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FRENCH QUERY U.S. STATE DEPT. ABOUT LSD ATTACK
Kris     9:12 am on February 3, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply     | Edit
 
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FRENCH GOVERNMENT QUERIES U.S. STATE DEPT. ABOUT LSD ATTACK

Washington, D.C. ‹ According to informed sources, the State Department¹s
Bureau of Intelligence and Research has received a confidential inquiry from
the office of Erard Corbin de Mangoux, head of the French intelligence
agency, Directorate General for External Security (DGSE), concerning a
recent account of American government complicity in a mysterious 1951
incident of mass insanity in France. The DGSE is the French counterpart of
the CIA.

The incident took place in the village of Pont-Saint-Esprit in southern
France, and is described in a recent book about the 1953 death of an
American biochemist, A Terrible Mistake: The Murder of Frank Olson and the
CIA¹s Secret Cold War Experiments. The book, by investigative journalist
H.P. Albarelli Jr., was published in late November 2009 by TrineDay, which
specializes in books about ³suppressed information.²

The strange outbreak severely affected nearly five hundred people, causing
the deaths of at least five. For nearly 60 years the Pont-St.-Esprit
incident has been attributed either to ergot poisoning, meaning that
villagers consumed bread infected with a psychedelic mold, or to organic
mercury poisoning. But Albarelli reports that the outbreak resulted from a
covert LSD aerosol experiment directed by the US Army¹s top-secret Special
Operations Division at Fort Detrick, Maryland. He notes that the scientists
who produced both alternative explanations worked for the Sandoz
Pharmaceutical Company, which was then secretly supplying both the Army and
CIA with LSD.

The effect was devastating, as a contemporary French report made clear: ³It
is neither Shakespeare nor Edgar Poe. It is, alas, the sad reality all
around Pont-St.-Esprit and its environs, where terrifying scenes of
hallucinations are taking place. They are scenes straight out of the Middle
Ages, scenes of horror and pathos, full of sinister shadows.² Even Time
magazine took notice: ³Among the stricken, delirium rose: patients thrashed
wildly on their beds, screaming that red flowers were blossoming from their
bodies, that their heads had turned to molten lead. Pont-Saint-Esprit¹s
hospital reported four attempts at suicide.²

A Department of Justice website on the dangers of LSD states that in the
early 1950s ³the Sandoz Chemical Company went as far as promoting LSD as a
potential secret chemical warfare weapon to the U.S. Government. Their main
selling point in this was that a small amount in a main water supply or
sprayed in the air could disorient and turn psychotic an entire company of
soldiers leaving them harmless and unable to fight.² The CIA entertained a
number of proposals from American scientists concerning placing a large
amount of LSD into the reservoir of a medium-to-large city, but, according
to former agency officials, ³the experiment was never approved due to the
unexpected number of deaths during the operation in France.²

Albarelli also describes a series of small, secret chemical attacks by the
CIA on the New York City subway system during the 1950s. Recently, the Army
has referred to these experiments as ³simulated tests,² but contemporary
documents make no reference to simulation. An August 1950 FBI memorandum
refers to ³planned BW [biological warfare] experiments in the New York
Subway System in September, 1950,² expressing concerns about ³poisoning the
water supply of a large metropolitan area at the source Š the poisoning of
food Š sold to the general public.²

In its quest to research LSD as an offensive weapon, Albarelli claims, the
Army drugged over 5,700 unwitting American servicemen between the years 1953
and 1965, and, with the CIA, experimented widely with LSD and other drugs
through secret contracts with over 325 colleges, universities and research
institutions in the U.S., Canada and Europe, involving about 2,500
additional subjects, many of them hospital patients and college students.

According to an official with the DGSE, who declined to be identified, ³If
the details of this book¹s revelations prove to be true, it will be very
upsetting for the people of Pont-St.-Esprit, as well as all French citizens.
That agencies of the United States government would deliberately target
innocent foreign citizens for such an experiment is a violation of a number
of international laws and treaties.²

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http://www.prweb.com/releases/A_Terrible_Mistake/Albarelli/prweb3549024.htm

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