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Chembio smoke detectors
© 2001 WorldNetDaily.com
Now that
at least one American has died from inhaling anthrax, perhaps you're thinking
that it "was the right thing to do" for President Clinton to have
ordered all U.S. armed forces personnel including reserve and
National Guard units here at home to be inoculated with an anthrax vaccine
developed by the U.S. Army. Perhaps you're thinking that it would also have
been the right thing to vaccinate as Clinton seriously considered doing
all the police, fire, public-health and other emergency officials in cities
throughout the country.
Well, Clinton reportedly gave
that order because he had read a novel, "The Cobra Event," which
revolves about a bio-attack but not of anthrax on New York City, and had
misunderstood what he read. Outbreaks of disease caused by certain biological
warfare agents like smallpox, for example can spread and can
become epidemic or even pandemic. But the disease caused by the anthrax
bacteria does not "spread" from one individual to another.
Anthrax is a naturally occurring
bacterium. The U.S. Army has long had the responsibility for developing
vaccines and antidotes to protect all our armed forces from viruses, bacteria
and other naturally occurring disease-causing agents which our armed forces
would likely encounter in various foreign climes.
The vaccine being used under the
Clinton order had been developed by the Army in the 1950s, and had been
determined by the Food and Drug administration to be effective against
cutaneous exposure to the naturally occurring strains of anthrax infecting
cattle, sheep and, very rarely, humans.
According to the medical experts,
the disease resulting from cutaneous anthrax exposure develops relatively
slowly, is relatively easily treated, and usually does not prove fatal, even
if not treated.
However, if the victim actually
inhales an anthrax aerosol, the disease develops very rapidly, is difficult
to treat, and almost always proves fatal, if not treated.
The Army anthrax vaccine was
never intended to counter the enemy use of anthrax aerosols as biological
weapons on the battlefield and the vaccine has never actually been shown to
be effective against the inhalation of anthrax aerosols.
In the Gulf War, since there had
been reports that Iraq had previously used anthrax in some form on the
battlefield, more than 150,000 U.S. troops were given the FDA-approved
six-shot vaccination regime. We now know that the Iraqis had produced tons of
chembio agents and had actually loaded some 'liquid' anthrax into missile
warheads. However, they had never solved the difficult problem of
transforming their liquid anthrax in the warhead into an effective anthrax
aerosol over the target, so they never used anthrax or any other chembio
weapon.
Meanwhile, President Yeltsin
acknowledged, in 1992, that the Soviet Union had had a program in which
biological weapons were successfully developed and that an accidental release
of an anthrax aerosol had occurred from a military facility near Sverdlovsk
(now called Ekaterinburg) on April 2, 1979, which killed 64 people. The
Russians have apparently since developed a vaccine that is effective against
anthrax aerosol inhalation, have stockpiled it, and have just offered to
supply us with however much we need.
But, face it. It will never be
possible try as we may to prevent every chembio terrorist attack. We've
been hit, and we're going to be hit again, even if we find bin Laden and kill
him. However, it would be a mistake for the director of the Office of
Homeland Defense to give vaccines even one effective against anthrax
aerosols to hundreds of millions of Americans, as President Clinton
seriously considered doing. (Of course, vaccination against smallpox, which
can spread, is a different story.)
Instead, what we almost
desperately need and will need for the duration of the War Against
Terrorism is the chembio equivalent of a smoke detector. At present, it is
days, even weeks, before the medical experts know that someone has been the
victim of a chembio attack, and it frequently takes even longer for them to
figure out what their patients were hit with. Rather than trying to vaccinate
everyone against every conceivable chembio agent a terrorist might use, what
the president and Gov. Ridge should concentrate on is developing perhaps in
cooperation with the Russians technologies and methodologies for detecting
all kinds of chembio agents in real time.
The sooner we know what we've
been hit with, the sooner we can go about mitigating the consequences to the
victims. That's the way to thwart terrorists deny them their victims.
Physicist James Gordon Prather has served as a policy
implementing official for national security-related technical matters in the
Federal Energy Agency, the Energy Research and Development Administration,
the Department of Energy, the Office of the Secretary of Defense and the
Department of the Army. Dr. Prather also served as legislative assistant for
national security affairs to U.S. Sen. Henry Bellmon, R-Okla. -- ranking
member of the Senate Budget Committee and member of the Senate Energy
Committee and Appropriations Committee. Dr. Prather had earlier worked as a
nuclear weapons physicist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in
California and Sandia National Laboratory in New Mexico.
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