Wednesday, October 16, 2019

DNA-weapons-biological-chemical fassilities for production and testing


part1
https://war-lab.blogspot.com/2019/10/biological-chemical-dna-wepons-and.html

2:



¤--> Stepnagorsk Scientific and Technical Institute for Microbiology, Stepnogorsk, northern Kazakhstan
In use 1982-Present
 also known as the Scientific Experimental and Production Base, was one of the premier biological warfare facilities operated by the Soviet Union. It was the only Biopreparat facility to be built outside of Russia proper, and one of the few ever visited officially by Western experts. Currently, the site conducts civilian biological research, overseen by director Vladimir Bugreyev. The United States Department of State and the U.S. Civilian Research & Development Foundation now provide significant funds supporting civilian research at Stepnogorsk.
 http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/russia/stepnogorsk.htm
 (ISBN 978-0-684-87158-5.
 Miller   Judith; Engelberg  Stephen; and Broad  William.
 Germs: Biological Weapons and America's Secret War. New York: Simon and Schuster, Inc., 2002.
 https://books.google.com/books?id=RBb8ss3GG1MC&pg=PA63&dq=nixon+biological+weapons+ban&client=firefox-a#PPA63,M1
 )

¤--> Vector State Research Center of Virology and Biotechnology (VECTOR), a weaponized smallpox center
 , also known as the Vector Institute, is a biological research center in Koltsovo, Novosibirsk Oblast, Russia. It is roughly analogous to both the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the US Army Chemical and Biological Defense Command. It has research facilities and capabilities for all levels of Biological Hazard, CDC Levels 1-4. It is one of two official repositories for the now-eradicated smallpox virus, and is part of the system of laboratories known as the Biopreparat.
 // ( The other repository is the CDC in Atlanta, Georgia. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is the leading national public health institute of the United States. The CDC is a United States federal agency under the Department of Health and Human Service

Recently  the facility has been upgraded and secured using modern cameras, motion sensors, fences, and biohazard containment systems.[citation needed] Its relative seclusion makes security an easier task. Since its inception there has been an army regiment guarding the facility.
The facility has, at least in Soviet times, been a nexus for biological warfare research (see Soviet biological weapons program), though the nature of any ongoing research in this area is uncertain.

Nellis, Kathy (26 October 2007). "Smallpox Eradication Memories and Milestones". The Global Health Chronicles
http://globalhealthchronicles.org/items/show/3022

 https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/sep/17/blast-sparks-fire-at-russian-laboratory-housing-smallpox-virus
 https://slate.com/technology/2014/07/vector-institute-in-novosibirsk-siberia-where-russia-stores-its-smallpox.html
 https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/sep/17/blast-sparks-fire-at-russian-laboratory-housing-smallpox-virus




¤--> Institute of Ultra Pure Biochemical Preparations, Leningrad, a weaponized plague center

Vladimir Artemovich Pasechnik (12 October 1937 Stalingrad, USSR – 21 November 2001, Wiltshire, England) was a senior Soviet biologist and bioweaponeer who defected to the United Kingdom in 1989, alerting Western intelligence to the vast scope of Moscow's clandestine biological warfare (BW) program, known as Biopreparat. His revelations that the program was ten times larger than previously suspected were confirmed in 1992 with the defection to the United States of Colonel Kanatjan Alibekov, the No. 2 scientist for the program

age of 37, Pasechnik was invited by a general from the Soviet Ministry of Defence to start his own biotechnology institute in Leningrad and he was given "an unlimited budget" to buy equipment in the West and recruit the best staff available. The laboratory he created was in reality part of the countrywide Biopreparat program. Known as the Institute of Ultra Pure Biochemical Preparations, it was to work on a strain of plague. The laboratory actually began operating in 1981, and over the next two years Pasechnik realized that, far from running a civilian research operation dedicated to vaccine development, as he had been promised, he had become part of a vast network of laboratories and factories involved in a massive BW program. According to Pasechnik, the Institute, which had a staff of about 400, did research on modifying cruise missiles to spread the plague. The weapons system was to operate by flying low to avoid early-warning systems and use robot craft to spray clouds of aerosolized pathogens over unsuspecting enemies. The team succeeded in producing an aerosolized version of the plague microbe that could survive outside a lab. This version of the organism was genetically-engineered to be resistant to antibiotics.

early 1993, the British government permitted Pasechnik to speak publicly. The next year, writer James Adams told Pasechnik's story in a book, The New Spies. Pasechnik lived in Wiltshire and worked at the UK Department of Health's centre for applied microbiological research at Porton Down, before forming Regma Biotechnologies, which is involved in research into tuberculosis and other drug resistant infections.

Pasechnik died of a stroke in 2001 in Salisbury. He was survived by his wife, Natasha, a daughter and two sons. According to one of his sons, Nikita, he was always expecting the KGB (or the later FSB) to deal with him

Saxon, Wolfgang, “V. Pasechnik, 64, Is Dead; Germ Expert Who Defected” [Obituary], The New York Times
https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F01E4D9153AF930A15752C1A9679C8B63

Bannerman, Lucy (12 March 2018). "Sergei Skripal: Salisbury's other spy lived in fear of KGB revenge". The Times
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/city-s-other-spy-lived-in-fear-of-kgb-revenge-fhkwhnvbp

"Vladimir Pasechnik" (Obituary), Telegraph.co.uk, 29 Nov 2001
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1363752/Vladimir-Pasechnik.html


¤-->  Sverdlovsk bioweapons production facility (Military Compound 19), Sverdlovsk, a weaponized anthrax center
On 2 April 1979, spores of anthrax were accidentally released from a Soviet military research facility near the city of Sverdlovsk, Russia (now Yekaterinburg). The ensuing outbreak of the disease resulted in approximately 100 deaths, although the exact number of victims remains unknown. The cause of the outbreak was denied for years by the Soviet authorities, which blamed the deaths on consumption of tainted meat from the area, and subcutaneous exposure due to butchers handling the tainted meat. All medical records of the victims were removed to hide serious violations of the Biological Weapons Convention. The accident is sometimes referred to as "biological Chernobyl"

The closed city of Sverdlovsk had been a major production center of the Soviet military-industrial complex since World War II. It produced tanks, nuclear rockets and other armaments. A major nuclear accident happened in this region in 1957, when a nuclear waste facility exploded (known as the Kyshtym disaster), resulting in the spread of radioactive dust over a thousand square kilometers. The biological weapons facility in Sverdlovsk was built after World War II, using documentation captured in Manchuria from the Japanese germ warfare program.[1]

The strain of anthrax produced in the Military Compound 19 [ru] on the southern edge of Sverdlovsk was the most powerful in the Soviet arsenal ("Anthrax 836"). It had been isolated as a result of another anthrax leak accident that happened in 1953 in the city of Kirov. A leak from a bacteriological facility contaminated the city sewer system. In 1956, biologist Vladimir Sizov found a more virulent strain in rodents captured in this area. This strain was planned to be used to arm warheads for the SS-18 ICBM, which would target American cities, among other targets

Russian Prime Minister Yegor Gaidar issued a decree to begin demilitarization of Compound 19 in 1992. However, the facility continued its work.  Not a single journalist has been allowed onto the premises since 1992. About 200 soldiers with Rottweiler dogs still patrol the complex. Classified activities were moved underground, and several new laboratories have been constructed and equipped to work with highly dangerous pathogens.  One of their current subjects is reportedly Bacillus anthracis strain H-4. Its virulence and antibiotic resistance have been dramatically increased using genetic engineering

 Meselson Matthew, [Discussions in Moscow Regarding Sverdlovsk Anthrax Outbreak](https://profiles.nlm.nih.gov/ps/access/BBGLPJ.pdf), 25 September 1986

 "Interview [with Dr.] Matthew Meselson". WGBH educational foundation (Public Broadcasting Service)
 https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/plague/interviews/meselson.html

 http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/13928/title/Matthew-Meselson/
 Peg Brickley (8 March 2002). "Matthew S. Meselson waited quietly in the car while female associates handled the delicate work of questioning families of people who had died of anthrax. The scientist had charmed, wrangled, and nagged politicians on two continents from 1979 to 1992 for permission to probe a strange outbreak of the disease in the Soviet city of Sverdlovsk 1979. But just days before Meselson boarded a plane for Moscow to conduct the interviews ..." The Scientist. LabX Media Group, Ontario.

