The History of
Biological Weaponization
~~~~~~~~~~~~
The following study is from Chapter Four
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BEGINNINGS
How it began. The Soviet germ weapon program began in the 1920s and
gradually grew into a mammoth operation. The objective was to develop
weapons capable of infecting people with anthrax, typhus, and other
diseases. Stalin spent large amounts of money on the project.
We get involved. Back then, the United States had no germ weapons.
By the late 1930s, with intelligence agencies warning that Tokyo and
Berlin had biological weapons, Washington began to mobilize against germ
attacks in 1942. President Franklin D. Roosevelt publicly denounced the
germ warfare plans of the enemy, even while preparing to retaliate with
similar ones. George W Merck, president of the drug company, Merck &
Co., was placed in charge of the new project.
Fort Detrick. The army base at Fort Detrick, Maryland, was selected
as the place where the research should begin. It would eventually become
an immense U.S. biological weapons center.
When World War II ended. Meanwhile, in 1946 at Sverdlovsk, the
Soviets set up a factory that specialized in anthrax. The next year,
outside Zagorsk, they built a complex for making weapons out of viruses,
including smallpox.
The outbreak of the Cold War and the Korean War in 1951 led Washington
to put new emphasis on planning for germ battles, and rapid expansion of
facilities took place at Fort Detrick. Nuclear testing was already
occurring both in the Soviet Union and the United States.
Spraying San Francisco. In one experiment, U.S. scientists sprayed
mild germs (Sarratia marcescens) on San Francisco, to assess the ability
of pathogens to spread through urban centers. The germs were meant to be
harmless. However, they were not harmless enough. Eleven patients were
admitted to Standard University Hospital with sarratia infection. One
patient, Edward J. Nevin, died. The physicians were so astonished at the
outbreak of a totally rare disease that they wrote it up in a medical
journal. Years later, in 1981, the government denied any responsibility
and the judge dismissed a lawsuit (Cole, Clouds of Secrecy, pp. 52-54,
75-104).
Clusters of anthrax. Another U.S. project consisted of cluster
bombs, each of which held 536 bomblets. Upon hitting the ground, each
bomblet would emit a little more than an ounce of anthrax mist. This
terrible disease, if untreated, kills nearly every infected person (a very
high mortality rate, even compared with the Bubonic plague and most other
pathogens).
Practice runs. A substance, something like anthrax, was used in
practice sessions against St. Louis, Minneapolis, and Winnipeg, cities
whose climates and sizes were considered similar to Kiev, Leningrad, and
Moscow. Code named Project Saint Jo, the clandestine tests involved 173
releases of noninfectious aerosols (CBW Conventions Bulletin, June 2000,
pp. 16-19).
In 1956, the Soviet defense minister, Georgi Zhukov, told a Communist
Party Congress that any modern war would certainly include the use of
biological weapons (Sidell et al., Medical Aspects, p. 54). When American
intelligence learned of that statement, it energized our bioweapons
program even more.
The same year, American U-2 spy planes began flying over the Soviet
Union. By that time, the Russians had built many secret bases throughout
the nation, which were developing and producing germ weapons.
Island in the Aral Sea. Shortly afterward, an American U-2 spy
plan, flying high over a desolate island in the Aral Sea, photographed
dense clusters of buildings and odd geometric grids which CIA agents
recognized as belonging to a biological weapons base (Mayday: Eisenhower,
Khrushchev and the U-2 Affair, p. 121).
The bull's eye ring pattern was identical to one at our Utah desert
biological testing base, where roads, sensors, electrical poles, and test
subjects were placed at increasing distances from germ sprayers.
Germ factories. By the late 1950s, the U.S. was building factories
capable of producing enough pathogens and biological toxins to fight wars.
But, officially, they were only doing that which was needed to defend
against such attacks.
Q fever. In 1956, the Pine Bluff Arsenal, an army base in the woods
of northern Arkansas, was turned into a weapons factory producing
bacteria, including tularemia. Soon it expanded into virus production.
Before long, it was also producing Q fever (Sidell, et al., Medical
Aspects, pp. 50-51, 429).
Q fever is a relatively mild disease which was meant, not to kill enemy
troops, but cripple them with chills, coughing, headaches, hallucinations,
and fevers of up to 104° F It was thought that sick soldiers would cause
more problems to the enemy in a war than dead ones. Another virus was
Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE), a horrible disease.
THE 1960s
Nixon was absent. President Eisenhower was briefed on Fort
Detrick's advances just before he left the White House. The full meeting
of the National Security Council occurred on February 18, 1960. But
Richard Nixon, the vice president, was absent. He was preparing for his
run for president. By this time, researchers had found ways to concentrate
the diseases and extend their storage lives from one to three years.
Under Kennedy. Spending on biological weapons greatly increased
after John F Kennedy took office in January 1961. The new secretary of
defense, Robert McNamara, along with the Joint Chiefs of Staff thoroughly
analyzed the program and were satisfied that the new weapons would prove
very handy in case of war, especially those (such as Q fever) which could
cripple the enemy's troops rather than kill them. Caring for injured
soldiers would cause more problems than disposing of dead ones. The
development of virus weapons was accelerated (Regis, Biology of Doom, pp.
185-186).
Tests were made in both the Pacific and Alaska. The hundreds of
personnel involved in these tests were coordinated from Fort Douglas, near
Salt Lake City.
Improving smallpox. As we became more involved in the Vietnam War,
work focused on improving smallpox and its delivery. This ancient disease
was highly contagious, and killed about a third of Its victims, mainly
from blood loss, cardiovascular collapse, and secondary infections as
pustules spread over the body (New York Times, June 15, 1999).
It was during this time that biologists at Fort Detrick learned how to
extend the life of the variola (smallpox) virus by refrigerating it in a
special way which made use of freeze drying. In connection with this, an
ominous discovery was made: Freeze drying would kill some microbes, but
not smallpox (Hahon, Screening Studies, pp. 15, 55). This meant they could
be stored for an indefinite period of time. Methods were devised for
making it into a fine powder and spraying it.
Another fake test. In May 1965, Fort Detrick scientists packed fake
smallpox powder in suitcases- and sprayed it in
Washington National (now Reagan International) Airport, just across the
Potomac from the Capital.
The resultant report concluded that one in every twelve travelers would
have become infected, quickly spreading the disease throughout the nation,
and that smallpox powder would be an excellent choice for terrorism
against a foreign power.
A special warfare advantage is that its incubation period is a full
twelve days before the first symptoms (malaise, headache, fever, and
vomiting) begin to occur and medical diagnosis is made.
Our military leaders considered applying smallpox to the Ho Chi Minh
Trail in Vietnam. But the anger caused by a fearful spread of the disease
throughout southern Asia, and the quick retaliation likely to come from
Chinese and Soviet stockpiles, were feared. So the project was abandoned.
Protests begin. Nearly all of the information you have just read
was not generally known back then (nor is much of it known today).
