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U.S. ARMY QUIETLY RESUMES BIOWARFARE TESTING
AFTER 10-YEAR HIATUS
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The Salt Lake City Tribune
Dates: 1/27/93; 7/28/93
Titles: "Army Resumes Biological-Agents Tests at Dugway After 10-Year
Cessation"; "Dugway to test disease-causing agents at remote lab".
Author: Jim Woolf
[Name of paper obscured]
Date: 9/21/93
Title: "Dugway Base Cited for 22 Waste Violations"
Author: Laurie Sullivan
High Country News
Date: 8/9/93
Title: "Biowarfare is back"
Author: Jon Christensen
High Desert Advocate
Date: 9/15/93
Title: "Utah biowarfare oversight group wants to do its work behind
closed doors"
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SYNOPSIS: Although few people outside of Dugway,
Utah, are aware of it, the US Army has brought biological warfare back
to a site it declared unsafe a decade earlier.
Ten years ago, residents of western Utah breathed a healthy sigh of
relief when the Army discontinued testing biological warfare agents at
its Dugway Proving Ground. The reason given was that the Army's
testing facility was getting old, and its safety--its ability to
prevent potentially deadly diseases from escaping into the air outside
the facility and thence to the rest of the world--could no longer be
guaranteed. Now the deadly bugs are back.
Military scientists are testing a device called the Biological
Integrated Detection System (BIDS) at the renovated Dugway facility.
BIDS is described as a defensive weapon, designed to detect the
presence of biological agents in time to allow soldiers to put on
protective clothing.
A Dugway representative said the tests, which include organisms such
as anthrax, botulism, and the plague, would initially be liquid, not
aerosol, tests. Aerosol tests are the most hazardous form of testing
because they involve spraying biological agents into the air inside a
sealed chamber. One tiny air leak could result in a catastrophic
release of deadly diseases. It was precisely this hazard that led to
the closing of the Dugway facility in 1983. The biowarfare lab has
been renovated since then and Army experts claim their elaborate
safety precautions will prevent such a leak.
Nonetheless, new safety concerns were raised in September 1993, when
the Dugway Proving Ground was cited for 22 violations of state
hazardous-waste regulations, ranging from inadequate record-keeping to
improper dumping of poisonous chemicals. Notices of violations and
orders for compliance were issued to the Army base by the Utah
Department of Environmental Quality.
Critics also point out that it was the Army that denied for a year
that it was responsible for the 1968 accidental release of nerve gas
from Dugway that killed some 6,000 sheep in the area.
Finally, public information about what was happening at
Dugway suffered a serious setback in September 1993, when the
biowarfare oversight committee that advises the governor of Utah on
biological defense testing matters at Dugway voted to make itself
off-limits to the public. Reasoning that they could obtain more
information from the Army if confidentiality could be assured, the
oversight group also voted to disengage from its parent organization,
the State Advocacy Council on Science and Technology. The committee
had been frustrated by its inability to get timely information from
Dugway.
Critics doubt the committee will have access to any more information
than it has received in the past and that the net result only further
distances the Army from accountability and the public from the truth.
COMMENTS: Jim Woolf, environmental writer for The Salt Lake Tribune,
said he was surprised by the lack of attention this story generated.
"It was treated as a local story that had little significance to the
general public.," Woolf said, adding, "I disagree."
Woolf felt the general public should know more about this story for at
least three reasons:
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"1. This is an important local story. Military
scientists near my home are conducting tests with some of the most
deadly disease causing organisms and natural toxins ever identified.
What if some of these 'bugs' escape into the environment or are
carried by workers into my community? Are local doctors trained to
recognize and deal with this threat? Has the Army taken all prudent
steps to reduce the risk? Has the public been told the full scope of
testing being carried out by the Army?
"2. Biological and chemical weapons have been described as the "poor
man's atomic bomb." They are relatively easy to produce and could
have devastating consequences in battle. Several of our enemies are
known or suspected to have these weapons. All announced testing at
Dugway focuses on developing systems to protect America troops from
these weapons. (The development or testing of OFFENSIVE biological
or chemical systems is prohibited under international treaties.)
Work in this field would be of general interest to military families
and others who may feel threatened by this category of weapon.
"3. The resumption of testing and plans to build an upgraded research
laboratory at Dugway could have important consequences for America's
international relations. Critics claim there is no clear line
dividing defensive from offensive testing--the scientific knowledge
gained at Dugway can be used for either good or bad. Does the
resumption of this testing send a message to other countries that
the United States is interested in bio-chem warfare? Will it prompt
other countries to upgrade their test facilities and lead to an
escalation in the race to produce ever-more-deadly weapons?"
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Woolf felt the interests of several groups were
served by the limited coverage given the resumption of biowarfare
testing.
"The Army was pleased. Military scientists want freedom to study
whatever they want, no matter how dangerous or far-fetched the
potential threat may be. The last thing they want are questions from
the public or elected officials.
"Congress was served because members were not required to confront
another potentially controversial issue. A handful of members
interested in military issues are responsible for most of the funding
decisions in this area. If there is no controversy, no one else has to
confront the difficult questions surrounding this topic.
"Certain economic interests in Utah and elsewhere were served. Dugway
provides jobs in a remote area of the state. If biological testing
were eliminated or scaled back, the Army would have fewer reasons to
maintain the base. Also, a handful of companies are developing
products and services related to biological-defense. None would like
to see their income potential reduced."
Woolf notes that the resumption of biological testing has been a
difficult issue in Utah and concludes with a chilling question.
"The presence of these deadly agents so close to our community is a
source or concern, but we watched on CNN the terror in Israel during
the Iraq war when no one knew whether the bombs that were falling
contained chemical or biological weapons. We understand the need to
improve our defenses, but wonder why it has to be done in our
backyard, whether there are safer alternatives, and whether all safety
precautions have been taken.
"We're also frightened that the Army may not be telling the whole
truth-- that in times of emergency they will cover their operations
with the national security veil and do whatever they think is right,
regardless of the threat to their neighbors. Utahans learned this
lesson living downwind from the nuclear-weapons tests at the Nevada
Test Site.
"Will the clouds of radioactive material be followed by the plague?"
Jon Christensen, Great Basin Regional Editor for the High Country
News, agreed that there hadn't been sufficient coverage of this issue.
"The only papers to cover the story adequately were The Salt Lake
tribune and the High Desert Advocate, in Wendover, Nevada." Without
their coverage, Christensen felt that we all might have missed this
story about the resumption of biowarfare testing at Dugway, Utah. He
feels it is important for people to know about this issue since they
"might better understand the domestic costs and risks of preparing for
war, many of which are borne by remote, rural Western communities
(among others). Also, our stockpile of dangerous chemical weapons and
biological agents must be stored and destroyed safely. The public
needs to know how." Christensen emphasized that "The regional media
deserve credit for following this story. Without them, we would all be
in the dark about this?"
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