 Meselson M, Guillemin J, Hugh-Jones M, et al. (November 1994). "The Sverdlovsk anthrax outbreak of 1979"
 https://www.webcitation.org/6YE4f1fgB?url=http://www.anthrax.osd.mil/documents/library/Sverdlovsk.pdf

 Shoham D, Wolfson Z (2004). "The Russian biological weapons program: vanished or disappeared?". Crit. Rev. Microbiol
 https://doi.org/10.1080%2F10408410490468812

 Cook, Robin (1 March 1999). Vector. Penguin Publishing Group. p. 122. ISBN 9781101203736.
 https://books.google.com/books?id=GZJbQnhhSNMC&pg=PT122

 Bear, Greg (1 April 2014). Quantico.
 Open Road Media Mystery & Thriller.
 ISBN 9781497607323. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
 https://books.google.com/books?id=rq0fAwAAQBAJ&pg=PT146

  Preston, Richard (10 April 2007). The Cobra Event: A Novel. Random House Publishing Group. p. 292. ISBN 9780345498137.
  https://books.google.com/books?id=zOyPzT5CmqkC&pg=PA292


 Vozrozhdeniya Island bioweapons testing site, Aral Sea
  Vozrojdeniye oroli) was an island in the Aral Sea. The former island's territory is split between Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan. In 1954, the Soviet Union constructed a biological weapons test site called Aralsk-7 there and on the neighboring Komsomolskiy Island, which also no longer exists
   in the final days of its existence in mid-2001, becoming a peninsula when the South Aral Sea dried up enough that the island joined the mainland
 
   In the 1920s, leaders of the Red Army were searching for an appropriate place to build a science and military complex for inventing, producing, and testing bioweapons.[6] The potential of bioweapons to quickly and cheaply kill large numbers of people was considered beneficial to the leaders' goal
 
    In 1954, the site was expanded and named Aralsk-7, one of the main laboratories and testing sites for the Soviet Union's Microbiological Warfare Group tasked with inventing and testing the effects of multiple fatal diseases

In 1971, an accidental release of weaponized smallpox from the island infected ten people, of whom three died. In the 1990s, word of the island's danger was spread by Soviet defectors, including Ken Alibek, the former head of the Soviet Union's bioweapons program.  According to released documents, anthrax spores and bubonic plague bacilli were made into weapons and stored at the complex.

Hoffman, David (2009). The Dead Hand: The Untold Story of the Cold War Arms Race and Its Dangerous Legacy. Random House.  ISBN 9780385524377.
https://books.google.com/books?id=JQGHqScEFtoC&pg=PA460

Chalker, Dennis & Dockery, Kevin (2006). The Home Team: Weapons Grade. New York City: Avon Books.

After the Soviet Union dissolved, the idea of mass destruction lost its relevance
(!)
//issue is soviet unionis not planned to stay gone..
Many of the containers holding biological agents were not properly stored or destroyed, and over the last decade many of these containers have developed leaks.
In 2002, through a project organized and funded by the United States with the assistance of Uzbekistan, ten anthrax burial sites were decontaminated

Dembek, Zygmunt F., Julie A. Pavlin, and Mark G. Kortepeter (2007), "Epidemiology of Biowarfare and Bioterrorism", Chapter 3 of: Dembek, Zygmunt F. (2007), Medical Aspects of Biological Warfare, (Series: Textbooks of Military Medicine), Washington, DC: The Borden Institute,
http://www.bordeninstitute.army.mil/published_volumes/biological_warfare/biological.html

Michael Wines (9 December 2002). "Grand Soviet Scheme for Sharing Water in Central Asia Is Foundering". The New York Times. Retrieved 29 October 2012.
https://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/09/world/grand-soviet-scheme-for-sharing-water-in-central-asia-is-foundering.html

 "Аральск-7 — закрытый город-призрак, где испытывали биологическое оружие". Big Picture. 2014-
http://bigpicture.ru/?p=482671

http://sometimes-interesting.com/2014/11/29/abandoned-anthrax-vozrozhdeniye-island/


Berdsk bioweapons production facility, Berdsk
Bioweapons research facility, Obolensk
Institute of Applied Biochemistry, Omutninsk
Institute of Engineering Immunology, Lyubuchany
Institute of Virus Preparations
Kirov bioweapons production facility, Kirov, Kirov Oblast
Poison laboratory of the Soviet secret services
Zagorsk smallpox production facility, Zagorsk

Kazakh Science Center for the Quarantine of Zoonotic Diseases, Almaty: contains plague, anthrax, tularemia; facilities are to be replaced by the more modern Central Reference Laboratory in collaboration with the US Defense Threat Reduction Agency.[

Yuri Anatolievich Ovchinnikov
(Russian: Юрий Анатольевич Овчинников; 2 August 1934 – 17 February 1988) was a Soviet bioorganic chemist. He was the youngest vice president of the Soviet Academy of Sciences (1971-1988) and a member of the Central Committee of CPSU. He was a leading proponent of using molecular biology and genetics for creating new types of biological weapons.
 Ovchinnikov was director of the Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry in Moscow.
He contributed to the field of biophysics and biochemistry through research in rhodopsin  and structural biolog

 Birstein, Vadim J. (2004), The Perversion Of Knowledge: The True Story of Soviet Science, Westview Press ISBN 0-8133-4280-5.

 "Octopus rhodopsin. Amino acid sequence deduced from cDNA"
https://doi.org/10.1016%2F0014-5793%2888%2980388-0
https://www.worldcat.org/issn/0014-5793
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3366250

"Primary structure of α-subunit of DNA-dependent RNA polymerase from Escherichia coli"
https://doi.org/10.1016%2F0014-5793%2877%2980131-2
https://www.worldcat.org/issn/1873-3468

https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/plague/
http://www.the-scientist.com/article/display/11813/
http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/russia/agency/bw.htm
MIT Technology Review article featuring a lecture by Dr. Serguei Popov, a former Biopreparat researcher working on recombinant DNA techniques for developing novel biological weapons
http://www.technologyreview.com/BioTech/wtr_16485,306,p1.html

Article from James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies report: "FORMER SOVIET BIOLOGICAL WEAPONS FACILITIES IN KAZAKHSTAN: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE". Also describes Biopreparat in some detail
http://webarchive.loc.gov/all/20011111170136/http%3A//cns.miis.edu/pubs/opapers/op1/op1.htm



Colonel Kanatzhan "Kanat" Alibekov (Kazakh: Қанатжан Әлібеков, Qanatzhan Älibekov; Russian: Канатжан Алибеков, Kanatzhan Alibekov; born 1950) – known as Kenneth "Ken" Alibek since 1992 – is a former Soviet physician, microbiologist, and biological warfare (BW) expert. He rose rapidly in the ranks of the Soviet Army to become the First Deputy Director of Biopreparat, where he oversaw a vast program of BW facilities.

During his heyday as a Soviet bio-weapons designer, in the late 1970s and 1980s, Alibekov oversaw projects that included weaponizing glanders and Marburg hemorrhagic fever, and created Russia's first tularemia bomb.[1] Perhaps his signal accomplishment was the creation of a new "battle strain" of anthrax, known as "Strain 836", later hailed by the Los Angeles Times as "the most virulent and vicious strain of anthrax known to man".[2][3]

In 1992, he defected to the United States; he has since become an American citizen and made his living as a biodefense consultant, speaker, and entrepreneur. He had actively participated in the development of biodefense strategy for the U.S. government, and between 1998 and 2005 he testified several times before the U.S. Congress and other governments on biotechnology issues.