Nevertheless, by the late 1960s, the American public had gradually become
aware that biological weapons were being made at Fort Detrick, Crowds of
Vietnam anti-war protesters gathered at its entrance. Books opposed to
germ warfare began being published (Susan Wright, ed., Preventing a
Biological Arms Race;.S.M. Hersh, America's Hidden Arsenal; etc.).
Nixon calls an end. Then, on November 25, 1969, Richard Nixon
announced the end of biological weapon testing. In January, Nixon also
stopped all our chemical weapons programs. The scientists were told to
focus their work on "germ defense," not germ attack.
But no limits were set on the quantities of dangerous microbes or
chemicals which could be used in that research. So our stockpiles were not
reduced.
Overseas: business as usual. But our biological/ chemical defense
program had been greatly damaged. Our scientists were well-aware of the
fact that it takes 18 months to develop a weapons-grade agent and ten
years to develop a good vaccine against it. They also knew that the Soviet
Union would not stop their deadly projects, just because we had.
By that time, China was also working on chemical and biological
weaponization projects. Soon after, certain Near Eastern nations would
begin doing the same.
THE 1970s
The Senate is angry. In the fall of 1975. Senate hearings uncovered
a number of astonishing projects, plans, and plots by our BW (biological
warfare) scientists, working with the military.
At least 16 different, terrible diseases were stockpiled, mostly at
Fort Detrick. The single largest item was anthrax.
The germ treaty. That same year, 1975, an international germ treaty
took effect. All BW arsenals throughout the world were to be totally
destroyed within three years. How wonderful if that had happened! But it
did not take place.
Soviets in fast forward. Shortly afterward, secret papers smuggled
out of the Soviet Union revealed that Soviet leaders were continuing to
amass and develop germ weapons. Then, in 1978, a senior Soviet diplomat at
the UN defected to the United States (Arkady Shevchenko, Breaking with
Moscow, pp. 34, 172-174, 179, 202). But his warnings, like those in the
secret papers, were largely ignored by our leaders. They did not believe
him.
The Sverdlovsk accident. Then, in October-1979, a Russian language
newspaper fort Russian immigrants living in Germany revealed something
important. Newly arrived immigrants told of a thousand Russians living in
a village close to Sverdlovsk, an industrial complex in the Ural
Mountains, who had, within two weeks, died of anthrax. The report said
that Soviet troops quickly entered the area and spread fresh dirt over the
ground (Jeff Goldberg, Plague Wars, pp. 71-74).
This story went around the world. U.S. intelligence compared data and
photos and verified activity in that area at the time specified. It was
clear that an accident had occurred and the Soviets were, indeed,
continuing to produce, refine, and stockpile biological weapons.
Deadly anthrax. The anthrax bacillus can enter the human body in
three ways: into the lungs by breathing spores, into the digestive tract
by eating infected livestock, or into scrapes or open sores on the skin.
Bacteria from spores in the lungs produce several toxins that attack
cells. The first symptoms are coughing and fatigue, then a brief recovery
as the body fights the infection. This is usually followed by respiratory
failure and death. But a major drawback in attacking an enemy with anthrax
is that the spores can persist in the soil for decades.
THE 1880s
Reagan approves. In January 1981, Ronald Reagan took office; and,
soon after, some of his researchers gathered evidence that the Soviet
Union was working on a two-track plan: Stockpile old-fashioned germ
weapons, such as anthrax, while developing advanced, bioengineered
pathogens.
A research paper, issued by the army's Drugway center in Utah, warned
that such highly developed germs could be used to make highly concentrated
weapons. In fact, genetic manipulation could change such diseases as
anthrax, so they could not be treated by any medicine or protected against
by vaccines.
In early 1984, Reagan ordered more money given to the military and
intelligence to assess what was happening in certain foreign nations. In
April, his administration told the public of the danger. Shortly
afterward, the Wall Street Journal began a series of seven articles,
warning about the dangers of super-germ weapons (Wall Street Journal,
April 23, 1984, et al.).
More congressional hearings followed. America was awakening to the
danger. Under Reagan, all types of new military weapons were produced.
Biodefense alone was given $91 million annually. We started inventing our
own "super bugs."
In the name of defense. By this time, our leaders were declaring
that we had not violated the earlier biological weapons treaty, since all
research was only done for purposes of defense. This "biological
defense" research between 1980 and 1986 produced 51 projects which
produced strange, new bacteria and viruses; 32 which increased toxin
production; 23 which no vaccine could resist; 14 which could not be
diagnosed; and 3 which no drug could treat.
Urgent call for vaccine. In December 1984, a paper was produced by Fort
Detrick researchers, which, urgently called for the stockpiling of large
amounts of anthrax and botulinum vaccine to inoculate two million soldiers
against attack.
By 1985, the army asked the nation's pharmaceutical manufacturers to
develop an improved anthrax vaccine, since the only one available
frequently caused a variety of negative effects, some of them long-term.
To add to the problem, that vaccine did not protect against all types of
anthrax.
Brain-damaged children. But no drug company wanted to sign a
contract. A rising number of lawsuits had been hitting the courts. Parents
were suing the pharmaceutical companies because of vaccines which had
caused brain damage and death to their children. Many immense judgments
had been awarded by sympathetic juries.
The Michigan plant. So the army turned to the only licensed
manufacturer of anthrax in America, a decades old facility with run-down
buildings and equipment owned by the Michigan Department of Public Health.
Brushing aside concerns, on September 29, 1988, the army signed its
first-ever contract to purchase large quantities of anthrax vaccine. The
initial order was for 300,000 doses. The army bought the equipment and
gave Michigan five years (till September 1993) to deliver them.
Iraq also doing it. A few months earlier, in June, it was learned
that Iraq, under Saddam Hussein's leadership, was beginning to build its
own biological weapons stockpile. By that date, intelligence reports
disclosed that Baghdad had already used Clostridium botulinum (botulism
mold) to make a deadly toxin said to be 10,000 times more lethal than
nerve gas. Iraq was said to be working on large quantities of anthrax and
other biological agents. Reports had even disclosed that Saddam Hussein
had scientists preparing things useful for assassination of selected
individuals, and that his son-in-law, Hussein Kamel, was personally in
charge of the research work.
Made in the U.S.A. But that was not all: U.S. intelligence revealed
that the Iraqis were buying their starter germs from an American company,
the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC). Without such starter germs,
Saddam's germ warfare development program could not go forward. We
provided what was needed for him to get started in business (Defense
Intelligence Agency, report dated June 28, 1988).
The ATCC, at that time located in Maryland on the outskirts of
Washington, D.C., housed the world's largest collection of germ strains,
including the especially virulent variants of anthrax and botulinum which
our germ warfare experts had developed in the 1950s.
The ATCC sold from its stockpile to overseas nations, so their
scientists could find ways to improve the health of their citizens. At
least, that was the plan. Licenses to purchase the most virulent strains
could easily be obtained from the Department of Commerce.
The first purchase had been made in May 1986, when ATCC sold an
assortment of terrible disease germs to the University of Baghdad (ATCC
batch No. 010072; date of shipment: May 2, 1986). Included among them were
three different types of anthrax, five of botulinum, and three of brucella
(which causes brucellosis, an incapacitating livestock disease).
