Posted on 01/15/2003 6:10:18 PM PST by MadIvan
White House officials have reassured Republicans by signalling that America and Britain are prepared to release powerful intelligence evidence to cement the case for war against Iraq.
Andy Card, the White House chief of staff, and Karl Rove, President George W Bush's chief political strategist, have each indicated privately that the administration has proof that Saddam Hussein has weapons of mass destruction.
Mr Card received blunt warnings from conservative Republican senators last week that Mr Bush had to produce a much more concrete case for war if he hoped to keep public support.
Senator Kit Bond of Missouri said more information should be released and asked: "What is the connection between Iraq and al-Qa'eda?" According to sources at the private meeting, Mr Card is understood to have urged him: "Don't worry."
Mr Rove is believed to have used similar language during private briefings to politicians in Washington.
He strongly suggested that the Bush administration already possesses a piece of intelligence from the CIA or MI6 that would amount to the "smoking gun" critics are calling for.
Vic, Your guesses about me have never been right, so why started discussing false info? You've have a PhD from U Penn since 1990 and have experince in vaccines and now you have graduated to monoclonals, my specialty, but lets just say you are scientically trained and should be able to help the readers understand that the sequencing of the attack Ames identified a very interesting locus that can be used to distnguish several Ames isolates and this intersting locus is IDENTICAL in the attack Ames and the Ames from USAMRIID.
Allan, Can you cite ONE examples of spores from outside of the US that are an EXACT match with the attack Ames and 35 A's? The has been PUBLISHED in Science for USAMRIID. Exactly the same as the attack anthrax, down to the 35 A's on pX02.
Martin Enserink
Science Magazine, 10 May, 2002
Seven months after anthrax letters hit U.S. media and government offices, investigators still haven't nabbed a suspect--and the genome project launched in part to help them seems unlikely to provide a break either. An analysis of the genome of the strain used in the attacks, published online this week by Science (www.sciencexpress.org), has yielded extra tools for fingerprinting the hundreds of different anthrax strains, but little in the paper suggests that it can help the FBI tie the attack strain to a specific lab.
"I don't see how this could help us much," says Barbara Hatch Rosenberg, director of the Federation of American Scientists' Chemical and Biological Arms Control Program, who has closely watched the federal investigation. But even without an immediate payoff, researchers at The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) in Rockville, Maryland, who conducted the research, say it provided experience in comparing microbial genomes that could be useful in future outbreaks.
Last fall's letters contained spores of a Bacillus anthracis strain called Ames, which was collected from a dead cow in Texas in 1981, sent to the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases in Fort Detrick, Maryland, and later forwarded for experiments to some 14 other labs.
Because microbes mutate whenever they grow, it's possible that the current strain at each lab is a little different from the rest. And if one of them happens to match the attack strain, now dubbed Florida, it might lead to the bioterrorists. But until recently, genetic fingerprinting studies by Paul Keim's lab at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff had looked at diversity at just several dozen markers, rather than the entire genome, and these had failed to discriminate among different Ames isolates.
Now, TIGR's Timothy Read, Keim, and others have sequenced the entire Florida strain and compared it with the so-called Porton strain, whose genome TIGR had already sequenced. (A paper describing that genome is due out later this year.) Like most strains, the Florida strain contains two extra rings of DNA, called plasmids, that the Porton strain lacks, so the researchers compared their sequences with the plasmids from two other strains. In all, the team found 53 places where the Florida genome differed from the Porton strain and the two previously sequenced plasmids.
But could these apparent genetic hotspots also help tell apart other, previously indistinguishable anthrax strains? To find out, the researchers took four Ames isolates collected from various labs; another Ames strain from a dead goat in Texas; and two non-Ames strains found in cattle. For each strain, they determined the exact sequence at each of the 53 markers.
Although the markers could clearly distinguish the samples from dead animals, they did a poor job of discriminating among the four lab strains. One had 36 copies of the nucleotide A where others had only 35--an almost meaningless difference. Another had 37 copies at that same spot; but that strain also lacked one of the plasmids, making it easy to tell apart anyway. At all the other markers, the four lab strains and the Florida strain were identical. Theoretically, more variation may emerge when the Ames strains from all 15 labs are put through the same 53-marker test. But the scant differences found so far "offer only slim hope that something useful will come out," says Rosenberg. Still, says Keim, the study shows that full-genome sequencing could be a useful forensic tool. And in cases such as bioterror crimes, the price tag--some $125,000 for a bug's genome--is hardly an issue: "A lawyer's sneeze costs more than that."
I had no idea he was tenured.
Of course this is nonsense. The THIS IS NEXT was from the Sept 18 letter that most recipients just threw in the garbage. No one knew what the idiot was taking about. He was so delusional that he sent a letter about anthrax and never included the word anthrax! The guy was a complete moron. When the victims developed lesions, they thought they were insect bites!
Our clueless clown then wrote the second letter, which included WE HAVE THIS ANTHRAX, YOU CAN NOT STOP US, expecting people to believe that the letters came from the dead hijackers. Utter nonsense that was believed by a few nuts into involved convolted plots involving "sleeper cells".
If you think about, these detailed plans designed to deceive were somewhat like the attempted "perfect crime" of Leonard and Loeb who created the fake names of Morton P Ballard and Louis Mason and left clues to shift the blame elsewhere. Now what moron(s) would immitate those clowns, who messed up big time and got life plus 99 years for ONE murder.
The anthrax mailer(s) should be so lucky!
If one wants a smoking gun, the test site is the obvious answer. The Iraqis tested a device, and have been seeking to construct duplicate devices while trying to develop a larger device ... and they may have already succeeded in that endeavor, but haven't tested it nor do they need to since the specs would have been proven with the initial test successfully completed (as a detonator for the larger version).
Regarding a smoking gun, there are several already billowing : the training base 80 kilks south of Baghdad, the sponsorship for Palestinian and Hamas terrorist activities and successes, the Anthrax genetically linked to the supply we sent to Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war, the 1993 attack on the WTC, the connection between Iraqi Intelligence chiefs and Atta, the ... well, you get the gist.
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