http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/04/international/04GERM.html



SEP 04, 2001

U.S. Germ Warfare Research Pushes Treaty Limits

By THE NEW YORK TIMES
This article was reported and written by Judith Miller, Stephen Engelberg and
William J. Broad.


Over the past several years, the United States has embarked on a program of
secret research on biological weapons that, some officials say, tests the
limits of the global treaty banning such weapons.

The 1972 treaty forbids nations from developing or acquiring weapons that
spread disease, but it allows work on vaccines and other protective measures.
Government officials said the secret research, which mimicked the major steps
a state or terrorist would take to create a biological arsenal, was aimed at
better understanding the threat.

The projects, which have not been previously disclosed, were begun under
President Clinton and have been embraced by the Bush administration, which
intends to expand them.

Earlier this year, administration officials said, the Pentagon drew up plans
to engineer genetically a potentially more potent variant of the bacterium
that causes anthrax, a deadly disease ideal for germ warfare.

The experiment has been devised to assess whether the vaccine now being given
to millions of American soldiers is effective against such a superbug, which
was first created by Russian scientists. A Bush administration official said
the National Security Council is expected to give the final go-ahead later
this month.

Two other projects completed during the Clinton administration focused on the
mechanics of making germ weapons.

In a program code-named Clear Vision, the Central Intelligence Agency built
and tested a model of a Soviet-designed germ bomb that agency officials
feared was being sold on the international market. The C.I.A. device lacked a
fuse and other parts that would make it a working bomb, intelligence
officials said.

At about the same time, Pentagon experts assembled a germ factory in the
Nevada desert from commercially available materials. Pentagon officials said
the project demonstrated the ease with which a terrorist or rogue nation
could build a plant that could produce pounds of the deadly germs.

Both the mock bomb and the factory were tested with simulants — benign
substances with characteristics similar to the germs used in weapons,
officials said.

A senior Bush administration official said all the projects were "fully
consistent" with the treaty banning biological weapons and were needed to
protect Americans against a growing danger. "This administration will pursue
defenses against the full spectrum of biological threats," the official said.

The treaty, another administration official said, allows the United States to
conduct research on both microbes and germ munitions for "protective or
defensive purposes."

Some Clinton administration officials worried, however, that the project
violated the pact. And others expressed concern that the experiments, if
disclosed, might be misunderstood as a clandestine effort to resume work on a
class of weapons that President Nixon had relinquished in 1969.

Simultaneous experiments involving a model of a germ bomb, a factory to make
biological agents and the developoment of more potent anthrax, these
officials said, would draw vociferous protests from Washington if conducted
by a country the United States viewed as suspect.

Administration officials said the need to keep such projects secret was a
significant reason behind President Bush's recent rejection of a draft
agreement to strengthen the germ-weapons treaty, which has been signed by 143
nations.

The draft would require those countries to disclose where they are conducting
defensive research involving gene-splicing or germs likely to be used in
weapons. The sites would then be subject to international inspections.

Many national security officials in both the Clinton and Bush administrations
opposed the draft, arguing that it would give potential adversaries a road
map to what the United States considers its most serious vulnerabilities.

Among the facilities likely to be open to inspection under the draft
agreement would be the West Jefferson, Ohio, laboratory of the Battelle
Memorial Institute, a military contractor that has been selected to create
the genetically altered anthrax.

Several officials who served in senior posts in the Clinton administration
acknowledged that the secretive efforts were so poorly coordinated that even
the White House was unaware of their full scope.

The Pentagon's project to build a germ factory was not reported to the White
House, they said. President Clinton, who developed an intense interest in
germ weapons, was never briefed on the programs under way or contemplated,
the officials said.

A former senior official in the Clinton White House conceded that in
retrospect, someone should have been responsible for reviewing the projects
to ensure that they were not only effective in defending the United States,
but consistent with the nation's arms-control pledges.