However, U.S. officials expressed little concern. Iraq was considered a
friendly power in its fight against Iran, which earlier had held U.S.
hostages. They even seemed not to be disturbed when Iraq used nerve gas on
Kurds in northern Iraq. No calls were placed to ATCC, notifying them to
stop selling to Iraq-or anyone else.
Three months after the intelligence report had been submitted to U.S.
government leaders, a second large shipment of germs was sent to Iraq on
September 29, 1988. It included four types of anthrax, including strain
11966, a type of specially deadly anthrax developed by Fort Detrick in
1951 for germ warfare.
The order was placed by the Iraqi Ministry of Trade's Technical and
Scientific Materials Import Division (TSMID). Even though we had earlier
identified TSMID as a front for Baghdad's germ warfare program, the State
Department permitted the shipment to be sent.
Closing the barn door. It was not until February 23, 1989, that the
Commerce Department banned sales of anthrax and dozens of other pathogens
to Iraq, Iran, Libya, and Syria (all of which had earlier been able to buy
virulent germs from ATCC). By that time, it was too late.
Drug resistant germs. It was becoming obvious that microbes were
becoming increasingly resistant to antibiotics and other medicinal drugs.
This included drug resistant tuberculosis, new varieties of E. coli, and
AIDs. Other diseases were becoming harder to treat. How would we deal with
drug-resistant germs sent to us by foreign powers?
Funding refused. Throughout 1989 and the next year, an effort was
made to obtain government funding for defenses against this threat. But
the General Accounting Office said the project requests, totaling $47
million including toxic germ items, did not involve "valid
threats" (GAO, special report, December 1990, p. 2). Senator John
Glenn agreed and helped quash efforts to obtain the funding.
Big news. By 1989, the Soviets were still considered a problem, yet
it was thought that they had shut down their germ weapon projects. But, in
October, a leading Soviet biologist (Vladimir Pasachnik) defected to
Britain. He had been the director of the Institute for Ultra-Pure
Biological Preparations in Leningrad, one of many research and development
sites.
Pasachnik revealed that over 10,000 Soviet scientists were hard at work
on projects to produce both the worst possible kind of microbes and ways
to best deliver them to the enemy. Long-range missiles had been
constructed which could carry them great distances. Cruise missiles were
able to fly low and spray them in the air.
For the first time, our leaders had the opportunity to actually learn
what was happening in the Soviet GW (germ warfare) program.
The Soviets had even perfected a type of bubonic plague, which could
not be defended against or treated. Pasachnik disclosed that they had
packed a dry powdered form of the disease into bombs, rocket warheads, and
artillery shells. Yet this was only one of many Soviet germ warfare
projects.
Investigators found that Pasachnik was able to provide detailed
information and freely admitted when he did not know the answer to a
question. Yet, in spite of this, U.S. leaders hesitated. Was Pasachnik
really telling the truth? Once again, nothing was done.
THE 1990s
Awakened by the Gulf War. By June 1990, our intelligence was
focusing on Al Tuwaitha, near Baghdad, and suspecting that it was an
important germ warfare production facility.
Then, on August 2, Saddam's army invaded Kuwait. It was obvious that we
had waited too long. Hussein had biological warfare capability, and our
defenses were inadequate. We lacked detection devices for airborne anthrax
spores; they would not be developed by the January 15, 1991, deadline that
was set by the UN for Iraq's withdrawal from Kuwait. There was also little
likelihood of having enough vaccine by that time. The antiquated Michigan
anthrax vaccine facility was not able to produce enough.
Warning our ships. On August 6, the U.S. Navy sent its commanders a
warning, that Iraq might have germ weapons which could be used against
ships 25 miles away or closer. "The Iraqis would deploy these agents
if needed" (Navy Operational Intelligence Center Report No. 0604327,
August 6, 1990).
Already stockpiled. Two days later, another intelligence report
noted that Saddam already had "substantial amounts of botulinum
toxin" which was "probably weaponized." Other germs being
developed, or already available for weaponization, included cholera,
anthrax, staphylococcus enterotoxin (SEB), and clostridium perfringens.
"It is assessed that Iraqi forces will use BW [biological weapons]
only as a last resort" (Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center,
Special Weekly Wire, 3290(C)(U), August 8, 1990).
Anthrax shots begin. On December 17, Colin Powell recommended to
Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, that inoculations should begin right
away. President G.H.W. Bush approved it. The army began urging the FDA to
permit it to give the botulinum vaccine to U.S. soldiers without obtaining
the "informed consent" normally required of patients given
experimental, unapproved drugs. The FDA reluctantly gave permission. That
decision laid the seeds of grief for many Americans in coming years.
The Pentagon gave anthrax shots to 150,000 Persian Gulf soldiers, many
of whom later developed the mysterious "Gulf War Syndrome."
Another question concerned what to do with the remains of U.S. soldiers
killed by a germ attack. In response, a memo from Fort Detrick said that
the remains would have to be soaked in a powerful chlorine bleach. Only
then could they be safely sent to the States for burial.
At the war's end. After repeated bombings and 100 hours of action,
the sudden end of the Gulf War meant that Saddam did not have to release
his germs.
But it was discovered later that many of our "smart" bombs
had not hit their targets - and Iraq's germ
warfare plants, which were bigger and more in number than we had earlier
suspected, were largely intact.
Russians still busy. Vladimir Pasachnik's disclosures turned out to
be correct. By January 1991, we had far more evidence that Russia had an
immense germ warfare program. But Russian leadership continued to deny
that it was producing biological weapons.
Inspections begin. On August 2, 1991, the first team of United
Nations Special Commission (UNSCOM) inspectors had arrived in Baghdad.
UNSCOM spent four years and repeated trips trying, in vain, to actually
see what CIA intelligence had discovered by the fall of 1991.
Alibek defects. In the autumn of 1992, Kanatjan Alibekov (who later
changed his name to Ken Alibek) defected from Russia and arrived in
America. He was debriefed for over a year. Alibek had worked in Soviet
germ warfare plants for 17 years and had risen to become the second in
command of Biopreparat, which U.S. intelligence had been tracking for
years. Biopreparat was the central agency in charge of all chemical/
biological weaponization production throughout Russia.
Alibek told the Americans that Russia had secretly produced hundreds of
tons of anthrax, smallpox, and plague germs for use against the United
States and its allies. Tens of thousands of people were employed at over
40 sites, spread across Russia and Kazakhstan.
He also told the techniques used to accomplish this, including
breakthrough methods devised after the U.S. stopped its own germ program
in 1969.
First Trade Center bomb. Thirty-five days after Bill Clinton took
office, a bomb exploded in the basement of the World Trade Center. Among
the results of this wakeup call was renewed interest in developing and
stockpiling vaccines against biological weapons.
Iraq hard at work. Meanwhile, Iraq was rapidly improving its own
germ-making facilities. An Iraqi clerk told the UNSCOM team that Iraq's
large Technical and Scientific Materials Import Division (TSMID) was
actually part of their intelligence services. By the mid-1990s, British
and German firms had sold nearly 40 tons of microbial food (needed to mass
produce germs) to TSMID. Iraq had purchased far more than it needed for
normal research and medical treatment. Yet as early as the late 1980s, the
CIA had already identified the true role of TSMID.