Alibek published more than 80 articles
in classified journals on the development of new types of biological weapons and on medical aspects of biodefense prior to his defection to the United States.

https://www.c-span.org/person/?kennethalibek

Testimony before the Subcommittee on Prevention of Nuclear and Biological Attack, Committee on Homeland Security, US House of Representatives, July 28, 2005: "Implementing a National Biodefense Strategy"
https://web.archive.org/web/20080802025742/http://www.nti.org/e_research/official_docs/congress/house071305Alibek.pdf

Testimony before the House Subcommittee on National Security, Veterans Affairs, and International Relations of the Committee on Government Reform, October, 2001: "Combating Terrorism: Assessing the Threat of a Biological Weapons Attack", House Serial No. 107-103
https://web.archive.org/web/20080512201303/http://www.nti.org/e_research/profiles/Cuba/Biological/3490_3502.html

House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, March 1999 Biological Warfare Threats
https://fas.org/irp/congress/2001_rpt/h106-1054.html

Testimony before the House Subcommittee on Prevention of Nuclear and Biological Attack, July, 2005: "Engineering Bio-terror Agents: Lessons Learned from the Offensive US and Russian Biological Weapons Programs"
https://fas.org/irp/congress/2005_hr/bioterror.html

Alibek resigned as executive director of GMU's National Center for Biodefense and Infectious Diseases in September 2006, despite his position as a tenured Distinguished Professor. A University spokeswoman confirmed his resignation, but declined to comment on the circumstances surrounding his departure. According to a 2007 Los Angeles Times article, "Alibek said the college administration had grown displeased with his company's role in sharing grant-funded research. The university, he said, requested that he dismantle or leave AFG Biosolutions. He chose to resign from George Mason

In a September 2003 news release, Alibek and another professor suggested, based on their laboratory research, that smallpox vaccination might increase a person's resistance to HIV.

Alibek and colleagues have sought to develop a product that would protect against an array of deadly viruses and bacteria, rather than just a single organism. In his lab, mice had survived doses of smallpox and anthrax

Some experts question Alibek's characterizations of bioterrorism threats. Some have asserted that Alibek has a vested interest in raising fears, since he profits from government contracts related to countering bioterrorism. Retired Army major general and physician Philip K. Russell, while impressed by Alibek's knowledge of the former Soviet Union's production of anthrax, "began to think that Ken was more fanciful than precise in some of his recollections" where genetically engineered smallpox was concerned. Russell also remarked on "... the issue of putting Ebola genes into smallpox virus. That was viewed, at least in many of our minds, as somewhat fanciful. And probably not true.

 Willman, David (2007), "Selling the Threat of Bioterrorism", The Los Angeles Times, 1 July 2007.
 http://articles.latimes.com/2007/jul/01/nation/na-alibek1

Random samples
http://www.scienceonline.org/cgi/content/summary/298/5592/359b

Some observers have questioned the scientific credibility of Alibek's recent work and his motivations




_______________


Jacobsen, Annie (2015), The Pentagon's Brain: An Uncensored History of DARPA, America's Top Secret Military Research Agency; New York: Little, Brown and Company,



Some in US:

The Deseret Chemical Depot a U.S. Army chemical weapon storage area located in Utah, 60 miles (100 km) southwest of Salt Lake City. It is related to the Tooele Chemical Agent Disposal Facility.

As of January 2007, 7,593 tons (6,888 metric tons) of chemical weapons have been destroyed using incineration. All GB (sarin) was destroyed by March 2002 and all VX by June 2005.
By March 15, 2009, 3,216 ton containers and 54,453 projectiles of mustard gas had been destroyed (51.5% of Deseret's mustard agent stockpile
 All Tabun (GA) was destroyed by November 10, 2011. Disposal of land mines containing mustard gas as well as a small stockpile of Lewisite has not been completed. All disposal operations concluded January 21, 2012

At 9:24 AM UTC-07, September 5, 2002, officials at the depot triggered the Terrorist Alert Warning System in response to an unidentified intruder being spotted just inside the 7-foot barbed wire fencing at Cemetery Ridge, a mile north of the incinerator
Army officials later stated that the black-clad trespasser, sighted by four different soldiers during two different patrols,  immediately ran off towards Ophir Creek, escaping capture, according to the depot Commander, Col. Peter C. Cooper.  Despite the immediate setting up of roadblocks and a combined search by Army units and helicopters, no trace of the intruder was found

During the 2005 Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission (BRAC), Deseret Chemical Depot was recommended for closure if it was determined that it could not be used in the future for the demilitarization of conventional weapons. In such a case, supplies contained at the depot would be transferred to nearby Tooele Army Depot.[20] Deseret Chemical Depot officially closed July 11, 2013; however, it is unclear whether or not the hundreds of government employees and contractors employed at the time have transferred to other bases

Mesesan, Mark. "Deseret Chemical Depot Closes, Transitions Installation to Tooele Army Depot
http://www.army.mil/article/107472/Deseret_Chemical_Depot_closes__transitions_installation_to_Tooele_Army_Depot/


The United States Army Chemical Materials Activity (CMA) is a separate reporting activity of the United States Army Materiel Command (AMC). Its role is to enhance national security by securely storing the remaining U.S. chemical warfare materiel stockpiles, while protecting the work force, the public and the environment to the maximum extent.
CMA leads the world in chemical weapons destruction with a demonstrated history of safely storing, recovering, assessing and destroying materials that remain as a legacy of the former U.S. chemical weapons program. CMA managed destruction of all U.S. chemical weapons stockpiles except for the two that fall under the Department of Defense Assembled Chemical Weapons Alternatives program.

United States Army Soldier and Biological Chemical Command
https://www.army.mil/e2/c/downloads/419775.pdf

https://www.cma.army.mil/about/


 Project 112 and Project SHAD

 Ed Regis (15 November 1999). The Biology of Doom: The History of America's Secret Germ Warfare Project. Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 978-0-8050-5764-5.
 https://books.google.com/books?id=tStgQgAACAAJ

 "Secret Testing in the United States". The American Experience. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting
https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/general-article/weapon-secret-testing/

 "U.S. Army Activity in the U.S. Bio-warfare Program" (PDF). The National Security Archive, The Gelman Library, George Washington University.
 http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB58/RNCBW_USABWP.pdf

 "Project 112/SHAD News Releases"
https://web.archive.org/web/20130726035612/http://mcm.dhhq.health.mil/cb_exposures/project112_shad/shadnewsReleases.aspx

 Mitchell, Jon, "'Were we marines used as guinea pigs on Okinawa?'
 http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/fl20121204zg.html


The Program Executive Office, Assembled Chemical Weapons Alternatives (PEO ACWA)
Mission: Destroy Chemical Weapons Stockpile
 is responsible for the safe and environmentally sound destruction of chemical weapons stockpiles stored at the Blue Grass Army Depot, Kentucky and the U.S. Army Pueblo Chemical Depot, Colorado. In 1996, the United States Congress established the ACWA program to test and demonstrate alternative technologies to baseline incineration for the destruction of chemical weapons. The ACWA program oversaw the design and construction of the two chemical weapons destruction pilot plants – the Pueblo Chemical Agent-Destruction Pilot Plant (PCAPP) in Colorado, and the Blue Grass Chemical Agent-Destruction Pilot Plant (BGCAPP) in Kentucky. Today, PCAPP is in its pilot testing phase, and BGCAPP is in the systemization phase. ACWA will oversee both plants through pilot testing, operations and closure.
Both ACWA facilities are required to complete destruction of chemical weapons by Dec. 31, 2023

http://beta.congress.gov/bill/104th-congress/house-bill/3610/text

 "Department of Defense Report : Chemical Demilitarization Program : Semi-Annual Report to Congress"
 http://www.peoacwa.army.mil/wp-content/uploads/May09_CDP_Semi-Annual_Rpt_to_Congress.pdf

 http://www.peoacwa.army.mil/about-peo-acwa/chain-of-command/

 Program Executive Office, Assembled Chemical Weapons Alternatives (2016-12-11). "Facts: Anniston Field Office".
 https://www.peoacwa.army.mil/2016/12/11/facts-anniston-field-office/
https://www.peoacwa.army.mil/2019/04/30/international-team-performs-final-review/
https://www.peoacwa.army.mil/2018/07/27/more-than-half-of-blue-grass-systems-turned-over-to-operations

Chemical Weapons Convention Web Page
https://www.cwc.gov/
Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons Web Page
http://www.opcw.org/
Program Manager Assembled Chemical Weapons Alternatives Web Page
https://www.peoacwa.army.mil/
Chemical Materials Activity (CMA)
https://www.cma.army.mil/


Tooele Army Depot (TEAD) is a United States Army post in Tooele County, Utah. It serves as a storage site for war reserve and training ammunition. The depot stores, issues, receives, renovates, modifies, maintains and demilitarizes conventional munitions. The depot also serves as the National Inventory Control Point for ammunition peculiar equipment, developing, fabricating, modifying, storing and distributing such equipment to all services and other customers worldwide. TEAD provides base support to Deseret Chemical Depot.
Tooele Army Depot originally opened in 1942 during the early phase of U.S. involvement in World War II. The workforce at the post is now primarily composed of civilians. A full colonel serves as the commander. As of June 2018, Colonel Todd W. Burnley is the depot commander.
Capabilities of the depot include: engineering; explosives performance testing; logistical support; machining, fabrication, assembly, repair; robotics; non-destructive testing; demilitarization; laser cutting; and Slurry Emulsion Manufacturing Facility
// for what is on ground known..
TEAD is housed on 23,610 acres (95.5 km2) with 1,093 buildings, 902 igloos and storage capacity of 2,483,000 square feet (230,700 m2)
TEAD was placed on the Environmental Protection Agency’s National Priority List (Superfund) in 1990

http://www.jmc.army.mil/FactSheets/FactSheets%202008/Tooele%20Army%20Depot.pdf
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/facility/tooele.htm
http://www.tooele.army.mil/
Joint Munitions Command website
http://www.jmc.army.mil/



Dugway Proving Ground (DPG) is a U.S. Army facility established in 1942 to test biological and chemical weapons, located about 85 miles (140 km) southwest of Salt Lake City, Utah, United States, and 13 miles south of the 2,624 sq mi Utah Test and Training Range forming the largest overland special use airspace in the United States.

