-Caveat Lector-

Riddle of the spores

Why has the FBI investigation into the anthrax attacks stalled? The evidence
points one way

George Monbiot
Tuesday May 21, 2002
The Guardian

The more a government emphasises its commitment to defence, the less it seems
to care about the survival of its people. Perhaps it is because its attention
may be focused on more distant prospects: the establishment and maintenance of
empire, for example, or the dynastic succession of its leaders. Whatever the
explanation for the neglect of their security may be, the people of America
have discovered that casual is the precursor of casualty.

But while we should be asking what George Bush and his cabinet knew and failed
to respond to before September 11, we should also be exploring another,
related, question: what do they know now and yet still refuse to act upon?
Another way of asking the question is this: whatever happened to the anthrax
investigation?

After five letters containing anthrax spores had been posted, in the autumn, to
addresses in the United States, the Federal Bureau of Investigation promised
that it would examine "every bit of information [and] every bit of evidence".
But now the investigation appears to have stalled. Microbiologists in the US
are beginning to wonder aloud whether the FBI's problem is not that it knows
too little, but that it knows too much.

Reducing the number of suspects would not, one might have imagined, have been
too much to ask of the biggest domestic detective agency on earth. While some
of the anthrax the terrorist sent was spoiled during delivery, one sample
appears to have come through intact. The letter received by Senator Tom Daschle
contained one trillion anthrax spores per gram: a concentration which only a
very few US government scientists, using a secret and strictly controlled
technique, know how to achieve. It must, moreover, have been developed in a
professional laboratory, containing rare and sophisticated "weaponisation"
equipment. There is only a tiny number of facilities - all of them in the US -
in which it could have been produced.

The anthrax the terrorist sent belongs to the "Ames" strain of the bacterium,
which was extracted from an infected cow in Texas in 1981. In December, the
Washington Post reported that genetic tests showed that the variety used by the
terrorist was a sub-strain cultivated by scientists at the US army's medical
research institute for infectious diseases (USAMRIID) at Fort Detrick,
Maryland. That finding was publicly confirmed two weeks ago, when the test
results were published in the journal Science. New Scientist magazine notes
that the anthrax the terrorist used appears to have emerged from Fort Detrick
only recently, as the researchers found that samples which have been separated
from each other for three years acquire "substantial genetic differences".

The Ames strain was distributed by USAMRIID to around 20 other laboratories in
the US. Of these, according to research conducted by Barbara Hatch Rosenberg,
who runs the Federation of American Scientists' biological weapons monitoring
programme, only four possess the equipment and expertise required for the
weaponisation of the anthrax sent to Senator Daschle. Three of them are US
military laboratories, the fourth is a government contractor. While security in
all these places has been lax, the terrorist could not have stolen all the
anthrax (around 10 grams) which found its way into the postal system. He must
have used the equipment to manufacture it.

Barbara Hatch Rosenberg has produced a profile of the likely perpetrator. He is
an American working within the US biodefense industry, with a doctoral degree
in the relevant branch of microbiology. He is skilled and experienced at
handling the weapon without contaminating his surroundings. He has full
security clearance and access to classified information. He is among the tiny
number of Americans who had received anthrax vaccinations before September
2001. Only a handful of people fit this description. Rosenberg has told the
internet magazine Salon.com that three senior scientists have identified the
same man - a former USAMRIID scientist - as the likely suspect. She, and they,
have told the FBI, but it seems that all the bureau has done in response is to
denounce her.

Instead, it has launched the kind of "investigation" which might have been
appropriate for the unwitnessed hit and run killing of a person with no known
enemies. Rather than homing in on the likely suspects, in other words, it
appears to have cast a net full of holes over the entire population.

In January, three months after the first anthrax attack and at least a month
after it knew that the sub-strain used by the attacker came from Fort Detrick,
the FBI announced a reward of $2.5m for information leading to his capture. It
circulated 500,000 fliers, and sent letters to all 40,000 members of the
American Society for Microbiology, asking them whether they knew someone who
might have done it.

Yet, while it trawled the empty waters, the bureau failed to cast its hook into
the only ponds in which the perpetrator could have been lurking. In February,
the Wall Street Journal revealed that the FBI had yet to subpoena the personnel
records of the labs which had been working with the Ames strain. Four months
after the investigation began, in other words, it had not bothered to find out
who had been working in the places from which the anthrax must have come. It
was not until March, after Barbara Hatch Rosenberg had released her findings,
that the bureau started asking laboratories for samples of their anthrax and
the records relating to them.

To date, it appears to have analysed only those specimens which already
happened to be in the hands of its researchers or which had been offered,
without compulsion, by laboratories. A fortnight ago, the New York Times
reported that "government experts investigating the anthrax strikes are still
at sea". The FBI claimed that the problem "is a lack of advisers skilled in the
subtleties of germ weapons".

Last week, I phoned the FBI. Why, I asked, when the evidence was so abundant,
did the trail appear to have gone cold? "The investigation is continuing," the
spokesman replied. "Has it gone cold because it has led you to a government
office?" I asked. He put down the phone.

Had he stayed on the line, I would have asked him about a few other offences
the FBI might wish to consider. The army's development of weaponised anthrax,
for example, directly contravenes both the biological weapons convention and
domestic law. So does its plan to test live microbes in "aerosol chambers" at
the Edgewood Chemical Biological Center, also in Maryland. So does its
development of a genetically modified fungus for attacking coca crops in
Colombia, and GM bacteria for destroying materials belonging to enemy forces.
These, as the research group Project Sunshine has discovered, appear to be just
a tiny sample of the illegal offensive biological research programmes which the
US government has secretly funded. Several prominent scientists have suggested
that the FBI's investigation is being pursued with less than the rigour we
might have expected because the federal authorities have something to hide.

The FBI has dismissed them as conspiracy theorists. But there is surely a point
after which incompetence becomes an insufficient explanation for failure.

www.monbiot.com



"If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so
long as I'm the dictator."
 -GW Bush during a photo-op with Congressional leaders on
12/18/2000.
As broadcast on CNN and available in transcript on their website
http://www.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0012/18/nd.01.html

Steve Wingate, Webmaster
ANOMALOUS IMAGES AND UFO FILES
http://www.anomalous-images.com

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