South African stockpile. By the mid-1990s, both Iraq and Libya were
trying to buy germs from South Africa. The Apartheid regime in South
Africa had, for years, been developing a stockpile of anthrax, botulinum
toxin, ebola, Marburg, and HIV virus (the cause of AIDS), to use against
an uprising of blacks.
When the government suddenly collapsed in 1994, Libyan leader, Muammar
Qadaffi, sent agents to purchase supplies and hire out-of-work scientists.
They especially wanted Wouter Basson, who had been in charge of South
Africa's former germ warfare program.
Tokyo attack. On March 19, 1995, a nerve gas attack was carried out
in a Tokyo subway, using sarin, which sickened thousands of people.
Eventually, the leaders of Aum Shinrikyo were jailed. It was later learned
that the cult had acquired some of its materials from ATCC, that Maryland
germ center, as well as from Russia.
Oklahoma bombing. One month later, on April 19, the Alfred P Murrah
Federal Building in Oklahoma City was bombed. Nearly two hundred people
died. Although no chemical or germ weapons were used, it was also a
terrorist attack, the largest ever to occur in the U.S. up to that time.
First time inside a Russian germ facility. Stepnogorsk is a place
you may never have heard about. It is a city in Kazakhstan which had been
built in 1982 as part of the Scientific Experimental and Production Base (SEPE).
This was the most advanced of all Soviet germ warfare plants, and the only
one on the edges of Russia. When Kazakhstan broke away from Moscow in
1991, its leaders wanted closer relations with America, and let them
examine the now-empty production facilities.
Andy Weber, a young diplomat stationed at the American embassy in
Kazakhstan, led the inspection team. Inside just one structure, Building
221, they saw ten 20 ton fermentation vats, each four stories tall. Each
one could hold 20,000 liters of fluid. The building was as long as two
football fields. Yet it was only one of more than 50 buildings.
Building 221, alone, could produce 300 tons of anthrax in just 220
days, enough to fill many ICBMs.
Yet the Stepnogorsk complex was just one of at least six Soviet
production facilities.
Immense production. American intelligence was beginning to realize
the astounding fact of what had been accomplished. Begun in 1973, by the
late 1980s, the Soviet germ warfare program had employed over 60,000
people, run by the military with an annual budget of close to $1 billion;
they had stockpiled immense amounts of plague, smallpox, anthrax, and
other agents for intercontinental ballistic missiles and bombers.
Two questions. But there were two questions: First, what had
happened to all that germ stockpile?
Second, where were the hundreds of scientists and technicians who had
once worked here? At its peak, Stepnogorsk alone had 700 scientists and
top-level technicians. Now there were only 180. Where were the rest? Were
they driving taxis or farming or had they been hired by foreign nations?
Fortunately, young Weber was fluent in Russian, and he set to work to
find answers. He had abundant opportunities, for the U.S. government found
he was very effective at obtaining uranium transfers to the U.S. It was
Weber who first learned of the existence of Stepnogorsk, during a hunting
trip with a friend who was a high-placed Kazakh official.
Vector. Then there was Vector. The defector, Alibek, had earlier
identified this remote location in western Siberia as the Soviet's largest
and most sophisticated virus facility. Russia had secretly moved its
smallpox samples there from Moscow, in violation of a 1992 treaty. That
treaty broke down in 1995, when the Russians refused to permit the
Americans to visit Vector and other facilities. Obviously, they were still
being used to store and work on germ weapons. It would not be till several
years later that we would be able to enter that facility.
Scientists for hire. One evening during supper, Gennady Lepyoshkin,
a former Soviet colonel who had managed the Stepnogorsk plant after Ahibek
transferred to Moscow in late 1987, told Weber that Iran had repeatedly
tried to recruit remaining scientists and technicians at Stepnogorsk. But,
so far, they had not succeeded. But this could not continue forever.
Everyone at Stepnogorsk was impoverished; some were close to starvation.
Lepyoshkin asked for U.S. help to retrain these scientists at something
they could use to support themselves. Later, Weber relayed the message.
But, for a time, little was done.
The Aral Sea site. Lepyoshkin offered to show Weber other secret
germ sites in Kazakhstan. Especially important to the Americans would be a
visit to Vozrozhdeniye Island, located 850 miles east of Moscow, and the
Soviet Union's largest open-air testing site. Located on an island in the
midst of the shrinking Aral Sea, it had been used to test brucellosis, Q
fever, plague, glanders, tularemia, and even smallpox. ("Vozrozhdeniye"
means "Renaissance" or "new life" in Russian.)
Buried treasure. After arriving there, Lepyoshkin told his new
friend, Andy Weber, a very deep secret: When the Soviets lost Kazakhstan,
they put their cache of anthrax into 66 stainless steel canisters, shipped
them on a train with 24 cars, poured bleach into the canisters, then
buried them under three to five feet of sand on this desolate island.
This discovery enabled the Americans to later dig up some of that
anthrax, test it, discover that part of it was still alive, and learn its
potency. There was enough buried anthrax to kill, many times over, every
person in the world.
Waiting to be dug up. But, when others learned the secret (now
rather well-known or I would not be mentioning it here), they could come
to the lonely, totally deserted island and dig up some of the anthrax
canisters (so many that they originally filled 24 box cars) and carry them
back home! One does not even need a boat to go there, for at certain times
of the year a sandbar extends out to the island.
Thousands of gallons. Meanwhile, UNSCOM inspectors in Iraq were
trying to learn the facts. On the evening of July 1, 1995, one of the
Iraqi scientists broke down and told the truth. Rihab Taha had trained in
Britain and spoke excellent English. She told them that Iraq began its
biological weapons program in 1988, just as the Iran-Iraq War was coming
to an end. Production of germ agents began the next year. Since then,
thousands of gallons of anthrax and botulinum had been produced at Al
Hakam. The anthrax and botulinum were stored in stainless-steel tanks in a
warehouse.
Kamel exits. On August 8, Lieutenant General Hussein Kamel, a
son-in-law of Saddam Hussein, defected to Jordan. He was the highest level
Iraqi official to escape, and had been in charge of much of the special
weapons program.
Fearing that Kamel would provide the West with some inaccuracies,
Baghdad hurriedly decided to "discover" a cache of his papers,
to which they led the UNSCOM inspectors. A massive amount of information
was there.
(Shortly thereafter, when Saddam promised his son-in-law a warm, loving
welcome, Kamel returned to Baghdad, only to be shot dead by Saddam. )
Gulf War Syndrome. By 1995, thousands of Persian Gulf War veterans
were complaining of a mysterious sickness which seemed to be ruining their
lives. They insisted that their illnesses were caused by the medicines
they were given, the air they breathed, or the anthrax inoculation. But
poor records had been kept of which soldiers had received the anthrax and
botulinum shots during the war.
