I am referring to posts on the first or second page of this thread, from where I took your quote (by the way thank you for all your interventions QuantumPion). I was not aware that my post would appear at the very end of the thread. The problem is:
1. U232 is often quoted as the solution to nuclear proliferation. i have read several times: "it is very difficult to make a bomb from a LFTR because the U233 is mixed with U232.
2. U232 comes from the reaction: Pa233 + n --> U232 + n + n + beta To avoid this, you take the Pa233 from away from the reactor for a while, till it beta-decays to U233.
Both ideas are very nice, but I think that unfortunately, you cannot have your cake and eat it. If you want to avoid the building of U232 in your power plant (which probably makes many things easier), than U232 won't help you stop proliferation.
I am not a physicist, tell me where I am wrong. Apparently, wikipedia agrees with me:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_fluoride_thorium_reactor#Removal_of_fission_products (long article, see "disadvantages", and "Proliferation risk from Protactinium separation")