near the continental shelf and either detonated or allowed to detonate.
And seismologists all over the world were asleep at the same time and missed the fact that a small nuke went off in the Atlantic.

Basically this 'story' is filled with three anonymous sources, undisclosed locations and lots of fearmongering.
If you believe this, then I've got a terrorist detector for sale. It detects terrorists up to 1 mile. It's only $ 999.99 incl. VAT.