Faulty records. Were the anthrax shots, given to our troops during
the Gulf War, part of the cause of Gulf War Syndrome? In 1990, about
268,000 doses were sent to the military, but it reported that only 170,000
or less were given to our troops. Where are the rest? Between 1991 and
April, 1999, an additional 1.2 million doses were sold to our military.
Said to cause "little harm." On October 20, 1995, a
Defense Department slide showed a 1.3% systemicreaction level from the
anthrax vaccine. This was shown to demonstrate that little harm could come
to America's forces, if the anthrax vaccine was given. However, based on
2.4 million troops, that would equal 31,200 troops with varying degrees of
sickness!
Nerve gas explosions. On June 21, 1996, the Pentagon made a
startling announcement. For nearly five years, it had denied that any one
serving in the Gulf War had been exposed to chemical or biological
weapons. Now they admitted that, after American soldiers blew up an Iraqi
ammunition depot containing chemical weapons, tens of thousands of allied
soldiers might have been exposed to nerve gas. It was believed that
prevailing winds may have blown it toward them.
Checking further, government experts found a second incident in which
allied soldiers had blown up chemical weapons.
Anthrax for all. By the fall of 1996, the Joint Chiefs of Staff at
the Pentagon reversed themselves and approved a recommendation to
vaccinate the entire U.S. military force with anthrax vaccine. The cost
would be $2 billion. Six injections were to be taken by each of 2.4
million American military personnel.
Not so fast. Bitter complaints arose from the Gulf War veterans who
said it was the anthrax shots which caused at least part of their health
problems!
Medical experts also complained. They declared that the anthrax
vaccine had not been proven by testing to safeguard against the
aerosolized (air sprayed) form of the disease, the kind inhaled by the
lungs. (The other type is the much milder form of the disease which falls
on the skin and burrows in, a type not likely to be included in weaponized
anthrax.)
Then the FDA got into the quarrel, arguing that the Michigan anthrax
vaccine building did not follow its own manufacturing procedures, had
rusting equipment, and a dirty environment with floors and even equipment
not sanitized.
Demands were made that the current, entire Pentagon stockpile of
anthrax vaccine doses be tested for sterility, potency, and safety. But
the Pentagon balked. They knew that testing would reveal serious problems,
and they wanted to get on with the vaccinations.
In order to obtain a better report, the Pentagon sent its own
inspection team to the Michigan plant. Military officials feared that,
even if problems were found with the vaccine, if the plant did not keep
producing vaccine, it would close its doors. Then where would they turn to
for vaccine? All the regular pharmaceutical firms had steadfastly refused
to manufacture it, knowing that the anthrax vaccine could cause health
problems in those receiving it, Efforts to begin vaccinating all our
soldiers screeched to a halt.
Weber learns more. In June 1997, Andy Weber went to Kirov in
eastern Russia in order to attend an international meeting of science
researchers, sponsored by the United States, Europe, and Japan.
One evening after a conference session, Weber went to a large
cedar-panel sauna (steam bath). Evesdropping bugs don't work well in such
places. There he met two Russian scientists of the Obolensk State Research
Center of applied Microbiology. They told him confidentially that at
Obolensk, two hours drive from Moscow, the Soviets in earlier years had
perfected dozens of strains of deadly bacteria for weaponization.
Iranian offers. They also told him that a delegation of Iranians
had recently visited Obolensk and Vector (an important former germ
warfare, center which studied viruses, not bacteria). The scientists, who
made less than $1,000 year, had been offered salaries of up to $5,000 a
month if they would come to Iran and help them on their germ warfare
program.
The Iranians said they, the Iranians, were interested in developing
germ and chemical weapons, to be used not only against people but crops
and livestock. They also were interested in Russian genetic engineering.
Ominous developments. Several impoverished Russians from Moscow
institutions had already accepted positions in Iran or agreed to provide
it with information by computer.
Obolensk alone had lost 54% of its staff between 1990 and 1996,
including 28% of its top scientists. How many had gone to Iran or some
other foreign country was unknown. (U.S. intelligence sources learned that
similar offers had come from Iraq and North Korea.)
At the time Weber was told this, Washington was spending much less than
$1 million a year, helping Russian biologists. This was very small,
considering that there were over 15,000 Russian biologists; most of them
were trained in research and development of biological weapons.
After the Kirov conference, Weber traveled to other places in Russia.
At almost every stop, he learned that Iranian agents had been there
already, making offers for workers.
One Russian scientist told Weber that, by the year 2015, Russia would
be 60% Muslim. Fearful of a Muslim takeover, Russian leaders had secretly
moved their stockpiles of exotic disease germs from the designated
repository in Moscow to Vector, which was in faraway central Siberia.
Finally inside Vector. In September, 1997, Weber was at last
permitted to investigate what was inside Vector, that immense facility
with over a hundred buildings, located in a desolate part of western
Siberia. Many meetings by Weber in Russia and conferences of officials in
Washington followed.
Joint research projects. Finally, in the fall of 1997, the U.S.
agreed that it should begin joint research projects with scientists at
Vector. In this way, the U.S. could learn more about what was taking place
and try to prevent Iran, Iraq, or China from getting its scientists.
Soon after, similar agreements were entered into with Obolensk and
other Russian research centers.
By this time, samples brought back from the eleven burial pits on the
island of Vozrozhdeniye in the Aral Sea definitely revealed that some of
that massive cache of buried anthrax, just below the surface, was still
alive and deadly.
Still secret labs. Unfortunately, by early 1998, U.S. analysts
noted that four leading Russian military labs remained totally closed to
the Americans. It was feared that some of the money used to help
scientists at the other labs would be shared with the military labs. We
had no idea what was happening in them.
Smallpox contract. In late November 1997, the Pentagon awarded a
$322 million, ten-year contract to DynPort, a British-American firm, to
develop and obtain licenses for smallpox and 17 other vaccines for the
military, plus a new recombinant anthrax vaccine.
New anthrax campaign. On December 15, the Pentagon announced that
the vaccination of the entire U.S. military against anthrax was to begin
soon. It would take six years and cost $130 million.
Soon after, the Michigan plant was purchased by BioPort; this was owned
by the wealthy Iranian, Fuad El-Hibri, with Myers and Ravenswaay on the
board. But it still did not seem to know how to properly manufacture
anthrax vaccine. When Pentagon officials were asked about the sloppy work
at the plant, they consistently sidestepped the question. The truth was
that the Michigan plant was their only source, and they intended to use
the vaccine coming from it, regardless of its quality controls.
Many anthrax strains. In view of all that you have learned so far
in this study, you might ask, If the enemy has so many different types of
dangerous bioweapons, knowing that our troops are to be vaccinated against
anthrax, why would not the enemy use a different agent against us
-smallpox, ebola, bubonic plague, or something else? The answer to such a
sensible question is quite obvious.
It is a known fact that there are over 1,000 different strains of
anthrax (Care McNair, Dynport Vaccine Company, Maryland, quoted in Dave
Eberhart, Anthrax, October 29, 2001).