" [Dugway is] the new Area 51. And probably the new military spacepor "

" The Oh-My-God particle was the highest-energy cosmic ray detected so far (as of 2019), by the Fly's Eye detector in Dugway Proving Ground, Utah "

The Granite Peak Installation (GPI) — also known as Granite Peak Range — was a U.S. biological weapons testing facility located on 250 square miles (650 km2) of Dugway Proving Ground in Utah. The GPI was a sub-installation of Dugway but had its own facilities, including utilities.
GPI was the U.S. bio-weapons program's main testing site. Granite Peak was a sub-installation of Dugway Proving Ground and many of GPI's administrative task were overseen by the post commander at Dugway.

The Army Chemical Corps exposed over 11,000 guinea pigs to Brucella suis via air-dropped M33s.
Brucella suis is a bacterium that causes swine brucellosis, a zoonosis that affects pigs
The guinea pig trials caused one Chemical Corps general to remark, "Now we know what to do if we ever go to war against guinea pigs"




  Linksin web 1:
  https://war-lab.blogspot.com/2019/10/biological-chemical-dna-wepons-and.html
 https://pastebin.com/xzYdRDbS

 _______________
 _______________
 Some fassilites


 Linksin webpart 2:
https://war-lab.blogspot.com/2019/10/dna-weapons-biological-chemical.html
https://pastebin.com/8KDZ5kLz


-

Margus
https://www.facebook.com/Psychedelic.Experience/posts/10219024857309107
Waffa
https://twitter.com/Waffa/status/1184670162659807235


Biological, chemical, DNA wepons and virus, poison wartools,small peek



1.


Rule 73. The use of biological weapons is prohibited.
https://ihl-databases.icrc.org/customary-ihl/eng/docs/v1_rul_rule73

Littlewood, Jez. The Biological Weapons Convention: A Failed Revolution, (Google Books), Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2005, p. 9, (ISBN 0754638545).
https://books.google.com/books?id=B-xjnmd7hN0C&pg=PA9&dq=Biological+weapons+convention+enforcment&lr=&client=firefox-a

The Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law
https://books.google.com/books?id=boWuDQAAQBAJ&pg=PA1317
 "Show Treaty". disarmament.un.org  ( SHOW!!! )
https://web.archive.org/web/20180214040338/http://disarmament.un.org/treaties/t/bwc/text

https://web.archive.org/web/20110430190200/http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p_mla_apa_research_citation/0/7/3/6/4/p73644_index.html
 Wheelis M (September 2002). "Biological warfare at the 1346 siege of Caffa". Emerging Infectious Diseases.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2732530

Barras V, Greub G (June 2014). "History of biological warfare and bioterrorism". Clinical Microbiology and Infection
https://doi.org/10.1111%2F1469-0691.12706
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24894605

Andrew G. Robertson, and Laura J. Robertson. "From asps to allegations: biological warfare in history," Military medicine (1995)

Calloway CG (2007). The Scratch of a Pen: 1763 and the Transformation of North America (Pivotal Moments in American History

McConnel MN (1997). A Country Between: The Upper Ohio Valley and Its Peoples, 1724-1774. University of Nebraska

 Rakibul Hasan, "Biological Weapons: covert threats to Global Health Security." Asian Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies (2014)
 https://web.archive.org/web/20141217124035/http://www.ajms.co.in/sites/ajms/index.php/ajms/article/viewFile/559/488

 Jones DS (2004). Rationalizing Epidemics. Harvard University
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-0674013056


 Barras V, Greub G (June 2014). "History of biological warfare and bioterrorism" (PDF). Clinical Microbiology and Infection http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/store/10.1111/1469-0691.12706/asset/clm12706.pdf?v=1&t=j4bf3l4p&s=4351999801f90a508f62ce76425596025d9fff97

 Medical Aspects of Biological Warfare. Government Printing Office. 2007.
 https://books.google.com/books?id=nm_AVg4hmJQC&pg=PA3

 Christopher W (2013). "Smallpox at Sydney Cove – Who, When, Why". Journal of Australian Studies
 https://doi.org/10.1080%2F14443058.2013.849750
 First Fleet smallpox, and History wars / Controversy over smallpox in Australia.
 The history wars in Australia are an ongoing public debate over the interpretation of the history of the British colonisation of Australia and development of contemporary Australian society.
Various types of biological warfare (BW) have been practiced repeatedly throughout history. This has included the use of biological agents as well as the biotoxins, including venoms, derived from them.

Foley, Dennis, ‘’ Repossession of our Spirit: Traditional Owners of Northern Sydney,’’ (2001). Also Davis, Jack, in ‘’Aborigines of the West: Their Past and Their Present’’ ed. Berndt, RM and CH (1980

 Day, David, Claiming a Continent: a new history of Australia (1996)

 Butlin, Noel, Our Original Aggression: Aboriginal Populations of Southeastern Australia 1788–1850 (1983)

 Mear, C. "The origin of the smallpox in Sydney in 1789". Journal of the Royal Australian Historical Society.

  "Towards more consistent estimates of Aboriginal de-population in the early colonial Australia" by Jack Carmody and Boyd Hunter, presented to Asia-Pacific Economic & Business History conference in Hamilton (University of Waikato) 13–15 February 2014. Text online here. See also https://www.smh.com.au/business/the-economy/maybe-the-colonialists-didnt-outnumber-our-aboriginal-population-swiftly-20151224-gluntd.html.

Distinguished Research Fellow, Center for the Study of WMD, National Defense University, Ft. McNair, Washington.


Carus WS (August 2015). "The history of biological weapons use: what we know and what we don't". Health Security
https://doi.org/10.1089%2Fhs.2014.0092

Carus WS (2017). A Short History of Biological Warfare: From Pre-History to the 21st Century. US Defense Dept., National Defense University, Center for the Study of Weapons of Mass Destruction. ISBN 9780160941481.


Koenig, Robert (2006), The Fourth Horseman: One Man's Secret Campaign to Fight the Great War in America,

 Baxter RR, Buergenthal T (28 March 2017). "Legal Aspects of the Geneva Protocol of 1925". The American Journal of International Law.
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/american-journal-of-international-law/article/legal-aspects-of-the-geneva-protocol-of-1925/26453DA22053FCBB08BB4A520FFE9964
https://web.archive.org/web/20171027233302/https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/american-journal-of-international-law/article/legal-aspects-of-the-geneva-protocol-of-1925/26453DA22053FCBB08BB4A520FFE9964

Prasad SK (2009). Biological Agents, Volume 2. Discovery Publishing House
https://books.google.com/?id=SoDwO-dl-i0C

Garrett L (2003). Betrayal of Trust: The Collapse of Global Public Health. Oxford University Press. (
 pp. 340–341?)
https://books.google.com/books?id=teMYnJoVolkC&pg=PA340

Covert NM (2000). A History of Fort Detrick, Maryland
http://www.detrick.army.mil/cutting_edge/index.cfm?chapter=contents
https://web.archive.org/web/20120121062629/http://www.detrick.army.mil/cutting_edge/index.cfm?chapter=contents

Guillemin J (July 2006). "Scientists and the history of biological weapons. A brief historical overview of the development of biological weapons in the twentieth century". EMBO Reports
https://doi.org/10.1038%2Fsj.embor.7400689
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1490304