The C.I.A.'s tests on the bomb model touched off a dispute among government
experts after the tests were concluded in 2000, with some officials arguing
that they violated the germ treaty's prohibition against developing weapons.

Intelligence officials said lawyers at the agency and the White House
concluded that the work was defensive, and therefore allowed. But even
officials who supported the effort acknowledged that it brought the United
States closer to what was forbidden.

"It was pressing how far you go before you do something illegal or immoral,"
recalled one senior official who was briefed on the program.

Public disclosure of the research is likely to complicate the position of the
United States, which has long been in the forefront of efforts to enforce the
ban on germ weapons.

The Bush administration's willingness to abandon the 1972 Antiballistic
Missile treaty has already drawn criticism around the world. And the
administration's stance on the draft agreement for the germ treaty has put
Washington at odds with many of its allies, including Japan and Britain.


The Original Treaty

During the cold war, both the United States and the Soviet Union produced
vast quantities of germ weapons, enough to kill everyone on earth.

Eager to halt the spread of what many called the poor man's atom bomb, the
United States unilaterally gave up germ arms and helped lead the global
campaign to abolish them. By 1975, most of the world's nations had signed the
convention.

In doing so, they agreed not to develop, produce, acquire or stockpile
quantities or types of germs that had no "prophylactic, protective or other
peaceful purposes." They also pledged not to develop or obtain weapons or
other equipment "designed to use such agents or toxins for hostile purposes
or in armed conflict."

There were at least two significant loopholes: The pact did not define
"defensive" research or say what studies might be prohibited, if any. And it
provided no means of catching cheaters.

In the following decades, several countries did cheat, some on a huge scale.
The Soviet Union built entire cities devoted to developing germ weapons,
employing tens of thousands of people and turning anthrax, smallpox and
bubonic plague into weapons of war. In the late 1980's, Iraq began a crash
program to produce its own germ arsenal.

Both countries insisted that their programs were for defensive purposes.

American intelligence officials had suspected that Baghdad and Moscow were
clandestinely producing germ weapons. But the full picture of their efforts
did not become clear until the 1990's, after several Iraqi and Soviet
officials defected.
Fears about the spread of biological weapons were deepened by the rise of
terrorism against Americans, the great strides in genetic engineering and the
collapse of the Soviet Union, which left thousands of scientists skilled in
biological warfare unemployed, penniless and vulnerable to recruitment.

The threat disclosed a quandary: While the United States spent billions of
dollars a year to assess enemy military forces and to defend against bullets,
tanks, bombs and jet fighters, it knew relatively little about the working of
exotic arms it had relinquished long ago.


Designing a Delivery System

In the mid-1990's, the C.I.A. and other intelligence agencies stepped up
their search for information about other nations' biological research
programs, focusing on the former Soviet Union, Iran, Iraq and Libya, among
others. Much of the initial emphasis was on the germs that enemies might use
in an attack, officials said.

But in 1997, the agency embarked on Clear Vision, which focused on weapons
systems that would deliver the germs.

Intelligence officials said the project was led by Gene Johnson, a senior
C.I.A. scientist who had long worked with some of the world's deadliest
viruses. Dr. Johnson was eager to understand the damage that Soviet miniature
bombs — bomblets, in military parlance — might inflict.

The agency asked its spies to find or buy a Soviet bomblet, which releases
germs in a fine mist. That search proved unsuccessful, and the agency
approved a proposal to build a replica and study how well it could disperse
its lethal cargo.

The agency's lawyers concluded that such a project was permitted by the
treaty because the intent was defensive. Intelligence officials said the
C.I.A. had reports that at least one nation was trying to buy the Soviet-
made bomblets.

A model was constructed and the agency conducted two sets of tests at
Battelle, the military contractor. The experiments measured dissemination
characteristics and how the model performed under different atmospheric
conditions, intelligence officials said. They emphasized that the device was
a "portion" of a bomb that could not have been used as a weapon.

