Biological Weapons 
South Korean Military Lacks Vaccines Against WMD AgentsFull Story
National Institutes of Health Awards $85 Million for Biological Defense ResearchFull Story
Bush Plan to Deploy Public Health Officials Draws CriticismFull Story
U.S. Scientists Find No Smallpox in IraqFull Story
Indian Authorities Concerned Terrorists Could Conduct Ricin AttacksFull Story


Recent Stories: Biological Weapons

From September 24, 2003 issue.

South Korean Military Lacks Vaccines Against WMD Agents

The South Korean Defense Ministry has disclosed that it does not have its own vaccines to inoculate its soldiers against a North Korean chemical or biological attack, Yonhap News Agency reported Monday (see GSN, July 23).

In a report prepared for lawmaker Lee Kyeong-jae, the ministry concluded that North Korea has 13 types of biological and chemical weapons at its disposal.  The South Korean Army has contingency plans to draw on the nation’s civilian smallpox vaccine stocks.

The South Korean military is also developing chemical and biological detection systems, Yonhap reported (Yonhap, Sept. 22 in FBIS-EAS, Sept. 22).


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From September 22, 2003 issue.

National Institutes of Health Awards $85 Million for Biological Defense Research

The U.S. National Institutes of Health announced plans last week to establish five biological defense research centers nationwide (see GSN, Sept. 4).

Officials at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases will distribute $85 million over more than four years to the newly established Cooperative Centers for Translational Research on Human Immunology and Biodefense.  The centers will be located at the Baylor Research Institute in Dallas, the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, the Emory University medical school in Atlanta, the Stanford University medical school in California and the University of Massachusetts Medical School, according to the NIAID.

“A particular emphasis of these cooperative centers will be moving new findings about immune system function out of the lab and into clinical trials,” said NIAID Director Anthony Fauci.  “The flexibility of the program will allow research projects to be redirected quickly as new information is generated in the lab and the clinic,” he added.

Because of the ethical prohibition against exposing human subjects to actual biological agents, research on human immunity is difficult, according to a NIAID release.  The new research centers will focus on the human immune system, the release said.

“NIH is dedicated to supporting research that will help in fighting the war on terror,” said NIH Director Elias Zerhouni (National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases release, Sept. 17).


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From September 22, 2003 issue.

Bush Plan to Deploy Public Health Officials Draws Criticism

The Bush administration is attempting to convert the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps into a quick-response team to fight bioterrorism, but public health officials are concerned that the plan could damage other initiatives, USA Today reported today (see GSN, Sept. 15).

Sending vital scientists on missions to fight bioterrorism could damage efforts to combat other diseases, including severe acute respiratory syndrome, AIDS and West Nile virus, according to opponents of the White House plan. 

The corps currently has 6,000 members, and many volunteer for deployment on biological defense missions.  Under the new plan, deployment would be mandatory, but critics worry that new requirement could keep top young scientists away from the corps.

Health and Human Services SecretaryTommy Thompson said in July that he would convert the corps to a globally deployable force.  The U.S. surgeon general, who has led the corps since 1871, would be replaced by a civilian in the Health and Human Services Department.

“This is a complex issue, and it’s evolving,” said Surgeon General Richard Carmona.  “My opinion is that the surgeon general needs to be in control,” he added (Steve Sternberg, USA Today, Sept. 22).


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From September 19, 2003 issue.

U.S. Scientists Find No Smallpox in Iraq

Senior U.S. military officers involved in the search for evidence of alleged Iraqi WMD efforts have said that a team of U.S. scientists has found no evidence of smallpox stockpiles or production capabilities, the Associated Press reported today (see GSN, Sept, 18).

A six-member team of scientists, known as “Team Pox,” conducted a three-month search for evidence that Iraq had the capability to produce smallpox, as some Bush administration had previously claimed.  The team found, however, only equipment that had been previously dismantled by U.N. inspectors and abandoned facilities, AP reported.

“We found no physical or new anecdotal evidence to suggest Iraq was producing smallpox or had stocks of it in its possession,” a U.S. military officer said, adding that the team’s findings do not preclude that smallpox could still be found (Dafna Linzer, Associated Press/USAToday, Sept. 19).

Prior to Operation Iraqi Freedom, several senior Bush administration officials raised the prospect of Iraq either possessing smallpox or having the capability to produce the agent, according to the Associated Press.

“One of the real concerns about [former Iraqi President] Saddam Hussein, as well, is his biological weapons capability, the fact that he may at some point try to use smallpox … against other nations, possibly including even the United States,” Vice President Dick Cheney said Sept. 8, 2002 (Associated Press/San Jose Mercury News, Sept. 18).


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From September 19, 2003 issue.

Indian Authorities Concerned Terrorists Could Conduct Ricin Attacks

Indian security agencies are concerned that terrorists could conduct attacks using the toxin ricin after learning how to do so from al-Qaeda, the Times of India reported today (see GSN, June 3).

Recent references by al-Qaeda to the disputed region of Kashmir have raised concerns that al-Qaeda may have ties to terrorist groups operating there, a senior home ministry official said.  According to intelligence reports, al-Qaeda leaders have provided information to operatives on the production and use of ricin, the official said.

Some experts suspect that several outbreaks of “mysterious diseases” occurring in various parts of India could be “tests” of biological attacks, the Times reported (C.R. Jayachandran, Times of India, Sept. 19).


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