Genetically modified anthrax. Much of what the defector, Ken Alibek,
had told our intelligence in 1992 had been ignored. One thing he had said
was that Russia was continuing to find ways to blend ebola and smallpox.
But the December 1997 issue of Vaccine (pp. 18461850), a London-based
scientific journal, disclosed that Russian research had produced
genetically modified anthrax. The Russian strains of Bacillus anthracis
and Bacillus cereus were found to be closely related and often in soils
near one another. Based on that fact, the project was successfully carried
through to completion.
Russia, it turned out, was far more advanced in some areas of
recombinant research than we had assumed. U.S. military men and scientists
were alarmed to discover that Russia was in the process of making
"super bugs"!
Alibek goes public. In February 1998, in interviews with the New
York Times and ABC's Prime Time Live, Ken Alibek went public with the
frightening news of what was happening inside Russian biowarfare labs. He
said the Soviet Union had planned that World War III include
"hundreds of tons" of anthrax bacillus and scores of tons of
smallpox and plague viruses. He also said that the Soviet labs had made
hybrid germs from ebola and smallpox, which no vaccine or antibiotic could
protect against. Many Washington legislators did not know that Alibek even
existed.
Pscho germs. A new development was the discovery about the time of
the former Soviet Union effort to use genetically engineered germs and
toxins to cause psychological and physiological changes in people. The
program involved making changes in peptides (short chains of amino acids
that send signals to the central nervous system), to alter moods, sleep
patterns, and heart rhythms- all without
detection. They could also be used to produce death. The discovery was
also made that these drugs were being used on patients in a hospital
located close to that Russian research center!
Smallpox canisters. Soon after, we found that smallpox had also
been tested on that Aral island, and that large amounts of it were also
buried in canisters there.
Rapid-reaction teams. On March 17, 1998, Secretary of Defense Cohen
announced that the National Guard was preparing ten rapid-reaction teams
which would rush to any locality in America attacked by chemical or
biological weapons.
25 nations. He went public with the fact that 25 nations had or
were developing chemical and biological weapons, and the expertise was
spreading rapidly through the internet. He said terrorist groups would
eventually be able to acquire those weapons. Soon after, Congress lavished
money on the new state guard program.
Vaccinations resume. In March 1998, the Pentagon began vaccinating
ourr troops in the Near East against anthrax. But over two dozen sailors
on two U.S. navy carriers refused them, fearing for their own health. They
were about to be court-martialed, but managed to get emails to Mark Zaid,
an extremely competent Washington-based attorney who was already handling
a case about the Gulf War Syndrome cover-up.
Zaid makes discoveries. Zaid filed a lawsuit under FIA (Freedom of
Information Act) for every document connected to the anthrax vaccine
program.
He quickly found that, in 1998, the Michigan vaccine facility had been
sold BioPort, a new company whose owners included Willam J. Crowe, Jr.,
the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Government contracts for
massive quantities of anthrax vaccine could be lucrative.
Zaid also discovered that, for years, the FDA had been reporting on
deficiencies at that Michigan plant. The latest inspection, on February
1998, was not much better. Many deficiencies still needed to be corrected.
There was something wrong with almost every phase of the production
process. -Yet its vaccines were already being injected into U.S.
servicemen overseas!
He also learned that the anthrax vaccine had been significantly
altered. The new vaccine was quite different from the original one. The
manufacturing process was changed, the strain of anthrax was different,
and the added ingredients were changed "in order to increase the
yield of protective antigen" (Heemstra, Anthrax, pp. 18-19).
Another researcher, Redmond Handy, uncovered many secret U.S. files.
For example, one document from Fort Detrick revealed this:
"There is no vaccine in current use which will safely and
effectively protect military personnel against exposure to this hazardous
bacterial agent." "Highly reactogenic, [it] requires multiple
boosters to maintain immunity and may not be protective against all
strains of the anthrax bacillus" (Redmond Handy, Analysis of DOD's
Anthrax Vaccine Immunization Program (AVIP)," report presented at the
Call for Amnesty Press Conference, Washington, D.C., February 12, 2001, p.
7).
Delayed approval. It was not until two months after the military began
vaccinating troops for anthrax that, in May 1998, Secretary Cohen
officially gave approval for it to be done.
U.S. military within U.S. In the latter part of June, John Hamre,
Secretary of Defense, told NATO officials that the Pentagon was thinking
of appointing a regional commander to be in charge of "homeland
defense." The plan was, in case of a bio-weapons attack, to send the
national guard to set up field hospitals, bury the dead, and help care for
the living.
But civil liberties experts were alarmed and, pointing to the Posse
Comitatus Act enacted after the Civil War, declared it would be illegal
for the federal government to interfere with activities within the states.
The U.S. military would be involved in domestic law enforcement. The
Pentagon immediately backed down. It would not be until 2002 that a
Homeland Security Agency would finally be enacted into law.
$2 billion requested. On January 22, 1999, Clinton announced his
decision to ask Congress for $2.8 billion to avoid and prepare for
biochemical attacks. Donna Shalala, Secretary for Health and Human
Services, commented that it was the first time in U.S. history that the
public-heath system was being integrated into national security planning.
Our stockpiles not destroyed. It was only a few months later that
the White House had to decide whether America should destroy its remaining
stocks of smallpox virus. But experts immediately stepped forward,
declaring that not only Russia but other nations had smallpox stockpiles.
A special committee, formed by the National Academy of Science to study
the matter, decided in March that it was not wise to destroy our smallpox
stocks.
Shocking facts. About a month later, William Patrick, a germ
weapons expert, revealed a few facts to a special military conference at
Maxwell Air Force Base:
Dry agent production (in metric tons per year) during peak production
periods by the U.S. and former Soviet Union (S.U.):
Tularemia: U.S. 1.6 / S.U. 15,000
Q fever: U.S. 1.1 / S.U. 0
Anthrax: U.S. 0.9 / S.U. 45,000
Encephalitis: U.S. 0.8 / S.U. 150
Botulinum: U.S. 0.2 / S.U. 0
bubonic plague: U.S. 0 / S.U. 15,000
smallpox: U.S. 0 / S.U. 100
Glanders: U.S. 0 / S.U. 2,000
Marburg virus: U.S. 0 / S.U. 250
Exposure to no more than 10,000 anthrax germs, all of which would fit
comfortably into the period at the end of this sentence -
could kill a human being. The spores are so tiny, they can slip through
the fibers of an envelope or sheet of paper.
Zaid goes public. Meanwhile, the anthrax vaccine crisis only
deepened. Mark Zaid, the attorney representing some of the first soldiers
who refused the vaccine, had obtained thousands of pages of damaging facts
about it. He began issuing press releases about his findings and sharing
copies with the media.
Soldiers refuse vaccine. By this time, hundreds of soldiers,
fearing for their health, had refused orders to take the shots. Fearing
that their example would produce a general rebellion, the military took
steps to courtmartial them.
The problem had been worsened by a spring 1998 decision by the
Pentagon, "in the interest of fairness," to also vaccinate
reservists who were not stationed in high risk areas.
Pilots quit. This decision especially angered pilots in the Air
National Guard. Many had jobs back home flying for commercial airlines.
