Posted on 05/20/2002 2:30:16 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
The former head of Russia's biological weapons program and the man considered to be the foremost expert in the field of bioweapons told NewsMax he has "strong suspicions" that Cuba is developing deadly pathogens. Questions about Cuba's biological development program were defined recently by three separate charges.
First, an undersecretary of state announced, "The U.S believes that Cuba has at least a limited offensive biological warfare research and development effort."
Second, a spokesman for dictator Fidel Castro dismissed the slur as "loathsome."
And finally, former President Jimmy Carter chimed in that the U.S. had no hard evidence that Cuba is sending material for terrorist weapons to other nations.
The foremost expert on the controversial subject, 1992 defector to the U.S. and author of "Biohazard," Dr. Ken Alibek, said he suspects the Bush administration is correct when it says Cuba is developing deadly germ agents.
Alibek notes that a bioweapons program can be masked easily by a civilian-purpose biotechnology effort.
Alibek drew a parallel with Iraq, which he says in the 1980s ran an infamous program to turn the smallpox virus into a biological weapon for the Soviets.
The Iraqis, he said, used the guise of single-cell protein production as a cover for biological weapons facilities.
Russia was set to ship large fermenting vats to Iraq after the Persian Gulf War, says Alibek.
"Fortunately, the sale was not completed. I have no doubt that these fermenters were destined for use in biological weapons production [T]he particular fermenter size involved in this proposed sale would not be suitable for efficient single-cell protein production."
"Similarly, in 1990," Alibek says, "Biopreparat [the Soviet's key biowarfare entity] was negotiating the sale of dual-use equipment to Cuba."
But Alibek concedes that the readily transparent Iraqi ruse is a different animal from whatever is happening covertly on or under Castro's communist island.
'Strong Suspicions'
Alibek does not have any direct knowledge that Cuba is experimenting with biological weapons, only "strong suspicions," which he first brought to light in his 1999 book. According to Alibek, his former boss, Maj. Gen. Yuri Kalinin, said he thought Cuba had an active bacteriological arms program. However, Alibek concedes, Kalinin told him he never actually saw any weapons being produced.
"There are a few small differences in producing vaccines and weapons," Alibek warns. "But the knowledge is essentially the same."
According to Alibek, Cuba has the sophisticated fermentation vats needed to manufacture both vaccines and pathogens. But as to whether the Cuban biotechnology effort is more or less a front for more sinister R & D exports, the expert wavers.
However, Alibek says, he has always been puzzled by the emphasis of Cuba's biotechnology program on drug production instead of agriculture. "It's quite interesting that a poor country has this type of expertise in biotechnology when its people are hungry."
The bare economic figures also add to Alibek's puzzlement.
Adding Up the Numbers
Castro has injected an estimated $1 billion into biotechnology over the last 16 years. But despite the heralded development of a number of novel medicines, there has been no apparent payoff to justify the costs. Cuba's biotech industry's annual sales fluctuate only between $45 million and $125 million and rank behind prosaic seafood exports.
Yet beyond these relatively sinister facts and figures lurks the discomfiting long history of the Cuban love affair with biotechnology.
According to the Castro myth, less than a year after he led his revolutionaries out of the mountains to seize power in 1959, the 33-year-old head of state made a speech irrevocably linking Cuba's future not to tourism or tobacco but to science.
In the 1960s, the foundations of the eccentric Castro dream were laid down in the form of a Havana research base modeled after the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Over the next two decades, thousands of bright Cuban scientists were trained to staff the base at home, in the Soviet Union, Canada, France, Sweden and the United Kingdom.
By the early 1980s, Castro's special preoccupation with biotechnology was fueled by interferon, then seen as an important anti-cancer agent.
The rest is history.
Castro now brags to the world that his Cuban scientists have registered 24 new medicines and vaccines, 49 generic medicines, five products for containing AIDS, and 15 novel pieces of medical equipment. Polo Cientifico, the original research base, has blossomed into a science cluster on the outskirts of Havana that boasts a small city of sleek and modern laboratories.
