April 17, 2005 15:44
| by Heather Wokusch
News that a U.S. company recently sent vials of a 1957 pandemic
flu strain to laboratories across the world by accident is only
the latest outrage from the billion-dollar boondoggle called the
federal biological weapons program.
As you might recall, the Bush administration started its "biodefence"
spending spree following the September 2001 deadly anthrax attacks,
and one of its first projects was to genetically engineer a super-resistant,
even more deadly version of the anthrax virus.
Our leaders are nuts.
Unfortunately, Project Jefferson has good company. A US Army scientist
in Maryland is currently trying to bring back elements of the 1918
Spanish flu, a virus which killed 40 million people. And a virologist
in St. Louis has been working on a more lethal form of mousepox
(related to smallpox) - just to try stopping the virus once it's
been created.
Lack of oversight and runaway spending are exacerbated by the Bush
administration's disrespect for the internationally-recognized Biological
Weapons Convention. In short, reduced pressure on weapons labs to
issue declarations and allow inspections means less accountability
- and more opportunities for secrecy and abuse.
Put bluntly, the increasing number of stateside bioweapons blunders
should come as no surprise. In February 2003, for example, the University
of California at Davis (UCD) took a full ten days to inform nearby
communities that a rhesus monkey had escaped from its primate-breeding
facility. Coincidentally, UCD had been vying for government funds
to set up its own "hot zone" biodefence lab which could
use primates for biological weapons testing. If that monkey had
been infected with Ebola, or some other virus, it's unclear when
or if the public would have been informed.
At roughly the same time that the monkey ditched UCD, the Pentagon
unearthed over 2,000 tons of hazardous biological waste in Maryland,
much of it undocumented leftovers of an abandoned germ warfare program.
Nearby, the FBI was draining a pond for clues into 2001's anthrax
attacks.
Doesn't inspire much trust in the transparency of US biological
weapons programs. And things appear only to be getting worse.
In 2004, a whopping $6 billion went up for grabs for federal biodefence
programmes, and laboratories across the country went ballistic trying
to get their hands on some of that cash. Predictably, cases of fraud
and abuse quickly surfaced.
In June 2004, for example, the Army was caught shirking inspections
at a major biodefense lab under its domain. The scandal went back
to 1999, when the Army commissioned a biological and chemical weapons-agent
lab at Tennessee's Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Oversight regulations
obligated the Army to inspect the lab each year thereafter, and
the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) were supposed to have inspected
the lab on a regular basis too.
Everything seemed to be running smoothly; in December 2003, the
committee in charge of safety at the Oak Ridge lab announced that
it "remains comfortable of (sic) the review and inspections
of the Chem/Bio Facility conducted by the CDC and the Army."
Small problem. In 2004, the Department of Energy's Inspector General
discovered that the Army actually hadn't inspected the Oak Ridge
biodefence lab for the previous three years, and that the CDC hadn't
been there for four years. Yet the lab's safety committee said it
was "comfortable" with the imaginary inspections.
Also in 2004, a military biodefence contractor called Southern
Research landed in hot water by accidentally sending live anthrax
across the country from Frederick, Maryland to the Children's Hospital
of Oakland (California). To make matters worse, it turns out that
Southern Research's lab in Frederick, Maryland didn't even maintain
the institutional biosafety committee required by federal research
rules. The punishment for these acts of gross incompetence and irresponsibility?
The Bush administration gave Southern Research the task of safeguarding
a new $30 million biological weapons facility being built near Chicago.
In September of the same year, three lab workers at the Boston
University Medical Center were accidentally exposed to a potentially
lethal biowarfare agent called tularaemia bacterium. The lab didn't
report the tularemia infections until two months later though -
after it had won a contract to build a new, $178 million biodefence
laboratory.
Concerns about lack of transparency and monetary waste aside, the
administration's bioweapons buildup raises obvious ethical problems.
Why should the U.S. create newer, even deadlier viruses? Who are
these catastrophic weapons going to be tested on? What populations
will they ultimately be used against?