Strong and healthy, they feared for their personal safety.
Over 260 pilots quit the Air National Guard or Air Force Reserve.
The GAO predicted a 43% total loss of pilots over the next six months. At
a cost of $6 million to train each of these combat ready pilots with eight
to ten years of experience, the total cost was $1.5 billion.
GAO testimony. At an April 1999 hearing before Chris Shay's house
subcommittee, a GAO (General Accounting Office) auditor told the
congressmen that no study had ever been made of the long-term safety of
the anthrax vaccine. "Therefore one cannot conclude there are no
long-term effects," he said. He also stated that there were questions
about how effective it was in protecting against an anthrax attack. It
appeared that the vaccine was both dangerous and useless.
Another GAO official, Sushil Sharma, revealed that the Defense
Department's brochure about the vaccine was not true when it said that the
vaccine had already been given to large numbers of "veterinarians,
laboratory workers, and livestock handlers." It had actually been
given to only a few.
Records missing. It was also discovered that there was no record of
who received the anthrax shots in the Gulf War, yet the Pentagon had been
claiming for years that the Desert Storm illnesses were not caused by the
vaccine (Hearing before the Subcommittee on National Security, Veterans
Affairs, and International Relations of the Committee on Government
Reform, 106th Cong., 1st sess., Apr. 29, 1999, pp. 10-20).
Protecting BioPort. As if that was not bad enough, Zaid, the
attorney, disclosed that he had come across documents which had been
drafted earlier by the army in order to indemnify companies making the
anthrax vaccine! BioPort in Michigan was so afraid of the dangers of the
anthrax vaccine it was manufacturing, it wanted governmental protection
against lawsuits that would pour in when Americans were injured by
receiving it or when it proved ineffective in protecting against an
anthrax attack!
Long-term study promised. The Pentagon replied that there really
was nothing to worry about, but a month later it promised to begin "a
long-term study" of the vaccine's safety. This was more than a year
after large quantities of the shots began to be given and nine years after
it had been given during the Gulf War. We are still waiting for that study
to begin.
BioPort in trouble. More trouble erupted in the autumn of 1999,
when BioPort, the Michigan company churning out the vaccine, was unable to
meet FDA standards. So far, that plant never had met them. But this time,
the FDA threatened to close down its operations.
There was danger that the firm might become financially insolvent. So,
to help the company financially (not to improve the safety of the
vaccine), the Pentagon agreed to raise the price of what it was paying the
firm per anthrax dose, from $4.36 to $10.64.
This gave the company an additional $24 million; $18.7 million of this
was immediately paid in advance. You will recall that it was BioPort which
earlier spent millions on office furniture for its executives and bonuses
for its executives.
Vaccine still flunking tests. Shortly after this, it was discovered
that nearly 1.5 million vaccine doses, manufactured at BioPort, did not
pass potency tests. Others were rejected by the FDA because it had not
followed sterility procedures! A new inspection report found over 30
deficiencies, including the fact that batches did not uniformly meet the
same specifications.
House report. The house committee investigating the anthrax vaccine
issued a special report in April 2000: "The Department of Defense
Anthrax Vaccine Immunization Program: Unproven Fbrce Protection."
Strains not defendable against vaccine. The report included the
very serious fact that gene splicing by an enemy could easily produce a
strain of anthrax which would be completely resistant to our anthrax
vaccine, making the program a "medical Maginot Line, a fixed
fortification protecting against attack from only one direction." In
other words, it was a waste of time to inject Americans-any Americans-with
anthrax vaccine (Committee on Government Reform, 106th Cong.', 2d sess.,
House Report 106-556, April 3, 2000, p. 2).
Could the same be true about the other biowarfare protection vaccines?
One example should suffice:
Variant U. In the spring of 1988, Nikolai Ustinov had died at
Vector, the Siberian smallpox research complex. He was a scientist who had
accidentally infected himself with the Marburg virus, a hemorrhagic killer
that he and his colleagues had been trying to perfect as a weapon. After
his death, his colleagues at Vector had cultured the virus that killed
him. They discovered that, inside his body the virus had changed
slightly., The new variant, according to Ken Alibek, was particularly
virulent and had been weaponized as a replacement for the original. In
Ustinov's honor, it was named "Variant U." In addition, any
vaccine prepared to defend against Marburg virus would be useless against
Marburg-U virus.
It was not difficult to produce disease variants which vaccines could
not protect against. We would have to have samples of the secret virus;
and, even if we made a vaccine, which could take years, there was a good
likelihood it would neither be safe nor protective. We were already
discovering that with our anthrax and smallpox vaccines.
2000 AND A NEW CRISIS
"Unknown effects." A March 2000 study, released by the
Institute of Medicine at the National Academy of Sciences, concluded that
there was "inadequate/insufficient evidence" to determine
whether the anthrax vaccine could cause "long-term adverse health
outcomes." It added that there was a "paucity of published, peer
reviewed literature," and those few reports only described "a
few short-term studies" (NAS Institute of Medicine, An assessment of
the Safety of the Anthrax Vaccine, A Letter Report," Washington,
D.C., March 30, 2000, pp. 5-6). In other words, almost no research had
ever been done about the safety or effectiveness of the strain of anthrax
vaccine we had, and no long-term studies had ever been made!
No official clinical research had ever been done to prove anything.
But, of course, there were thousands of service men and women known to
have been damaged by the vaccine.
More pilots quit. By this time, hundreds of reserve pilots had quit
the military. By the summer of 2000, over 400 servicemen had been
disciplined for refusing to take the shots, and 51 had been court-martialed.
A few served brief sentences in the brig.
Only the U.S. military. Because of the extreme dangers of these
anti-attack vaccines, no other nation in the world required its troops to
be vaccinated, not one! Britain made anthrax vaccinations for its troops
voluntary, and France did not give them at all.
Mock bio-attacks. In the spring of 2000, 10-day mock bio-attacks
were staged in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and Denver, Colorado. Much of
this was done on paper, some in practice sessions.
The exercise in Denver ended on May 23, as the make-believe
"epidemic" spread out of control. Estimates of how many people
would have gotten sick varied widely. Some said 3,700 plague cases with
950 deaths; others estimated more than 4,000 sick and 2,000 dead. Federal,
state, and local officials quickly proclaimed the catastrophe a successful
exercise. The entire operation cost $10 million.
Interesting question. One problem was whether scarce resources
should be devoted to treating the sick who might die or trying to stop the
spread of the epidemic. At least the government discovered that it had
lots of unanswered questions.
How the money was spent. In the fall of 2000, Amy Smithson, an
analyst at the Henry L. Stimson Center in Washington, conducted an
18-month investigation; and, among other things, he found that only $315
million of the $8.4 billion the government spent on counterterrorism in
the year 2000 was devoted to training people in cities and states to
respond to a covert bioterrorism attack. Less than 4% of that amount was
being spent outside of Washington, D.C., and only 6% to strengthen
public-health facilities, the heart of useful biodefense preparedness. The
rest was spent on faulty detectors, special vehicles, and other marginal
items (Amy Smithson and Leslie Anne Levy, Ataxia: The Chemical and
Biological Terrorism Threat and the U.S. Response, Henry L. Stimson Center).
