Posted on 01/05/2002 4:37:59 AM PST by CrossCheck
I think I know who sent out the anthrax last fall.
He is an American insider, a man working in the military bio-weapons field. He's a skilled microbiologist who did not aim to kill anybody or even to disrupt the postal system. Rather, he wanted to sow terror. Like many in the bio-warfare field, he felt that the government was not sufficiently attuned to the risks of anthrax, so he seized upon the opportunity presented by Sept. 11 to get more attention and funding for bio-terror programs like those that have been his career.
How do I know all this? Well, I don't exactly. But talk to the people in the spooky world of bio-terror awhile, sop up the gossip and theories, and as you put the clues together -- as bio-terror experts and F.B.I. officials are now doing -- a hazy picture seems to come into focus. It's not a certainty but an educated guess, circulating among many who know their business.
"I think there are on the order of 100 people who could have done it, who have the access to the spores and the technical expertise to have done it," says one man with long experience in the shadows of the United States bio-defense program. "I've got to admit that I could be a suspect. I've been interviewed by the F.B.I."
The emerging image of the killer that many of the experts see (but not all; anthrax experts agree about as much as economists do) is precisely the opposite of the perpetrator whom we initially imagined. Our first impulse when catastrophes happen is to look for foreigners to round up, as we did after the Oklahoma City bombing and after the crash of Flight 800. The Bush administration tried hard to find evidence to pin the anthrax attacks on Iraq.
In fact, many experts believe that the killer is tied to the American bio-weapons program because the anthrax he sent out is genetically identical to the anthrax kept by the United States Army. A microbiologist named Paul Keim is helping the authorities compare the genetic fingerprint of the mailed anthrax, and every indication is that it derives at least indirectly from the mother lode of the military strain, kept at Fort Detrick, Md.
The mailed anthrax is also astonishingly pure and equivalent (in spore size and concentration) to the best the American Army ever achieved. Making anthrax in a dry powdered form of this quality is difficult, and beginning in 1959 took 900 workers in the "hot" area of Fort Detrick years of effort (and two accidental deaths, including that of an unlucky electrician who changed light bulbs at the wrong time). Thus it seems that the murderer had access not only to the American military germs but also to some knowledge of the American military method of preparing it in its dry form.
Why do specialists agree that the murderer was not trying to kill anybody? Because he taped the envelopes tightly, and as of September nobody expected that the spores could leak through envelopes. Moreover, each of the letters that has been recovered announced that the substance was anthrax and advised the recipient to take antibiotics.
"I don't think that he was trying to kill anybody," said Barbara Hatch Rosenberg, a microbiologist who has studied the attacks for the Federation of American Scientists. "I think the motive was to create public fear, to raise the profile of biological warfare."
The F.B.I. may already have talked to the killer. There are not that many people with the access to germs, the knowledge and an anthrax vaccine booster shot in the last year. But the murderer showed a knowledge of forensics (apparently not licking a stamp or envelope, for example, to avoid leaving DNA), and it may be very difficult to move from suspicions to sufficient proof for an arrest.
Washington has been pressing Russia, Pakistan and other countries, quite rightly, to improve their control of germs, chemicals and nuclear weapons. But one of the lessons of the anthrax investigation is that the first thing we need to do to feel safer is put our own house in order. It is appalling that we cannot even determine which labs have exchanged anthrax with Fort Detrick.
Terrorism and laxity, it seems, afflict not only foreigners with different complexions and religions, but --in exceptional cases -- perhaps also those with white lab coats and military haircuts.
It's always the same MO with them. Pose as something you aren't, or at the very least, misrepresent what you are, and use it as a forum to promote your agenda.
This group is a little more clever than most, the main page doesn't really address "social" issues, but start delving a little deeper into their website, read where they stand on things, and you see them for what they are.
Leftists are sleazy; they will call themselves teachers, scientists, yes, even ministers and priests, any clothing they can wear in order to hide their true selves.
People like you, Miss Marple and others are what makes this forum so great.
When I read this article, my B$ detector alarms went off immediately, since it was a NY Slimes article. As we both know, the NY Slimes since the Commies took over Russia in the last century, has been pushing the leftist agendas!
I knew nothing of this left wing agenda driven organization. Thanks to you, I now know that anything connected to them is B$ and promotes left wing agendas!
Thanks for being on top of this for us!
In my view there is still very definitely a foreign possibility.
BioPort is the firm that holds the exclusive government contract for producing the anthrax vaccine. BioPort, of course, has many microbiologists on staff who are anthrax experts capable of all of the sophisticated handling of the substance that Kristof limns above. The firm is owned by a German citizen of Lebanese descent, Fuad El-Hibri (his wife is titular owner). Adm. William J. Crowe, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Clinton's ambassador to Great Britain, owns a 13% share.
With BioPort we have hit the tri-fecta of possible motives to spread anthrax:
It very possibly was done as a warning to us from Iraq not to start bombing them for Sept 11. A strong hint that they were ready to use biological weapons on us.
Same here. Certain phrases in the article:
Our first impulse when catastrophes happen is to look for foreigners to round up, as we did after the Oklahoma City bombing and after the crash of Flight 800. The Bush administration tried hard to find evidence to pin the anthrax attacks on Iraq.
The subtle nudging that Bush and others like him are bigots (you know, like most conservatives), picking on some poor, Third World country.
Terrorism and laxity, it seems, afflict not only foreigners with different complexions and religions, but --in exceptional cases -- perhaps also those with white lab coats and military haircuts.
US military 'bad'---- a common belief among the left wing.
As well as a few other things.
Please ping me in the future when you "dissect" these B$ articles/opeds!
Have a great weekend, we will be spending most of it our grandchildren and a couple who are our oldest and dearest friends!
Looking at their website, I could say it may have been Ms Hatch or any one of her pals over at the "Federation of American Scientists".............they seem to have strong feelings on these issues......................;)
In-depth reports on the gay life-style.
And he was just following orders.
It's not clear to me that our first impulse wasn't right. There continue to be rumbles that McVeigh and Nichols had foreign help. The crash of Flight 800 was very likely not caused by the center wing fuel tank.
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