Williams P, Wallace D (1989). Unit 731: Japan's Secret Biological Warfare in World War II. Free Press.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-0-02-935301-1

 Gold H (1996). Unit 731 testimony

 Russell Working (5 June 2001). "The trial of Unit 731". The Japan Times https://web.archive.org/web/20141221090020/http://www.japantimes.co.jp/opinion/2001/06/05/commentary/world-commentary/the-trial-of-unit-731/

 Lewis P (4 September 2002). "Sheldon Harris, 74, Historian Of Japan's Biological Warfare". The New York Times
 https://www.nytimes.com/2002/09/04/us/sheldon-harris-74-historian-of-japan-s-biological-warfare.html?pagewanted=1

  Japan triggered bubonic plague outbreak, doctor claims
  https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/japan-triggered-bubonic-plague-outbreak-doctor-claims-704147.html

  Barenblatt D (2004). "A Plague upon Humanity". HarperCollins:

  Hudson C (2 March 2007). "Doctors of Depravity" https://web.archive.org/web/20070929145353/http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=439776&in_page_id=1770


  Chevrier MI, Chomiczewski K, Garrigue H, Granasztói G, Dando MR, Pearson GS, eds. (July 2004).
  "Johnston Atoll".
  The Implementation of Legally Binding Measures to Strengthen the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention, Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute, held in Budapest, Hungary, 2001. Springer Science & Business
  https://books.google.com/books?id=ZzlNgS70OHAC&pg=PA171
  ISBN 978-1-4020-2096-4.

  Croddy E, Wirtz JJ (2005). Weapons of Mass Destruction. ABC-CLIO
  ISBN 978-1-85109-490-5.
  https://books.google.com/books?id=ZzlNgS70OHAC

 
  Baumslag N (2005). Murderous Medicine: Nazi Doctors, Human Experimentation, and Typhus.


Stewart A (25 April 2011). "Where To Find The World's Most 'Wicked Bugs': Fleas". National Public Radi
https://web.archive.org/web/20180426075831/https://www.npr.org/2011/04/25/135638924/where-to-find-the-worlds-most-wicked-bugs

Clark WR (15 May 2008). Bracing for Armageddon?: The Science and Politics of Bioterrorism in America. USA: Oxford University Press.

Alibek K, Handelman S (2000). Biohazard: The Chilling True Story of the Largest Covert Biological Weapons Program in the World – Told from Inside by the Man Who Ran it. Delta. ISBN 978-0-385-33496-9.
 ISBN 978-0-385-33496-9
Biohazard, subtitled The Chilling True Story of the Largest Covert Biological Weapons Program in the World - Told from Inside by the Man Who Ran It, is the title of a 1999 book by former Soviet biological warfare researcher Ken Alibek that purports to expose the former Soviet Union's extensive covert biological weapons program.

https://archive.org/details/biohazardchillin00alib_0


Mangold T, Goldberg J (1999). Plague Wars: a true story of biological warfare. Macmillan, London. ISBN 978-0-333-71614-4.
https://archive.org/details/plaguewarstruest00mang

 Tom Mangold; Jeff Goldberg (2001). Plague Wars: The Terrifying Reality of Biological Warfare. Macmillan.  ISBN 9780312263799.
https://books.google.com/books?id=9_9Q7cZh91YC&pg=PA46

  Zelicoff A, Bellomo M (2005). Microbe: Are we Ready for the Next Plague?. AMACOM Books, New York, NY. ISBN 978-0-8144-0865-0.
  https://archive.org/details/microbeareweread00alan

"Weapons of Mass Destruction: Plague as Biological Weapons Agent". GlobalSecurity.org.
https://web.archive.org/web/20141220225944/http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/intro/bio_plague.htm

Preston R (2002). The Demon in the Freezer. New York: Random House.

The Demon in the Freezer is a 2002 non-fiction book (ISBN 0345466632) on the biological weapon agents smallpox and anthrax and how the American government develops defensive measures against them. It was written by journalist Richard Preston, also author of the best-selling book The Hot Zone (1994), about outbreaks of Ebola virus in Africa and Reston, Virginia and the U.S. government's response to them.
The book is primarily an account of the Smallpox Eradication Program (1967–1980), the ongoing perception by the U.S. government that smallpox is still a potential bioterrorism agent, and the controversy over whether or not the remaining samples of smallpox virus in Atlanta and Moscow (the "demon" in the freezer) should be finally destroyed.




Orent, Wendy (2004), Plague, The Mysterious Past and Terrifying Future of the World's Most Dangerous Disease, Simon & Schuster, Inc., New York, NY, ISBN 978-0-7432-3685-0
https://archive.org/details/plaguemysterious00oren

"26 Countries' WMD Programs; A Global History of WMD Use - US - Iraq War - ProCon.org". Usiraq.procon.org.
http://usiraq.procon.org/view.resource.php?resourceID=000678

"Overview of Potential Agents of Biological Terrorism | SIU School of Medicine". SIU School of Medicine.
https://web.archive.org/web/20171119070804/http://www.siumed.edu/im/overview-potential-agents-biological-terrorism.html

Millet, P., Kuiken, T., & Grushkin, D. (2014, March 18). Seven Myths and Realities about Do-It-Yourself Biology. Retrieved from http://www.synbioproject.org/publications/6676/
https://web.archive.org/web/20170914115608/http://www.synbioproject.org/publications/6676/


Jeanne Harley Guillemin (born 1943) is a medical anthropologist and author, who for 25 years was a Professor of Sociology at Boston College and for the last ten years, a senior fellow in the Security Studies Program at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
 She is an authority on biological weapons and has published four books on the topic

Guillemin, Jeanne, Biological Weapons: From the Invention of State-sponsored Programs to Contemporary Bioterrorism, Columbia University Press, 2005.
Guillemin, Jeanne (ed.), Anthropological Realities: Readings in the Science of Culture, Transaction Publishers, 1980.
http://www.sussex.ac.uk/Units/spru/hsp/People/Guillemin.htm
https://ssp.mit.edu/people/jeanne-guillemin
https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&q=Jeanne+Guillemin&btnG=&as_sdt=1%2C44&as_sdtp=

https://www.npr.org/2011/09/14/140216982/poison-in-the-post-revisiting-american-anthrax


Brown, Fredric Joseph, Chemical Warfare: A Study in Restraints, Princeton University Press, 1968; [Transaction Publishers edition, 2005].

Dugway Proving Ground (DPG) is a U.S. Army facility established in 1942 to test biological and chemical weapons
Lee Davidson and Joe Bauman (February 12, 2001). "Toxic Utah: A land littered with poisons". Deseret News
https://web.archive.org/web/20080724062508/http://www.deseretnews.com/dn/sview/1,3329,250010322,00.html

http://www.redorbit.com/news/science/285387/skull_valleys_nerve_gas_neighbors/
http://www.lexisnexis.com/us/lnacademic/results/docview/docview.do?risb=21_T2578521527&format=GNBFI&sort=RELEVANCE&startDocNo=1&resultsUrlKey=29_T2578521532&cisb=22_T2578521531&treeMax=true&treeWidth=0&csi=227171&docNo=1

DoD news briefing – Mr. Kenneth Bacon, ASD (PA)," (Lexis Nexis, relevant excerpt), M2 Presswire,
http://www.gulflink.osd.mil/current_press/NB3apr97.htm
http://www.lexisnexis.com/us/lnacademic/results/docview/docview.do?risb=21_T2578521527&format=GNBFI&sort=RELEVANCE&startDocNo=1&resultsUrlKey=29_T2578521532&cisb=22_T2578521531&treeMax=true&treeWidth=0&selRCNodeID=9&nodeStateId=411en_US,1,4&docsInCategory=4&csi=162367&docNo=4

Hoeber, Amoretta M. and Douglass, Jr. Joseph D. "The Neglected Threat of Chemical Warfare", (JSTOR), International Security,
https://www.jstor.org/stable/2626644








 "Al Qaeda's Pursuit of Weapons of Mass Destruction". Foreign Policy.
 https://foreignpolicy.com/2010/01/25/al-qaedas-pursuit-of-weapons-of-mass-destruction/

 "A NATIONAL BLUEPRINT FOR BIODEFENSE: LEADERSHIP AND MAJOR REFORM NEEDED TO OPTIMIZE EFFORTS" (PDF). ecohealthalliance.org
 https://www.ecohealthalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/A-National-Blueprint-for-Biodefense-October-2015.pdf https://web.archive.org/web/20170301213815/http://ecohealthalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/A-National-Blueprint-for-Biodefense-October-2015.pdf


  Foster JS, Director of Defense Research and Engineering, US Department of Defense. Letter dated 15 April 1965 to Honorable Richard D. McCarthy, US House of Representatives. Cited in: McCarthy RD. The Ultimate Folly: War by Pestilence,

   Kissinger HA. N.S. Decision Memorandum 35 an 44
 
    Department of the Army. General Order 137. Washington, DC: Headquarters, DA; 10 November 1971.