The experiments caused concern at the White House, which learned about the
project after it was under way. Some aides to President Clinton worried that
the benefits did not justify the risks. But a White House lawyer led a joint
assessment by several departments that concluded that the program did not
violate the treaty, and it went ahead.

The questions were debated anew after the project was completed, this time
without consensus. A State Department official argued for a strict reading of
the treaty: the ban on acquiring or developing "weapons" barred states from
building even a partial model of a germ bomb, no matter what the rationale.

A bomb is a bomb is a bomb," another official said at the time.

The C.I.A. continued to insist that it had the legal authority to conduct
such tests and, intelligence officials said, the agency was prepared to
reopen the fight over how to interpret the treaty. But even so, the agency
ended the Clear Vision project in the last year of the Clinton
administration, intelligence officials said.

Bill Harlow, the C.I.A. spokesman, acknowledged that the agency had conducted
"laboratory or experimental" work to assess the intelligence it had gathered
about biological warfare.

"Everything we have done in this respect was entirely appropriate, necessary,
consistent with U.S. treaty obligations and was briefed to the National
Security Council staff and appropriate Congressional oversight committees,"
Mr. Harlow said.
Breeding More Potent Anthrax

In the 1990's, government officials also grew increasingly worried about the
possibility that scientists could use the widely available techniques of
gene-splicing to create even more deadly weapons.

Those concerns deepened in 1995, when Russian scientists disclosed at a
scientific conference in Britain that they had implanted genes from Bacillus
cereus, an organism that causes food poisoning, into the anthrax microbe.

The scientists said later that the experiments were peaceful; the two
microbes can be found side-by-side in nature and, the Russians said, they
wanted to see what happened if they cross-bred.

A published account of the experiment, which appeared in a scientific journal
in late 1997, alarmed the Pentagon, which had just decided to require that
American soldiers be vaccinated against anthrax. According to the article,
the new strain was resistant to Russia's anthrax vaccine, at least in
hamsters.

American officials tried to obtain a sample from Russia through a scientific
exchange program to see whether the Russians had really created such a
hybrid. The Americans also wanted to test whether the microbe could defeat
the American vaccine, which is different from that used by Russia.

Despite repeated promises, the bacteria were never provided.

Eventually the C.I.A. drew up plans to replicate the strain, but intelligence
officials said the agency hesitated because there was no specific report that
an adversary was attempting to turn the superbug into a weapon.

This year, officials said, the project was taken over by the Pentagon's
intelligence arm, the Defense Intelligence Agency. Pentagon lawyers reviewed
the proposal and said it complied with the treaty. Officials said the
research would be part of Project Jefferson, yet another government effort to
track the dangers posed by germ weapons.

A spokesman for Defense Intelligence, Lt. Cmdr. James Brooks, declined
comment.

Asked about the precautions at Battelle, which is to create the enhanced
anthrax, Commander Brooks said security was "entirely suitable for all work
already conducted and planned for Project Jefferson."


The Question of Secrecy

While several officials in both the Clinton and Bush administrations called
this and other research long overdue, they expressed concern about the lack
of a central system for vetting such proposals.

And a former American diplomat questioned the wisdom of keeping them secret.

James F. Leonard, head of the delegation that negotiated the germ treaty,
said research on microbes or munitions could be justified, depending on the
specifics.
But he said such experiments should be done openly, exposed to the scrutiny
of scientists and the public. Public disclosure, he said, is important
evidence that the United States is proceeding with a "clean heart."

"It's very important to be open," he said. "If we're not open, who's going to
be open?"
Mr. Leonard said the fine distinctions drawn by government lawyers were
frequently ignored when a secret program was exposed. Then, he said, others
offer the harshest possible interpretations — a "vulgarization of what has
been done."

But he concluded that the secret germ research, as described to him, was
"foolish, but not illegal."

Reply via email to