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Buried WMDs Found ... In Maryland
CBS News ^ | 5-28-03

Posted on 05/29/2003 8:31:35 AM PDT by cgk

Buried WMDs Found ... In Maryland



FORT DETRICK, May 28, 2003


Aan exterior view of the lab building of U. S. Army Research Institute of Infectious Diseases at Fort Detrick.  (AP)



"You never know what's there until you start digging."
Col. John Ball,
Fort Detrick garrison commander,
to The Post



(CBS) U.S. weapons experts are struggling to deal with the remnants of a decades-old biological weapons program.

They are trying to find potentially dangerous materials — once shrouded in secrecy — with only poorly kept records and fading memories to go on.

Thousands of tons of hazardous substances like anthrax are at stake.

Only the hunt is not in Iraq.

It's in Maryland.

According to The Washington Post, the U.S. Army has spent two years and $25 million cleaning up an area of central Maryland's Fort Detrick that was used as a target range and waste dump.

In what has become the Army's biggest remediation project ever, the cleanup of Area B has unearthed vials of live bacteria and nonvirulent anthrax. Some 2,000 tons have been scooped out of the ground to date, in a project due to end in 2003.

"You never know what's there until you start digging," Col. John Ball, Fort Detrick garrison commander, told The Post.

The site is so toxic that clean-up crews wear respirators and the materials sometimes burst into flames as they are dug up. Animals from the surrounding forest are autopsied when they die to see what killed them. At one point, digging released a gas that sent workers to the hospital.

The very small amount of anthrax that was found was in vaccine form and could not have spread the disease. But cleanup crews have also unearthed old lab rats, syringes, and drums and canisters with unidentified contents.

"The documentation for where this came from doesn't exist," Lt. Col. Donald Archibald, Fort Detrick's director of safety, environment and integrated planning, told The Post.

The dump was used from 1955 into the 1960s. The cleanup began ten years after tests of monitoring wells near the dump showed dangerous chemicals. Subsequent testing indicated that wells used by houses near the site were contaminated.

The United States' biological weapons program ran from 1941, when it was headed by pharmaceutical magnate George Merck, until President Nixon ended the research in 1969.

During the intervening 28 years, the U.S. conducted research and testing on a wide variety of agents at several facilities across the country, as well as in cities where civilians were unwitting guinea pigs in tests using harmless bacteria to trace weapons' potential.

According to a history of the program provided by the Henry L. Stimson Center, research at facilities like Fort Detrick and Pine Bluff, in Arkansas, included development of 500-pound bombs for anthrax and botulinum toxin, as well work on strains of tularemia, staph and encephalitis.

In 1950, open-air tests with apparently harmless agents were conducted on Navy ships off Norfolk, Va., and over the San Francisco Bay. In 1965, the Army used nonhazardous Bacillus globigii to test the way germs might spread through Washington DC's National Airport and Greyhound bus terminal.

In 1969, when Mr. Nixon announced he was halting U.S. research on germ warfare, national security adviser Henry Kissinger said it was because, "We have simply not concluded that this is an effective or proper instrument of warfare."


TOPICS: Anthrax Scare; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: Maryland; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: anthrax; antraz; fortdetrick; ftdetrick; landfill; military
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1 posted on 05/29/2003 8:31:36 AM PDT by cgk
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To: cgk
And your point is.......?
2 posted on 05/29/2003 8:33:42 AM PDT by AxelPaulsenJr (Shriner's Childrens Hospitals Provide Free Medical Care to Those In Need.)
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To: AxelPaulsenJr
Yeah exactly. They'll probably try to blame President George Bush too. Like in 1950 he was 4 years old and in 1955 he was 9 years old. Just a thought...trying to jump the gun before I'm "surprised" at the no doubt coming accusations. :))))
3 posted on 05/29/2003 8:40:59 AM PDT by cubreporter
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To: cubreporter
Interesting that they actually credit a Republican Pres. with ended the testing.
4 posted on 05/29/2003 8:45:45 AM PDT by EggsAckley ( Midnight at the Oasis)
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To: cubreporter
So it took 30-50 years to find them. Why the rush in Iraq then?
5 posted on 05/29/2003 8:46:46 AM PDT by Grig
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To: cgk
So if we only find a very small portion of Anthrax vaccine in Iraq, that means that CBS will call it WMD!! Yay!!!
6 posted on 05/29/2003 8:47:06 AM PDT by dandelion
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To: AxelPaulsenJr
What about Ft. McCleelan AL, they have mustard gas buried there and it is seeping into the ground water, nary a world about that, of course, there are parts of france (who cares) that still has mustard gase seeping out, but with the state that country is in you really don't know.

Understand the frogs are trying to get all the Islamic fascists to move there, but understand about 90% of the population would have to move into those areas.

7 posted on 05/29/2003 8:47:15 AM PDT by dts32041 ("Liberty is not America's gift to the world, it is God's gift to humanity" George W Bush 28 Jan 2003)
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To: cgk
"...until President Nixon ended the research in 1969."

Hmmm, seems as though the project ran through mostly Democratic administrations, and it took a republican to put a stop to it.