  "Federal Select Agent Program". www.selectagents.gov.
  https://web.archive.org/web/20171124150908/https://www.selectagents.gov/


  Wagner D (2 October 2017). "Biological Weapons and Virtual Terrorism". Huffington Post
https://web.archive.org/web/20171104183637/https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/biological-weapons-and-virtual-terrorism_us_59d23151e4b034ae778d4c3c



Loner Likely Sent Anthrax, FBI Says". Los Angeles Times.
https://web.archive.org/web/20080407193942/http://www.ph.ucla.edu/epi/bioter/lonerlikelyanthrax.html

 "Anthrax Facts | UPMC Center for Health Security". Upmc-biosecurity.org.
https://web.archive.org/web/20130302063353/http://www.upmc-biosecurity.org/website/our_work/biological-threats-and-epidemics/fact_sheets/anthrax.html


Hassani M, Patel MC, Pirofski LA (April 2004). "Vaccines for the prevention of diseases caused by potential bioweapons". Clinical Immunology.
https://doi.org/10.1016%2Fj.clim.2003.09.010
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15093546

akafuji ET, Russell PK. "Military immunizations: Past, present and future prospects". Infect Dis Clin North Am. 1990


 Federal Funding for Bioweapons Prevention and Defense, by Agency, 2001-2009
 http://www.armscontrolcenter.org/policy/biochem/articles/fy09_biodefense_funding/


 Franz D. "The U.S. Biological Warfare and Biological Defense Programs" (PDF). Arizona University
 https://web.archive.org/web/20180219221907/http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/medaspec/Ch-19electrv699.pdf


  "Vietnam's war against Agent Orange". BBC News.
  https://web.archive.org/web/20090111171055/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/3798581.stm

   "Critics accuse Sri Lanka of using scorched earth tactics against Tamils". The National.
https://www.thenational.ae/world/asia/critics-accuse-sri-lanka-of-using-scorched-earth-tactics-against-tamils-1.524770


 Verdourt B, Trump EC, Church ME (1969). "Common poisonous plants of East Africa". London: Collins


 "An Introduction to Biological Weapons, Their Prohibition, and the Relationship to Biosafety
 https://web.archive.org/web/20130512163809/http://www.sunshine-project.org/publications/bk/pdf/bk10en.pdf
  The Sunshine Project

The Sunshine Project was an international NGO dedicated to upholding prohibitions against biological warfare and, particularly, to preventing military abuse of biotechnology. It was directed by Edward Hammond.
With offices in Austin, Texas, USA and Hamburg, Germany, the Sunshine Project worked by exposing research on biological and chemical weapons. Typically, it accessed documents under the Freedom of Information Act and other open records laws, publishing reports and encouraging action to reduce the risk of biological warfare. It tracked the construction of high containment laboratory facilities and the dual-use activities of the U.S. biodefense program. Another focus was on documenting government-sponsored research and development of incapacitating "non-lethal" weapons, such as the chemical used by Russia to end the Moscow theater hostage crisis in 2002. The Sunshine Project was also active in meetings of the Biological Weapons Convention, the main international treaty prohibiting biological warfare.
An announcement was posted on The Sunshine Project website, "As of 1 February 2008, the Sunshine Project is suspending its operations", due to a lack of funding. Its website remained online for some time after this date and could be used as an archive of its activities and publications from 2000 through 2008. However, as of October 2013 the Sunshine Project website was offline.
//impossible unless anothr country temp intel project..

http://pogoblog.typepad.com/pogo/2008/02/the-sun-sets-on.html
http://www.sunshine-project.org/ibc/bb2006.html#fourteen




  The Biodefense and Pandemic Vaccine and Drug Development Act of 2005, nicknamed "Bioshield Two" and sponsored by Senator Richard Burr, aims shorten the pharmaceutical development process for new vaccines and drugs in case of a pandemic, and to protect vaccine makers and the pharmaceutical industry from legal liability for vaccine injuries. The proposed bill would create a new federal agency, the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Agency (BARDA), that would act "as the single point of authority" to promote advanced research and development of drugs and vaccines in response to bioterrorism and natural disease outbreaks, while shielding the agency from public Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests. BARDA would be exempt from long-standing open records and meetings laws that apply to most government departments.



The United States biological defense program—in recent years also called the National Biodefense Strategy—began as a small defensive effort that parallels the country's offensive biological weapons development and production program, active since 1943. Organizationally, the medical defense research effort was pursued first (1956-1969) by the U.S. Army Medical Unit (USAMU) and later, after publicly known discontinuation of the offensive program, by the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID). Both of these units were located at Fort Detrick, Maryland, where the U.S. Army Biological Warfare Laboratories were headquartered. The current mission is multi-agency, not exclusively military, and is purely to develop defensive measures against bio-agents, as opposed to the former bio-weapons development program.
In 1951, due to biological warfare concerns arising from the Korean War, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) created the Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS), a hands-on two-year postgraduate training program in epidemiology, with a focus on field work.
Since the 2001 anthrax attacks, and the consequent expansion of federal bio-defense expenditures, USAMRIID has been joined at Fort Detrick by sister bio-defense agencies of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (NIAID's Integrated Research Facility) and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (the National Biodefense Analysis and Countermeasures Center and the National Bioforensic Analysis Center). These—along with the much older Foreign Disease Weed Science Research Unit of the U.S. Department of Agriculture—now constitute the National Interagency Confederation for Biological Research (NICBR).

 Today, these U.S. biodefense programs—military and civilian—have raised concerns that the U.S. may be pursuing research that is outlawed by the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) of 1972

  Leitenberg, Milton (2005), Assessing the Biological Weapons and Bioterrorism Threat, pg 68. [n.p., but USG/public domain]; ISBN 9781495965951.
  http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pdffiles/pub639.pdf

According to the Federation of American Scientists, U.S. work on non-lethal agents exceeds limitations in the BWC.[(e Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989)

"Original U.S. Interpretation of the BWC. ,Federation of American Scientists, official site.
http://www.fas.org/biosecurity/resource/documents/original%20us%20interpretation%20bwc.pdf

"Introduction to Biological Weapons", Federation of American Scientists,
http://www.fas.org/programs/ssp/bio/resource/introtobw.html



Franz, David R., Cheryl D. Parrott, and Ernest T. Takafuji (1997), Chapter 19: "The U.S. Biological Warfare and Biological Defense Programs", In: Frederick R. Sidell, Ernest T. Takafuji, David R. Franz (editors), Medical Aspects of Chemical and Biological Warfare (1997); Published by the Office of The Surgeon General at TMM Publications, The Borden Institute.


 Mauroni, Albert J. America's Struggle with Chemical-Biological Weapons, (Google Books), Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000, p. 49-60, (ISBN 0275967565).
 https://books.google.com/books?id=G35q8W4BGTYC&pg=PA126&dq=nixon+biological+weapons+ban&client=firefox-a#PPA123,M1


 Joseph Cirincione, et al. Deadly Arsenals
 Joseph Cirincione is the President of the Ploughshares Fund, a public grant-making foundation focused on nuclear weapons policy and conflict resolution.





Lockwood JA (2008). Six-legged Soldiers: Using Insects as Weapons of War. USA: Oxford University Press. pp. 9–26. ISBN 978-0195333053.
"Six-Legged Soldiers: Using Insects as Weapons of War is a nonfiction scientific warfare book written by award-winning author and University of Wyoming professor, Jeffrey A. Lockwood. Published in 2008 by Oxford University Press, the book explores the history of bioterrorism, entomological warfare, biological warfare, and the prevention of agro-terrorism from the earliest times to modern threats. Lockwood, an entomologist, preceded this book with Ethical issues in biological control (1997) and Locust: The devastating rise and mysterious disappearance of the insect that shaped the American frontier (2004), among others."

