29.08.2017
Chemical
and biological weapons conjure in the mind terror and have been
repeatedly cited as a pretext for both acts of military aggression and
even entire wars. Scenes of soldiers and civilians choking on toxic
chemicals or covered in boils after exposure have been the stuff of
nightmares both geopolitically and in fiction.
While current chemical and biological
weapons are far more limited than movies and politically-motivated
narratives suggest, emerging biotechnology is making possible a new
generation of biological weapons that may actually live up to the terror
current weapons inspire.
A US policy think tank as early as 2000 in a publication titled, “Rebuilding America’s Defense” (PDF), a
virtual blueprint of the plans and means the US sought to utilize
toward achieving global hegemony, would make particular note of
bioweapons and the use of genotype-specific weapons, stating:
Although it may take several decades for the process of transformation to unfold, in time, the art of warfare on air, land, and sea will be vastly different than it is today, and “combat” likely will take place in new dimensions: in space, “cyber-space,” and perhaps the world of microbes…
…advanced forms of biological warfare that can “target” specific genotypes may transform biological warfare from the realm of terror to a politically useful tool.
In 2004, the Guardian in an article titled, “Could you make a genetically targeted weapon?,” would warn:
The prospect that rogue scientists could develop bioweapons designed to target certain ethnic groups based on their genetic differences was raised this week in a report by the British Medical Association (BMA).
The report, Biotechnology, Weapons and Humanity II, warns that construction of genetic weapons “is now approaching reality”. Such “genetic bombs” could contain anthrax or bubonic plague tailored to activate only when genes indicated the infected person was from a particular group.
The topic of genotype-specific
bioweapons has held interest across the West for decades. The
Apartheid regime in South Africa attempted to produce biological weapons
to induce infertility among the nation’s black population.
PBS Frontline’s article, “What Happened in South Africa?” would recount:
In 1998 South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission held hearings investigating activities of the apartheid-era government. Toward the end of the hearings, the Commission looked into the apartheid regime’s Chemical and Biological Warfare (CBW) program and allegations that it developed a sterility vaccine to use on black South Africans, employed toxic and chemical poison weapons for political asssassination, and in the late 1970s provided anthrax and cholera to Rhodesian troops for use against guerrilla rebels in their war to overthrow Rhodesia’s white minority rule.
While
South Africa’s entire CBW program was abhorrent, what is particularly
frightening is the use of South Africa’s national vaccination program as
a vector for infecting black women with viruses meant to sterilize
them. Now that vaccination programs are being pushed globally, there
lies the danger that such weapons could be used against entire regions
of the planet.
PBS would elaborate further on the CBW program, stating that the South African government:
Developed lethal chemical and biological weapons that targeted ANC [African National Congress] political leaders and their supporters as well as populations living in the black townships. These weapons included an infertility toxin to secretly sterilize the black population; skin-absorbing poisons that could be applied to the clothing of targets; and poison concealed in products such as chocolates and cigarettes.
PNAC’s
dream of genotype specific bioweapons then, is not some far-off science
fiction future, it is something that has been pursued in earnest for
decades and apparently by interests aligned to the West, not enemies of
it. More
No comments:
Post a Comment