From owner-imap@chumbly.math.missouri.edu Sun Nov 3 07:30:06 2002
Date: Sat, 2 Nov 2002 01:11:46 -0600 (CST)
Organization: South Movement
From: Dave Muller <davemull@alphalink.com.au>
Subject: [southnews] US used Sarin in Hawaii -Pentagon
Article: 146622
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
The Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/Print/0,3858,4534310,00.html
WashingtonRespected scientists on both sides of the Atlantic warned yesterday that the US is developing a new generation of weapons that undermine and possibly violate international treaties on biological and chemical warfare.
The scientists, specialists in bio-warfare and chemical weapons, say
the Pentagon, with the help of the British military, is also working
on non-lethal
weapons similar to the narcotic gas used by
Russian forces to end last week's siege in Moscow.
They also point to the paradox of the US developing such weapons at a time when it is proposing military action against Iraq on the grounds that Saddam Hussein is breaking international treaties.
Malcolm Dando, professor of international security at the University of Bradford, and Mark Wheelis, a lecturer in microbiology at the University of California, say that the US is encouraging a breakdown in arms control by its research into biological cluster bombs, anthrax and non-lethal weapons for use against hostile crowds, and by the secrecy under which these programmes are being conducted.
There can be disagreement over whether what the United States is
doing represents violations of treaties,
Mr Wheelis told the
Guardian. But what is happening is at least so close to the
borderline as to be destabilising.
In a paper to be published soon in the scientific journal Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, the two academics focus on recent US actions that have served to undermine the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention. In a move that stunned the international community last July, the US blocked an attempt to give the convention some teeth with inspections, so that member countries could check if others were keeping the agreement.
Mr Dando believes Washington's motive for torpedoing the deal, which had the support of its allies, was to maintain secrecy over US research work on biological weapons. He said that work includes:
In each case, the US argued the research work was being done for defensive purposes, but their legality under the BWC is questionable, the scientists argue.
For example, a clause in the biological weapons treaty forbids
signatories from producing or developing weapons, equipment or
means of delivery designed to use such agents or toxins for hostile
purposes or in armed conflict
.
Furthermore, signatories agreed to make annual declarations about their biodefence programmes, but the US never mentioned any of those programmes in its reports. Instead, they emerged from leaks and press reporting.
The focus on Washington's biological and chemical weapons programme comes at an awkward time for the Bush administration, which is locked in negotiations at the UN for a tough resolution on arms inspections of Iraq.
According to Mr Dando, British and US research into hallucinogenic
weapons such as the gas BZ encouraged Iraq to look into similar
agents. We showed them the way,
he said.
Mr Dando added that the US was currently working on non-lethal
weapons similar to the gas Russian forces used to break the Moscow
theatre siege. Those include calmative
agent which are designed
to knock people out without killing them.
What happened in Moscow is a harbinger of what is to come,
Mr
Dando said. There is a revolution in life sciences which could be
applied in a major way to warfare. It's an early example of the
mess we may be creating.
He added that Britain is implicated as well
, as the
Pentagon's Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate has worked with
British officers on its research.
Jonathan Tucker, a chemical weapons expert at the US Institute for Peace in Washington, said much of the work on non-lethal weapons was being carried out by an institute under the US justice department but was funded by the Pentagon.
They are trying to keep it at arms length, but it is problematic
especially for military purposes. The chemical weapons convention
makes a very clear distinction between riot control and
incapacitants,
he said.
While Mr Tucker believes that such knock-out gases are explicitly
banned under the treaty, Mr Dando and Mr Wheelis believe the Pentagon
has exploited a loophole that allows for such weapons for law
enforcement purposes
.
But by blurring the edges of the treaty, they argue the US is inviting
other countries to do the same. The US, Mr Dando said, runs the
very real danger of leading the world down a pathway that will greatly
reduce the security of all.