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To: MamaDearest; Myrddin; Godzilla; freeperfromnj; All
Experts Paint Dire Picture of Bioterrorism Threat

By Joe Fiorill
Global Security Newswire

WASHINGTON — The knowledge needed to engineer new weapon-usable biological agents is common around the world, and the United States must seek the proper balance between agility of response and countermeasure stockpiling in defending against biological terrorism, experts told a U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee this morning (see GSN, July 6).

U.S. efforts to defend against known threats, such as the Strategic National Stockpile of countermeasures, have some utility, said Molecular Sciences Institute Director Roger Brent. However, they may represent a “Maginot Line” that terrorists could simply circumvent by using new pathogens, or existing ones not addressed by the stockpile, he told the Homeland Security Subcommittee on Prevention of Nuclear and Biological Attack.

Brent said terrorists faced with a U.S. stockpile of the antibiotic Ciproflaxin, for example, would be certain, if mounting an anthrax attack, to employ a variety of the bacteria that was resistant to Ciproflaxin.

Programs to protect against known threats are not “bad things,” Brent added, but “what’s going to come at you is impossible to predict.”

The threat is underscored by the wide dissemination of biological-engineering knowledge around the globe, Brent said.

“There are now tens of thousands of people who could engineer drug-resistant anthrax,” said the scientist, who as a consultant to the U.S. government has received numerous briefings on U.S. and Soviet biological weapon programs.

George Mason University professor Kenneth Alibek, a top official in the Soviet Union’s biological weapon program before defecting to the United States in 1992, concurred that there is no shortage of knowledge that terrorists could exploit in mounting a biological attack.

“The knowledge is there,” Alibek told the subcommittee. “Whether or not they are developing this, they don’t publish — but they can.”

Massachusetts General Hospital Biodefense and Mass Casualty Care Director Michael Callahan suggested a few potential “chokepoints” at which the United States could seek to monitor or disrupt terrorists’ biological weapon efforts.

Washington could focus on the trade in certain chemicals useful for making pathogens more deadly, he said, or on products and technologies, such as vaccines, that could be used to protect people against biological agents with which they are working.

Brent expressed skepticism about such approaches, stressing that the market for such products is diffuse and worldwide.

“You wish there were more chokepoints,” he said. “I’m not convinced that there are very good chokepoints.”

http://www.nti.org/d_newswire/issues/2005_7_13.html#85DAECF6

442 posted on 07/13/2005 3:38:37 PM PDT by Oorang ( A great deal of talent is lost to the world for want of a little courage. -Goethe)
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To: Oorang

Thanks Oorang. These stories get more ominous each day. Savage's guest just said 80% of the mosques in this country are radicalized. Also talking about OBL's plan to kill 4 million Americans, 2 million of them children. Mentions how in 2001 a terrorist was caught crossing the Israeli border with a plutonium device in his backback. He said everything could be verified. Tancredi is going to be holding hearings on the possibility that nukes were smuggled in from Chechnya via Albanians who then got them into the hands of M-13 gang. He paints a frightening scenario.


447 posted on 07/13/2005 3:46:29 PM PDT by freeperfromnj
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To: Oorang
Thanks for pinging me here. I'm on a very intense project that has me out of town for a few weeks.

Alibek's acknowledgment of the number of people who can make drug resistant anthrax indicates that we have a large potential number of parties that could employ bioweapons against us. Our medical facilities aren't really up to the task of dealing with bio attack. It is unlikely that even a small number of patients would be properly diagnosed in time.

708 posted on 07/14/2005 4:59:09 PM PDT by Myrddin
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