 European Union cooperative Initiatives to improve Biosafety and Biosecurity (12 August 2010). "Meeting of the States Parties to the Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production and Stockpiling of Bacteriological (Biological) and Toxin Weapons and on Their Destruction"
 https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/708897/files/BWC_MSP_2010_MX_WP.5-EN.pdf

  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Biosafety in Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratories. 3rd ed. Washington, DC: US Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. May 1993. HHS Publication (CDC) 93-8395.

   Huxsoll DL, Parrott CD, Patrick WC III. "Medicine in defense against biological warfare". JAMA. 1989;265:677–679.

  Geissler E, ed. Biological and Toxin Weapons Today (Stockholm International Peace Research Institute). Oxford, England: Oxford University Press; 1986.

  Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). "The Rise of CB Weapons", Vol 1. In: The Problem of Chemical and Biological Warfare. New York, NY: Humanities Press; 1971.

 Harris R, Paxman J. A Higher Form of Killing: The Secret of Chemical and Biological Warfare. New York, NY: Hill and Wang; 1982.

 Ouagrham-Gormley S. Dissuading Biological Weapons Proliferation. Contemporary Security Policy [serial online].
 Available from: Humanities International Complete, Ipswich, MA.

 Guillemin J (2013). The Soviet Biological Weapons Program: A History. Politics & The Life Sciences.
 https://doi.org/10.2990%2F32_1_102


  Ryan CP (2008). "Zoonoses likely to be used in bioterrorism". Public Health Reports.
  https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2289981
  https://doi.org/10.1177%2F003335490812300308


  Wilkening DA (2008). "Modeling the incubation period of inhalational anthrax". Medical Decision Making
  https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0272989X08315245
  https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18556642

   Toth DJ, Gundlapalli AV, Schell WA, Bulmahn K, Walton TE, Woods CW, Coghill C, Gallegos F, Samore MH, Adler FR (August 2013). "Quantitative models of the dose-response and time course of inhalational anthrax in humans"
   https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3744436
   https://doi.org/10.1371%2Fjournal.ppat.1003555
 
 
    Treadwell TA, Koo D, Kuker K, Khan AS (March–April 2003). "Epidemiologic clues to bioterrorism". Public Health Reports
https://doi.org/10.1093%2Fphr%2F118.2.92
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1497515



"Physorg.com, "Encoded Metallic Nanowires Reveal Bioweapons",  2006"
https://web.archive.org/web/20110605231844/http://www.physorg.com/news74433040.html

 "BiosparQ features" https://web.archive.org/web/20131113041020/http://www.tno.nl/content.cfm?context=markten&content=case&laag1=178&item_id=832


 Genuth I, Fresco-Cohen L (13 November 2006). "BioPen Senses BioThreats". The Future of Things. Archived from the original
 https://web.archive.org/web/20070430131012/http://www.tfot.info/content/view/96/56/



 Kelle A (2009). "Security issues related to synthetic biology. Chapter 7.". In Schmidt M, Kelle A, Ganguli-Mitra A, de Vriend H (eds.). Synthetic biology. The technoscience and its societal consequences. Berlin: Springer.


  Garfinkel MS, Endy D, Epstein GL, Friedman RM (December 2007). "Synthetic genomics: options for governance" (PDF). Industrial Biotechnology
https://dspace.mit.edu/bitstream/1721.1/39141/1/Synthetic%20Genomics%20Options%20for%20Governance.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1089%2Find.2007.3.333


Addressing Biosecurity Concerns Related to Synthetic Biology". National Security Advisory Board on Biotechnology (NSABB)
http://oba.od.nih.gov/biosecurity/pdf/NSABB%20SynBio%20-DRAFT%20Report-FINAL%20(2)_6-7-10.pdf.


Buller M (21 October 2003). The potential use of genetic engineering to enhance orthopoxviruses as bioweapons. International Conference “Smallpox Biosecurity. Preventing the Unthinkable. Geneva, Switzerland.

Tumpey TM, Basler CF, Aguilar PV, Zeng H, Solórzano A, Swayne DE, et al. (October 2005). "Characterization of the reconstructed 1918 Spanish influenza pandemic virus" (PDF). Science. New York, N.Y
http://birdflubook.com/resources/0Tumpey77.pdf
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16210530


Cello J, Paul AV, Wimmer E (August 2002). "Chemical synthesis of poliovirus cDNA: generation of infectious virus in the absence of natural template". Science
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Wimmer E, Mueller S, Tumpey TM, Taubenberger JK (December 2009). "Synthetic viruses: a new opportunity to understand and prevent viral disease". Nature Biotechnology. 2
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Basulto D (4 November 2015). "Everything you need to know about why CRISPR is such a hot technology". The Washington Post.
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Kahn J (9 November 2015). "The Crispr Quandary". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331
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 Ledford H (June 2015). "CRISPR, the disruptor". Nature. 522 (7554): 20–4. Bibcode:2015Natur.522...20L.
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  "Shyh-Ching Lo"
  Dr. Shyh-Ching Lo, a scientist at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington, discovered the microbe in 1986
  https://demystifyingmedicine.od.nih.gov/dm11/BioSketch/DM0222-Lo-Shyh-Ching.pdf
  Creation of the Mycoplasma - Living Well Clinical Nutrition
  This pathogen was patented by the United States military and Dr Shyh-Ching Lo.


  Rothschild J.H. (1964), Tomorrow’s Weapons: Chemical and Biological, New York, New York: McGraw-Hill.

  Wheelis, Mark, Biological warfare before 1914
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  Hobbes, Nicholas (2003), Essential Militaria, Atlantic Books

   "Biological Warfare", EMedicineHealth
   http://www.emedicinehealth.com/biological_warfare/article_em.htm
 
   Barras, V.; Greub, G. (June 2014). "History of biological warfare and bioterrorism" (PDF). Clinical Microbiology and Infection. 20 (6): 497–502. doi:10.1111/1469-0691.12706. PMID 24894605. However, in the light of contemporary knowledge, it remains doubtful whether his hopes were fulfilled, given the fact that the transmission of smallpox through this kind of vector is much less efficient than respiratory transmission, and that Native Americans had been in contact with smallpox >200 years before Ecuyer’s trickery, notably during Pizarro’s conquest of South America in the 16th century. As a whole, the analysis of the various ‘pre-micro- biological” attempts at BW illustrate the difficulty of differentiating attempted biological attack from naturally occurring epidemics.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/store/10.1111/1469-0691.12706/asset/clm12706.pdf?v=1&t=j4bf3l4p&s=4351999801f90a508f62ce76425596025d9fff97
 
 Jones, David S. (2004). Rationalizing Epidemics. Harvard University Press. p. 97. ISBN 978-0674013056.

 Anderson, Crucible of War, 541–42; Jennings, Empire of Fortune

  Anderson, D. (2006), Lessons Learned from the Former Soviet Biological Warfare Program; UMI Dissertation Services, UMI NO. 3231331

  Lambert, JT., ‘’Brokers of Cultural Change’’ (2000

  Warren, C. "Could First Fleet smallpox infect Aborigines? – A note". Aboriginal Histor
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  Finzsch, Norbert (2008). "Extirpate or remove that vermine: genocide, biological warfare and settler imperialism in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries". Journal of Genocide Research.
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  Welcome to CAEPR".
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   http://www.geocities.ws/jamie_bisher/anthrax.htm
 
   S.k. Prasad (2009). Biological Agents, Volume 2. Discovery Publishing House
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    Additional Requirements for Facilities Transferring or Receiving Select Agents, Title 42 CFR Part 72 and Appendix A; 15 April 1997 (DHHS).
 
