With respect to the question of the nature of widespread
reports of jets (many identified as U.S. Air Force) that
are spraying something that dozens of people around the
nation claim makes them and their communities sick, the
following testimony of Professor Leonard A. Cole is most
relevant and alarming. In the following testimony before
the U.S. Senate, Dr. Cole covers facts regarding the U.S.
military's spraying of HUNDREDS of populated areas in the
U.S. with harmful chemicals and infectious pathogens as
part of biological warfare experiments. Dr. Cole has
a book on the topic that has received much praise:

"Clouds of Secrecy: The Army's Germ-Warfare Tests Over
Populated Areas," by Leonard A. Cole (http://amazon.com)

Environmental News Service reports on U.S. Air Force
jets seen spraying something that makes people sick:
 http://ens.lycos.com/ens/jan99/1999L-01-12-01.html
 http://ens.lycos.com/ens/jan99/1999L-01-08-05.html


============== BEGIN DR. COLE'S TESTIMONY ===============
=========================================================
   http://personalpages.tds.net/~kknowlto/openair.htm
---------------------------------------------------------

United States Senate Testimony before the
Committee on Veterans' Affairs May 6, 1994

Open Air Testing with Simulated Biological
and Chemical Warfare Agents

By Leonard A. Cole, Ph.D.

My name is Leonard A. Cole, and I teach science and public
policy at Rutgers University in Newark. My research interests
include biological and chemical warfare policies, and I have
written in particular about testing done in the U.S Army's
biological defense program.

I appreciate your invitation, Senator Rockefeller, to testify
about experiments involving simulated biological and chemical
warfare agents. These agents, which the army calls simulants,
are intended to mimic more lethal bacteria and chemicals that
might be used in actual warfare.

As described in my book, Clouds of Secrecy, the army began a
program in 1949 to assess the nation's vulnerability to attack
with biological weapons. During the next 20 years, the army
released simulant agents over hundreds of populated areas
around the country. Targets included portions of Hawaii and
Alaska, San Francisco, St. Louis, Minneapolis, New York City,
Washington, D.C., Key West, and many other cities. The purpose
was to see how the bacteria spread and survived as people went
about their normal activities.

Evidence suggested that the tests may have been causing illness
to exposed citizens. Nevertheless, as army spokesmen subsequently
testified, the health of the millions of people exposed was never
monitored because the army assumed that the bacteria and chemicals
were harmless.

Vulnerability testing continues at Dugway Proving Ground, 70
miles from Salt Lake City. Several smaller communities are closer
to the base, and Dugway itself is home to hundreds of civilians
and military personnel and their families. The stated purpose of
the tests is to evaluate biological detector systems and
protective gear.

Since tests involve spraying simulants outdoors, it is important
to understand how much risk they pose to humans who are exposed.
Official statements have not always been dear on this matter. A
July 1993 news release by the Dugway Public Affairs Office
indicates that "no specific safety controls or protection are
required for testing with simulants." The statement implies,
erroneously, that the simulants are harmless.

In fact, during 45 years of open air testing, from time to time
the army has stopped using certain simulants for reasons of
safety. In each instance the army belatedly recognized they
could be causing disease and death, although such information
had long been available in the medical literature. This was
the case in the 1950s when it ceased using the fungus
Aspergillus fumigatus as a simulant. The fungus had long been
known to cause aspergillosis, a disease that can be fatal.
Similarly, in the 1960s the army stopped using zinc cadmium
sulfide, a chemical that had been known for years to cause
cancer.

In the 1970s, the bacterium Serratia marcescens, a source of
infections that can lead to death, was taken out of service as
a simulant. And in the 1980s, dimethyl methylphosphonate, a
chemical known as DPP, was removed from use as a simulant
because of its carcinogenic and other toxic potential. I
understand that one of today's witnesses, Earl Davenport,
was exposed to DMMP at Dugway in 1984 and may still be
suffering health problems as a result.

Indeed, simulants now used at Dugway continue to pose risks.
The chemical ethylene oxide, which is present in some of the
mixtures used in outdoor spraying, is a known carcinogen. The
bacterium Bacillus subtilis, while not generally seen as
dangerous, is cited in medical textbooks as able to cause
serious infections. In truth any microorganism that seems
harmless under some circumstances may cause illness under
others.

Exposure to high concentrations of any microorganism can be
critically dangerous to people in weakened conditions. The
elderly, the very young, people with AIDS and others who
have weakened immune systems are more susceptible to life
threatening infections. Nevertheless, the army has not
monitored the health of citizens who may have been exposed
during its tests while maintaining that its bacterial
agents cause no harm.

In addition to people who are unwittingly exposed to the
army's bacteria and chemicals, human research subjects may
not be receiving appropriate information. A test at Dugway
in November 1993, for example, raises important questions
in this regard. The test was intended to assess the ability
of chemical agents to penetrate protective clothing.

Test subjects wore special outer garments and were then
sprayed with chemicals in simulated battle conditions. An
army Environmental Assessment before the test indicated
that some of the chemicals could be toxic. Yet the consent
form that the subjects signed in advance of the test said
nothing about any of the chemicals.

Subsequently, two of the test subjects said they were asked
to sign another consent form sometime after the test had
been completed. The second form described the chemicals.
But having the subjects sign a consent form after an
experiment, rather than before, makes little ethical sense.
The procedure renders meaningless the notion of informed
consent.

Finally, several physicians at the University of Utah
Medical School in Salt Lake City continue to express
concern about the tests at Dugway. They do not feel they
have information that would enable them optimally to
handle infections and complications that might be caused
by the tests. Dugway officials have thus far not satisfied
their concerns either about field tests involving simulants
or indoor tests with highly pathogenic agents.

These are a few of the disconcerting issues associated with
testing at Dugway. If such tests must continue, several
policy suggestions seem appropriate:

--Inform people in the area before each test that they may
be exposed to the army's biological and chemical agents.

--For a substantial period after each test, monitor the
health of the exposed population.

--Provide comprehensive information in understandable
language to human subjects before they participate in
any test.

--Fully inform the neighboring medical community about
the nature of each test and its possible medical
complications.

--Above all, strive for safety, candor, and openness.


            Return to The RATS Home Page

       (http://personalpages.tds.net/~kknowlto)


============== END OF DR. COLE'S TESTIMONY ================

  Witnesses a dozen or more witnesses of massive spraying
    and sickness call in on the 1/25/99 Art Bell show:
   http://ww2.broadcast.com/artbell/archive99.html#jan99


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