In April, Cuban scientists will travel to Toronto, Canada, to attend "BIO 2002," the International Biotechnology Convention & Exhibition. Sponsored by the Biotechnology Industry Organization, the U.S. biotech lobbying organization, the annual convention is expected to draw some 15,000 biotech professionals.
Despite the nettlesome American embargo, the Cuban representatives will work hard at the convention pitching the virtues of doing business with the communist regime.
Cuban Credibility
And the Cubans come equipped with plenty of credibility, including a history of manufacturing genetically engineered vaccines against hepatitis B and meningitis B, which Cuba ships to India and former Soviet republics and throughout Latin America.
According to Jose de la Fuente, the former director of research and development at Havana's Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, Cuba has also innocuously sold production technology for hepatitis B vaccine to Iran.
But, counter U.S. officials, "It's not clear what Cuba has gotten out of this relationship [with Iran]. It is clear that Iran has obtained a considerable amount of weapons technology. In many cases, Russia has used Cuba as a front for technology that Moscow cannot transfer."
Other recipients of Cuban biotechnology research include India, China, Brazil, Egypt, Malaysia, South Africa, Tunisia, Algeria, Great Britain, Venezuela and Mexico.
And if you believe Castro's line, negotiations are under way with several other nations and U.S. pharmaceutical companies that, despite all the obstacles, have professed interest in Cuba's anti-meningitis vaccine and possible clinical trials with a Cuban vaccine for lung cancer.
Other goodies in the Cuban pipeline: A medication made from mango peels that targets oxidant stress is sure to be a success on the international market.
The product, "Vimang," is claimed to be an anti-inflammatory, anti-spasmodic and immune system regulator, and is manufactured as a cream, tablets and flavored powder.
Getting Around the Embargo
Years ago, the British company Smith Kline Beecham succeeded in persuading Washington to give it an exemption from the embargo, allowing it to develop and market a Cuban vaccine against the child-killing disease meningitis B.
Another British outfit, York Medical, has conducted clinical trials of Cuban cancer vaccines and antibodies. To date the company has licensed three anti-cancer therapeutic drugs, a cancer vaccine and a topical anti-fungal.
Currently, thousands of Cuban scientists laboring at 38 institutes continue to refine products for treatment of cancers of the lung, head, neck, breast and ovaries, as well as chemo-therapeutics derived from snake venom, an epidermal growth factor, and a recombinant vaccine against ticks.
Castro's ultimate propaganda message is that his country is selflessly working to provide affordable life-saving meds to an overlooked Third World still dying in droves from AIDS and even cholera.
If all this is but a covering ruse to proliferate forbidden technologies to dangerous foes, it is that much more dangerous and sinister.
Experts like Alibek, who have been to the dark side, are very skeptical of Cuba's intentions despite all the window dressing.
Douglas Burton
Insight Magazine, February 2000
Clinton fund-raiser Charles Trie has admitted to the FBI that he conducted a business deal that gave Red China equipment capable of producing deadly biological weapons.
Peter Leitner, a senior Defense Department licensing analyst who specializes in export controls of dual-use technology, has reviewed Insights copies of the confidential FBI interviews with Trie. Leitner says the transfer of the highly sophisticated pharmaceutical-grade fermenting machine poses significant risks to U.S. security at home and abroad if used to make advanced germ-warfare products such as anthrax and botulism.
The evidence of the fermenting machines sale and transfer sometime in 1993 to the Changchun Biological Products Institute is alarming, according to Leitner, given that the Chinese facility has been flagged by some experts as a biological-weapons laboratory run by the Peoples Liberation Army. Leitner tells Insight: This whole affair has the classic earmarks of a Chinese military-intelligence operation.
A summary of Tries depositions to the FBI reads, in part: Trie acknowledged being a close friend of Dr. Peter Fu, a research biochemist who was chief of the toxicology branch of an FDA facility near Little Rock, adding that the Fus withdrew from the partnership in 1992 or 1993. Trie also told the FBI that Zhang was present when Trie formed United Biotech and that Trie had introduced Fu to Zhang in Little Rock.
