Health officials, law officers take part in biohazard training
The day-long seminars are for law enforcement and emergency personnel who would be the first on the scene if a chemical or biological incident-like a train wreck, a chemical explosion, or even a terror attack-happened in Bladen.
The Soviets were deeply involved in chemical and biological warfare, Little said, and since the fall of the Soviet Union, "many of those weapons stocks have since disappeared."
"We have no way of knowing whose hands they ended up in," he said.
The advantages of biological warfare-ease of transport and distribution-make a biological attack very attractive to terrorists.
"You might not realize it," he said, "but an outbreak of smallpox, anthrax or tularemia in a major population center could quickly spread through the entire country."
http://www.bladenjournal.com/articles/2004/06/11/news/news07.txt
Looks like Putin would rather have Bush in office:
Putin takes Bush's side against Democrats on Iraq
June 11, 2004 Posted: 10:49 Moscow time (06:49 GMT)
Russian President Vladimir Putin stepped into the U.S. political campaign on Thursday, saying the Democrats had "no moral right" to criticize President George W. Bush over Iraq. The Kremlin leader, answering a reporter's question in Sea Island, Georgia, suggested that the Democrats were two-faced in criticizing Bush on Iraq since it had been the Clinton administration that authorized the 1999 bombing of Yugoslavia by U.S. and NATO forces.
The reporter had asked Putin to respond to U.S. press articles questioning Russia's place at the G8 feast of leading industrial countries. Putin brushed these off, saying such articles were part of an internal U.S. political debate.
He went on: "I am deeply convinced that President Bush's political adversaries have no moral right to attack him over Iraq because they did exactly the same. "It suffices to recall Yugoslavia. Now look at them. They don't like what President Bush is doing in Iraq."
Russia was adamantly opposed to the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, as it has been to the U.S.-led military operation Iraq to topple Saddam Hussein. At the same time, Putin forged a strong friendship with Bush by offering immediate support in the global fight against terrorism. Both men go out of their way now to avoid criticizing each other publicly. GAZETA.RU
Source URL: http://www.russiajournal.com/news/cnews-article.shtml?nd=44195