Lots of money was being misdirected to objectives which would not protect
the public.
Teams set up. By January 2001, more than $143 million had been
spent on rapid-reaction teams (renamed Civil Support Teams) within the
National Guard. Each one was located on a military base, and many were
long distances from the cities they were supposed to protect. (The closest
one to Atlanta was 250 miles away in Florida.)
After the September 11 tragedy occurred, everything speeded up, but
there was much confusion as to what should be done, how it should be done,
who should be in charge, and how should they cooperate with one another.
Protecting another vaccine firm. In the fall of 2002, a last-minute
addition was made in secret the night before the last major budget bill
(the Homeland Defense Security Act) was passed by Congress. The addition
released Eli Lilly & Co. from liability for damage from vaccines it
sold to the public and to the military.
WHAT IS THE SOLUTION?
What is the answer? In this chapter, we have overviewed a massive
problem, caused by production of dangerous biological weapons. What is the
answer? Are there solutions, and what are they?
Treatment, not vaccination. If rapid detection, diagnosis, and
treatment methods are in place, people exposed to anthrax can be cured of
the disease. That is part of the solution. Not vaccination, but immediate
treatment of the sick!
Vaccination cannot protect against multiple strains. In Sverdlovsk,
Russia, when anthrax was accidentally released from a biowarfare facility
in 1979, when the spore cloud passed directly over a nearby ceramics
factor shop, only 10 out of 450 workers fell ill and died. This was a
fatality rate of only 2% (Redmond Handy, `Analysis of DOD's Anthrax
Vaccine Immunization Program [AVIP], " report to Call for Amnesty
Press Conference, Washington, D.C., February 12, 2001, p. 49).
Later at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, autopsy
studies were made of some of those 10 people. It revealed that they were
infected by at least four different strains of anthrax. This means that no
vaccine could have protected against such an attack!
One scientist, Paul Jackson, concluded, "The purpose of such a
mixture might have been to overwhelm the American vaccine (Jackson, quoted
in Nicholas Wade, "Tests with Anthrax Raise Fears that American
Vaccine Can be Defeated, " New York Times National, March 26, 1998).
Vaccination cannot protect against genetically altered strains. The
Russians had developed a special combined strain which would defy any
vaccine we could make against it. It is known that they have also made
gene-altered strains that could defeat their own vaccine, not only ours;
this is much more powerful.
The experts agree. Testifying before Congress in the spring of
1998, Ken Alibek, the former deputy director of the Soviet biological
warfare directorate (BioParat), said, "We need to stop deceiving
people that vaccines are the most effective protection . . In the case of
most military and all terrorist attacks with biological weapons, vaccines
would be of little use" (Dr. Ken Alibek, statement to Joint Economic
Committee of Congress, May 20, 1998).
Our leaders have known this for a long time. In a test done at Fort
Detrick in 1986, guinea pigs were immunized with our U.S. anthrax vaccine
and then given several different anthrax strains. Half of them died.
In a separate Fort Detrick study, over 50% of the guinea pigs died.
Here is an intriguing statement by an expert at a major U.S. vaccine
firm: "The great challenge was to manufacture a vaccine that will be
effective against as many as possible of the more than 1,000 known anthrax
strains."-Care McNair, Dynport Vaccine Company, Maryland, quoted in
Dave Eberhart, Anthrax; October 29, 2001.
Here is the fourfold defense that is needed. Instead of stockpiling
dangerous vaccines as an effective military strategy, military planners
should emphasize rapid detection, decontamination, and medical treatment
after exposure in the event of a confirmed attack. In addition, ways
should be developed to render the enemy's biological weapons obsolete.
Why weapon vaccines do not work. First, vaccination is useless as a
protection against deadly multi-strain diseases, Second, the vaccines
against those deadly diseases are themselves extremely dangerous to those
taking them. The evidence is abundant and obvious. The problem is that, so
far, the U.S. military and homeland defense agencies refuse to consider
these facts.
Lederberg speaks. Joshua Lederberg, Nobel Prize winner and biological
weapons expert, summarized it in these words:
"There is no technical solution to the problem of biological
weapons. It needs an ethical, human, and moral solution if it's going to
happen at all. There is no other solution."-Lederberg, quoted in
Meryl Nass M.D., `Anthrax Vaccine and the Prevention of Biological,
Warfare," p. 6.
Polls of U.S. citizens. A 1999 poll of 7,800 Americans found that
83% disapproved of the anthrax vaccine. They said it should not be given
and they did not want to receive it (USA Today, Weekend Poll, September 9,
1999). A poll of service personnel found that 77% were opposed to it (Army
Times, March 1999).
In Britain, where the anthrax vaccine was given on a voluntary basis,
80% refused it.
However, regarding the smallpox vaccine, which is also dangerous, but
lesser so, a slight majority of Americans polled say, if it were offered,
they would be willing to take it.
GLOSSARY
APHIS - Animal and Plant Inspection Service, a department of the USDA
ATCC - American Type Culture Collection, the world's largest collection
of germ strains
AVIP - The Department of Defense's massive Anthrax Vaccine Immunization
Program of our troops
BioParat - (Biopreparat) - Soviet biological warfare directorate. The
central Russian agency in charge of all chemical/biological weaponization
production
BW - Biological weapons
CDC - The Centers for Disease Control, based in Atlanta
CBW - Chemical/biological warefare
DOD - Department of Defense
FDA - Food and Drug Administration
FIA - Freedom of Information Act
GAO - General Accounting Office
GW - Germ warfare
JVAP - Joint Vaccination Acquisition Program
Pentagon - Headquarters of the DOD
POX - The skin eruptions in smallpox
SEPE - Russian Scientific Experimental and Production Base, the code
name for its bioweapons projects
TSMID - The Iraqi Ministry of Trade's Technical and Scientific
Materials Import Division. This is in charge of obtaining supplies for
their CBW program.
UNSCOM - United Nations Special Commission
USDA - U.S. Department of Agriculture
VA - Veterans Administration
VAERS - Vaccine Adverse Event Report System forms, which are often
either not recorded or lost afterward
Vaccinia - The vaccine given to protect against smallpox. It is derived
from cowpox
Variola - Variola major is the scientific name for smallpox
WHO - World Health Organization
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Twenty five outstanding books which can tell you even more about these
deadly terrorist diseases.
Alibek, Ken, with Stephen Handelman, Biohazard: The Chilling True Story
of the Largest Covert Biological Weapons Program in the World, 1999.
Cole, Leonard A., Clouds of Secrecy: The Army's Germ Warfare Tests over
Populated Areas, 1988.
Cole, Leonard A., The Eleventh Plague: Politics of Biological and
Chemical Warfare, 1977.
Covert, Norman M., Cutting Edge: A History of Fbrt Detrick, Maryland,
1943-1993 (1997).
Drell, Sidney D., Abraham B. Sofaer, and George D. Wilson (eds.), The
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