These questions take on urgent meaning given the Bush administration's
military adventurism coupled with the US media's poor coverage regarding
war victims. For example, eyewitnesses to the late-2004 attack on
Fallujah claimed that US forces used poisonous gases, and "weird"
bombs that exploded into fires that burned the skin despite water
being thrown on the burns - a telltale sign of napalm or phosphorus
bombs.
UK reaction to the revelation was swift and strong, with demands
that Prime Minister Blair remove British troops from Iraq until
the US ceased from using such savage weaponry. Labour MP Alice Mahon
demanded that Blair make "an emergency statement to the Commons
to explain why this is happening. It begs the question: 'Did we
know about this hideous weapon's use in Iraq?'"
No similar outrage in Congress. In fact, no comment at all. The
US mainstream media didn't cover the "weird bomb" allegations.
But it doesn't take a genius to put two-and-two together: if we
permit our government to ignore international weapons-control conventions
and then say nothing while fresh billions are invested in barbaric
new weaponry, we lose the right to act surprised when our own military
uses that weaponry on innocent civilians abroad.
Or even on us.
You may be surprised to learn that in 2003, the Pentagon quietly
admitted to having used biological/chemical agents on 5,842 service
members in secret tests conducted over a ten-year period (1962-73).
In operations called Project 112 and Project SHAD, the Defence
Department tested its own weapons on service members aboard Navy
ships, and in all sorts of other nasty ways - such as spraying a
Hawaiian rainforest and parts of Oahu. All in all, tests were conducted
in six states (Alaska, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Maryland, Utah)
as well as in Canada and Britain.
Many military personnel were not informed when the toxic agents
were being tested on them. Only decades later, as crucial documents
slowly become declassified, have the veterans' health complaints
been acknowledged.
You might think such barbarism could never happen again: too many
legal protections for citizens in place. Think again.
There's a tricky clause in Chapter 32/Title 50 of the United States
Code (the aggregation of US general and permanent laws) which states
that the Secretary of Defence can conduct a chemical or biological
agent test or experiment on humans in certain cases "if informed
consent has been obtained."
So far so good. But check out a different part of Chapter 32, Section
1515, entitled "Suspension; Presidential authorization":
After November 19, 1969, the operation of this chapter, or any
portion thereof, may be suspended by the President during the period
of any war declared by Congress and during the period of any national
emergency declared by Congress or by the President.
You got it. If the President or Congress decides we're at war then
the Secretary of Defense doesn't need anybody's consent to test
chemical or biological agents on human beings. Gives one pause during
these days of a perpetual "War on Terror."
In January 2005, US Senate majority leader Bill Frist called for
a new Manhattan Project (referring to the WWII-era nuclear weapons
bonanza) for biological weapons. Frist told an audience at the World
Economic Forum, "The greatest existential threat we have in
the world today is biological," and he went on to predict a
biowarfare attack "at some time in the next 10 years."
How ironic that while Frist cited the 2001 US anthrax attacks as
proof more biological weapons research was necessary, he failed
to mention that those incidents involved anthrax produced right
in the good 'ole USA - or that the primary suspect in the attacks
was a US Army scientist. Frist also didn't clarify how developing
even more biological warfare agents would make the world safer.
The original Manhattan Project ultimately led to US forces dropping
atom bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, with the resulting slaughter
of hundreds of thousands of people. It's terrifying to consider
the potential repercussions, both domestic and abroad, of the Bush
administration's coveted new biological-weapons Manhattan Project.
Heather Wokusch is a free-lance writer who lives in Austria
and can be reached via her website
This article was partially excerpted from her upcoming book entitled
The Progressives' Primer: 100 Easy Ways to Make a Difference Now.
Heather's currently on hiatus, putting together a multimedia project
on women and war.
See also:
http://www.spectrezine.org/NorthAmerica/wokusch.htm
http://www.spectrezine.org/war/Wokusch17.htm