   Daniel Barenblatt, A Plague upon Humanity, 2004,
 
 Barenblatt, Daniel (2004), A Plague upon Humanity, HarperCollins,

 CIA review of "Rikugun Noborito Kenkyujo no shinjitsu [The Truth About the Army Noborito Research Institute]" By Ban Shigeo. Tokyo: Fuyo Shobo Shuppan, 2001".
https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/csi-studies/studies/vol46no4/article11.html

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   Countermeasures, Chapter 6 – An Overview of Emerging Missile State Countermeasures
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    "Hidden history of US germ testing"

American Experience biological weapons timeline
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Eitzen, Edward M. Medical Aspects of Chemical and Biological Warfare: Chapter 20 – Use of Biological Weapons, (PDF: p. 6), Borden Institute, Textbooks of Military Medicine,
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Kirby, Reid. "The CB Battlefield Legacy: Understanding the Potential Problem of Clustered CB Weapons
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  Army Chemical Review,

Army Chemical Review is prepared twice a year by the United States Army Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear (CBRN) School and the Maneuver Support Center, Directorate of Training, Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri. This magazine presents professional information about the Army Chemical Corps functions related to CBRN, smoke, flame, and civil support operations. The objectives of this magazine are to inform, motivate, increase knowledge, improve performance, and provide a forum for the exchange of ideas.

 "TX Anticrop Agent & Project 112"
 https://rockymountainarsenalarchive.wordpress.com/2011/07/09/tx-anticrop-agent-project-112/

  "Medical Aspects of Chemical and Biological Warfare, Chapter 34 TRICHOTHECENE MYCOTOXINS p.659"
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Julian Ryall (June 10, 2010). "Did the US wage germ warfare in Korea?". The Telegraph
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   Typhoid- Biological Weapons
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  Legvold, R (2012). "The Soviet Biological Weapons Program: A History". Foreign Affairs.

  Glenn Cross. Dirty War: Rhodesia and Chemical Biological Warfare, 1975 to 1980. Solihull: Helion & Company

   Working Group on Civilian Biodefense (February 28, 2001), "Consensus Statement: Botulinum Toxin as a Biological Weapon, Medical and Public Health Management", Journal of the American Medical Association,
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   https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11209178
 
   Rheinhart, Courtney Elizabeth, Clostridium botulinum toxin development in refrigerated reduced oxygen packaged Atlantic croaker (Micropogonias undulatus)
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    Adherence To and Compliance With Arms Control, Nonproliferation and Disarmament Agreements and Commitments, Washington, DC: US Department of State
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Paul K. Kerr (February 20, 2008). "Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Weapons and Missiles: Status and Trends" (PDF). U.S. Congressional Research Service: 14. RL30699.
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http://usiraq.procon.org/view.resource.php?resourceID=000678

Keith, Jim (1999), Biowarfare In America, Illuminet Press, ISBN 978-1-881532-21-7

Knollenberg, Bernhard (1954–1955). "General Amherst and Germ Warfare". Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 41 (3): 489–494. doi:10.2307/1897495. JSTOR 1897495.

Maskiell, Michelle; Mayor, Adrienne (2001). "Killer Khilats: Legends of Poisoned Robes of Honour in India. Parts 1 & 2". Folklore.
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Maskiell M, Mayor A (January 2001). "Killer Khilats Part 2: Imperial collecting of poison dress legends in India". Folklore.
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Mayor A (2009). Greek Fire, Poison Arrows & Scorpion Bombs: Biological and Chemical Warfare in the Ancient World



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^ "Interview: Dr Kanatjan Alibekov". Frontline. PBS.
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^ "Dr. Ira Baldwin: Biological Weapons Pioneer". American History
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 "Obituary: Vladimir Pasechnik". The Daily Telegraph. London. 29 November 2001. https://web.archive.org/web/20100303235824/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1363752/Vladimir-Pasechnik.html

 ^ "Anthrax attacks". Newsnight. BBC
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Dr. Serguei Popov, a former Biopreparat researcher working on recombinant DNA techniques for developing novel biological weapons
http://www.technologyreview.com/BioTech/wtr_16485,306,p1.html

At Oblensk, Popov and his team spliced the diphtheria toxin gene into the plague bacterium, thus creating a highly virulent and deadly strain.

Popov worked at Vector from 1976 to 1986 and at Obolensk from 1986 until 1992. His work included "designer" bio-agents that would cause the symptoms of lupus and rheumatoid arthritis, in which a victim's auto-immune system attacks its own body. His team inserted genes into viruses to make protein fragments of myelin (the sheathing around nerves). Victims that became infected would develop multiple sclerosis, a degenerative disease of the nervous system. By splicing myelin into Legionella (Legionnaires' disease), they also created an agent that caused brain damage, paralysis and death. The recombinant Legionella was very infectious and lethal with only a few cells causing disease.

Popov has described Biopreparat's "Project Bonfire", whose goal was to develop antibiotic-resistant microbial strains, and "Project Factor", whose goal was to create microbial weapons with new biologic properties that would result in high virulence, improved stability, and new clinical syndromes

In 1992, Popov defected to the United Kingdom and later traveled to the United States. He worked for Hadron, Inc. in microbiology and pharmacology and at George Mason University.


 ^ "Interviews With Biowarriors: Sergei Popov" Archived 18 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine, (2001) NOVA Online.
https://web.archive.org/web/20170618153502/http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/bioterror/biow_popov.html

  Popov, S (2000), "Interview: Serguei Popov" Archived 2011-09-27 at the Wayback Machine, J Homeland Security,1.
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 ^ "US welcomes 'Dr Germ' capture". BBC
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 Woods JB, ed. (April 2005). USAMRIID's Medical Management of Biological Casualties Handbook (PDF) (6th ed.). Fort Detrick, Maryland: U.S. Army Medical Institute of Infectious Diseases. https://web.archive.org/web/20070609104204/http://www.usamriid.army.mil/education/bluebookpdf/USAMRIID%20BlueBook%206th%20Edition%20-%20Sep%202006.pdf

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 https://purl.fdlp.gov/GPO/gpo55844

 Appel JM (July 2009). "Is all fair in biological warfare? The controversy over genetically engineered biological weapons". Journal of Medical Ethics
 https://doi.org/10.1136%2Fjme.2008.028944
 //oh..how dare they...

 Mordini E. (2016) The Biodefense Field. Bioethics, Volume 30,


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 Chevrier MI, Chomiczewski K, Garrigue H, eds. (2004). The Implementation of Legally Binding Measures to Strengthen the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention: Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute, Held in Budapest, Hungary, 2001. Volume 150 of NATO science series: Mathematics, physics, and chemistry (illustrated ed.). Springer. ISBN 978-1402020971.
 https://books.google.com/books?id=lILltXBTo8oC


 National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. (2018). Biodefense in the Age of Synthetic Biology. National Academies Press. doi:10.17226/24890. ISBN 978-0-309-46518-2. PMID 30629396.
 https://doi.org/10.17226%2F24890

 Miller J (2001). Biological Weapons and America's Secret War. New York: Simon & Schuster.   ISBN 978-0-684-87158-5.
 Miller, Judith; Engelberg, Stephen; and Broad, William.
 Germs: Biological Weapons and America's Secret War. New York: Simon and Schuster, Inc., 2002.
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  "Jamie Bisher, "Baron von Rosen's 1916 Anthrax Mission," 2014". Baron von Rosen's 1916 Anthrax Mission
  http://anthrax1916.weebly.com/
  https://web.archive.org/web/20140413125850/http://anthrax1916.weebly.com/

  ^ "MIT Security Studies Program (SSP): Jeanne Guillemin". MIT.
  https://web.archive.org/web/20091128145354/http://web.mit.edu/ssp/people/guillemin/fellow_guillemin.html

  ^ "Matthew Meselson – Harvard – Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs". Harvard
  http://belfercenter.ksg.harvard.edu/experts/148/matthew_meselson.html

 ^ Yazid Sufaat works on anthrax for al-Qaeda Archived 2 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine, GlobalSecurity.org
https://web.archive.org/web/20140502001505/http://www.globalsecurity.org/security/profiles/yazid_sufaat_works_on_anthrax_for_al-qaeda.htm

 Jackson PJ, Siegel J (2005). Intelligence and Statecraft: The Use and Limits of Intelligence in International Society. Greenwood Publishing Group.  ISBN 978-0-275-97295-0.
 https://books.google.com/books?id=I3Q3_Ww-5SMC&pg=PA194



  Linksin web:
  https://war-lab.blogspot.com/2019/10/biological-chemical-dna-wepons-and.html
 https://pastebin.com/xzYdRDbS

 _______________
 _______________
 Some fassilites


 Linksin webpart 2:
https://war-lab.blogspot.com/2019/10/dna-weapons-biological-chemical.html
https://pastebin.com/8KDZ5kLz




Margus
https://www.facebook.com/Psychedelic.Experience/posts/10219024857309107
Waffa
https://twitter.com/Waffa/status/1184670162659807235