[Mb-civic] Soviet Germ Factories Pose New Threat
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sat Aug 20 08:00:46 PDT 2005
Soviet Germ Factories Pose New Threat
Once Mined for Pathogens in Bioweapons Program, Labs Lack Security
By Joby Warrick, Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, August 20, 2005; Page A01
ODESSA, Ukraine -- For 50 years under Soviet rule, nearly everything
about the Odessa Antiplague Station was a state secret, down to the
names of the deadly microbes its white-coated workers collected and
stored in a pair of ordinary freezers.
Cloistered in a squat, gray building at the tip of a rusting shipping
dock, the station's biologists churned out reports on grave illnesses
that were mentioned only in code. Anthrax was Disease No. 123, and
plague, which killed thousands here in the 19th century, was No. 127.
Each year, researchers added new specimens to their frozen collection
and shared test results with sister institutes along a network
controlled by Moscow.
Today, the Soviets are gone but the lab is still here, in this Black Sea
port notorious for its criminal gangs and black markets. It is just one
of more than 80 similar "antiplague" labs scattered across the former
Soviet Union, from the turbulent Caucasus to Central Asian republics
that share borders with Iran and Afghanistan. Each is a repository of
knowledge, equipment and lethal pathogens that weapons experts have said
could be useful to bioterrorists.
After decades of operating in the shadows, the labs are beginning to
shed light on another secret: How the Soviet military co-opted obscure
civilian institutes into a powerful biological warfare program that
built weapons for spreading plague and anthrax spores. As they ramped up
preparations for germ warfare in the 1970s and 1980s, Soviet generals
mined the labs for raw materials, including highly lethal strains of
viruses and bacteria that were intended for use in bombs and missiles.
The facilities' hidden role is described in a draft report of a major
investigation by scholars from the Center for Nonproliferation Studies
at the Monterey Institute of International Studies. The main conclusions
of the report, which was provided to The Washington Post, were echoed in
interviews with current and former U.S. officials familiar with the
labs. Most scientists who worked in antiplague stations in Soviet times
knew nothing of their contributions to the weapons program, the report says.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/19/AR2005081901507.html
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