8 posted on 05/29/2003 8:47:59 AM PDT by Psalm 73 ("Gentlemen, you can't fight in here - this is a war room".)
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To: Grig
:)
9 posted on 05/29/2003 8:48:57 AM PDT by cubreporter
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To: cgk
materials sometimes burst into flames as they are dug up.

Cool. Sounds almost haunted.

10 posted on 05/29/2003 8:51:38 AM PDT by dead
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To: cubreporter
The point is, we are actively destroying our weapons of mass destruction. And more importantly, I trust The United States with WMD's a whole lot more than I do Iran, or Iraq, or North Korea, or Syria, or Russia, or name your favorite rogue state.
11 posted on 05/29/2003 8:52:56 AM PDT by AxelPaulsenJr (Shriner's Childrens Hospitals Provide Free Medical Care to Those In Need.)
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To: EggsAckley; MHGinTN; Coleus; cpforlife.org
The United States' biological weapons program ran from 1941, when it was headed by pharmaceutical magnate George Merck

This would be the same Merck who has a "new" endeavour: making vaccines out of aborted babies. From Bio-weapons to genocide. What a legacy.

12 posted on 05/29/2003 8:56:20 AM PDT by cgk (Bob Geldof: "President Bush is radical, in a positive sense. Clinton just screwed everybody.")
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To: Psalm 73
Hmmm, seems as though the project ran through mostly Democratic administrations, and it took a republican to put a stop to it.

----------------------

The project was very limited until Eisenhower expanded it into major proportions.

13 posted on 05/29/2003 8:56:42 AM PDT by RLK
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To: RLK
...and after Eisenhower (a marginal Repub), eight years' of JFK/LBJ - what's your point?
14 posted on 05/29/2003 9:45:51 AM PDT by Psalm 73 ("Gentlemen, you can't fight in here - this is a war room".)
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To: cgk

15 posted on 05/29/2003 9:57:34 AM PDT by Puppage (You may disagree with what I have to say, but I will defend to your death my right to say it)
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To: The Great Satan; Badabing Badaboom; Mitchell; aristeides; okie01; pokerbuddy0; Nita Nupress
Here we go again...
16 posted on 05/29/2003 10:02:45 AM PDT by Fred Mertz
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To: Psalm 73
what's your point?

------------

The point is obvious to anyone of intelligence.

17 posted on 05/29/2003 11:21:35 AM PDT by RLK
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To: cgk; pokerbuddy0; Fred Mertz; The Great Satan; okie01
Dibs.
18 posted on 05/29/2003 11:32:55 AM PDT by Shermy
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To: RLK
"...obvious to anyone of intelligence."

I asked you to clarify your statement and I get a grammer-school-boy insult.
Thanks, pal, I'll remember to ignore your comments from now on.

19 posted on 05/29/2003 11:56:09 AM PDT by Psalm 73 ("Gentlemen, you can't fight in here - this is a war room".)
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To: cgk; pokerbuddy0
http://www.wusatv9.com/news/news_article.asp?storyid=18752

Ft. Detrick Digs Uncover Live Bacteria

Two years of digging at Fort Detrick have unearthed more than 2,000 tons of hazardous waste, including vials of live bacteria and nonvirulent anthrax the military didn't know were there, Army officials say.

The discovery of pathogens apparently dumped by the offensive biological weapons program that operated at the post until 1969 has turned what was expected to be an industrial waste removal into the biggest cleanup in Army history.


"When Nixon shut us down, we had a deadline, we were given six weeks to clean up the post. Well you couldn't do it. People sneaked out to the good area, and dumped it in a pit." says Hubert Kaempf, the retired Army maintenance engineer in charge of cleanup back then.

Kaempf tells 9 News's Bruce Leshan that concerns began to rise when cleanup workers first found autopsied rats, and vials of viruses.

So far, cleanup crews have found more than 100 glass vials containing live bacteria.

"Nothing that we removed from the pit has been released into the environment, " said Lt. Col. Donald Archibald.

Here's why: Inside a specially pressurized and filtered vinyl tent, workers in biohazard suits operate bulldozers under blast shields, protected from small explosions. The crew breathes through air hoses. The site is quarantined for two hours at the end of each working day, while the tent's air is tested for pathogens.

When digging began in April 2001, the Army expected to find mostly lab chemicals, debris and incinerator ash. But the bulldozers soon hit upon corroded drums of herbicides and unidentified chemicals, syringes, lab instruments and strange substances mixed with the dirt.

After larger objects are removed, the soil and waste are pulverized, and throughout the process, they are doused with bleach to kill all bacteria.

After testing for pathogens, it is sent in sealed containers to a disposal facility in Texas.

The Army did not expect to find tiny vials of live bacteria like Brucella melitensis, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Bacillus anthracis, the potent form of Anthrax,which was brewed by the gallon at Fort Detrick until President Nixon banned offense weapons research.

"The documentation for where this came from doesn't exist," says Archibald, Fort Detrick's director of safety, environment and integrated planning, said.

20 posted on 05/29/2003 12:55:15 PM PDT by Shermy
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