The 500-liter fermentation tank transferred to the Changchun facility would be prohibited for sale by the Department of Defenses Militarily Critical Technologies List because it allows the manufacture of large quantities of biological agents, such as botulism or anthrax bacteria, for military purposes, Leitner says. Several 500-liter tanks of this type were discovered in Iraq and seized as contraband by U.N. Special Commission inspectors in 1991. According to government sources, China has listed the Changchun facility on the international registry of facilities producing biological or chemical agents but claims its only use at this time is for the production of pharmaceuticals such as hepatitis vaccines.
1. Immediate cruise missile strikes on Cuban military facilities.
2. Several weeks of B-52 raids on suspected bio-war facilities and critical C4I facilities (including Lourdes).
3. Naval blockade.
My thesis is that if the Cold War really ended in 1991, then no one will help Cuba, and, we'll be able to at long last depose Castro and ensure the development of a responsible regime reflective of Cuba's Spanish roots and innate (e.g. if not terrorised by autocratic Communist totalitarianism) Western, Euro-Carribean orientation. And if the ChiCOMs and supposedly reborn Russians come to the aid of Cuba, then we'll have smoked out some folks who were simply stringing us along. This is what is known as the antitdote to appeasement and Neville Chamberlainism...
Fomenting Freedom - Circumventing Castro to reach the Cuban people***Engaging Cuba, in fact, has the unavoidable consequence of propping up the Communist dictatorship. European money that flooded in starting in the early 1990's after the fall of the Soviet Union was vital to the survival of the regime, and it gave Castro a financial shot in the arm.
European cash almost solely lines Castro's pockets because of the way the dictator has fashioned the terms of engagement. Foreign companies must establish joint ventures with the Cuban government, with a cut of the profits going to Castro. But the despot nets more cash from the labor arrangement: Workers are not employed by foreign companies; they are rented.
Companies pay Castro's machine approximately $1,000 per month per worker, in hard cash. The regime, in turn, shells out less than $20 - per month - to each worker, in pesos. In other words, 98 percent of all wages paid by foreign companies in Cuba are funneled straight to Castro.
Because Castro has been denied American cash from such joint ventures and for several other reasons, the embargo has worked, even if it hasn't dethroned him. The embargo has put Castro in a box, and has robbed him of resources to fund his extracurricular activities. As a senior administration official noted, "If Castro has to spend $40 million on food, that's $40 million he's not spending to develop biological weapons."
Despite the morally despicable conditions for joint ventures, a large number of Republicans and Democrats on Capitol Hill are pressing for engagement with Castro. In fairness, many simply don't understand that the communist dictatorship relies on foreign cash for its very existence, but ignorance should not be an excuse for ignorant policy.
Bush's speech may pave the way for expunging Congress's blissful ignorance, and likely will be cheered on Capitol Hill in the long run.***
If nations want to build weapons that target effectively America, then those nations' business becomes America's business. There is no going around the need to prevent others from leveraging US politics with pointing their weapons at us. It is one thing to have a defensive force and sovereign militarisation, it is another to constantly acquire America as a target. Purely offensive bio and Chem weapons combined with Castro's overimaginative hatred of America and political vigilatism definitely fit that bill. Moreover, the fate of the Cuban exiles in Florida make the demands even more stringent on Cuba, including forcing the communist oligarch of Cuba to forego their ill acquired assets. After all, it all stems from that unresolved aggression that continues today.
The concern then was a different wepaon of mass destruction - Russian nukes. Why today this contemporary Cuban biothreat doesn't cause a similar reaction by the U.S. is beyond me.
Other recipients of Cuban biotechnology research include India, China, Brazil, Egypt, Malaysia, South Africa, Tunisia, Algeria, Great Britain, Venezuela and Mexico.
So, shall the US commense embargoes and bombing now?
A summary of Tries depositions to the FBI reads, in part: Trie acknowledged being a close friend of Dr. Peter Fu, a research biochemist who was chief of the toxicology branch of an FDA facility near Little Rock, adding that the Fus withdrew from the partnership in 1992 or 1993. Trie also told the FBI that Zhang was present when Trie formed United Biotech and that Trie had introduced Fu to Zhang in Little Rock.
you might want to see this clip on Charlie Trie and a Little Rock biotech firm
Thanks for the ping!
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