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<A HREF="http://www.zolatimes.com/V3.8/pageone.html">Laissez Faire City Times
- Volume 3 Issue 8</A>
The Laissez Faire City Times
February 22, 1999 - Volume 3, Issue 8
Editor & Chief: Emile Zola
-----
The United States and Biological Warfare

a book review by Uri Dowbenko


CIA "legends" die hard.

A "legend" is a cover story concocted by the CIA to cover-up US
state-sanctioned criminality. During the Korean War, CIA operative
Colonel Edward Hunter created the "legend" that US airmen were
"brainwashed" by the Red Chinese to make false confessions about
engaging in germ warfare.

"The popularization of the idea that the flyers were �brainwashed� grew
out of a widely read book of the time by Edward Hunter titled
 Brainwashing in Red China (1951)," write Toronto�s York University
historians Stephen Endicott and Edward Hagerman in their fascinating
book, The United States and Biological Warfare.

"A few years later, after the results of a mammoth US Army study were
known, the US Defense Department concluded that US POWs had not been
subject to brainwashing, merely hardship, stress and duress," they
continue.

The CIA�s disinformation campaign, however, took on a life of its own.
This "legend" has become a myth of 20th century history, further
enshrined in movies like The Manchurian Candidate.

The CIA promoted the idea that American soldiers were coerced through
mind control to confess to imaginary crimes. And the fact that they had
actually engaged in "germ" warfare during the Korean War was effectively
covered-up.

Roosevelt�s Biological Warfare Program

And how did US biowarfare get started? Under Roosevelt, during World War
Two. "Begun with an inital grant of $250,000, modest by wartime
standards, the biological warfare program quickly grew to be one of the
largest wartime scientific projects in American history, second only to
the Manhattan Project, which created the atomic bomb," write Endicott
and Hagerman.

"Granted top priority status, the program employed approximately four
thousand people by the end of the war. The center of activity was the
Special Projects division of the Chemical Warfare Service and its new
research and development center located in Camp Detrick, Maryland," they
continue.

The Pentagon and its devil�s workshop was a busy place. "The Detrick
scientists cast a wide experimental net. They studied anthrax,
brucellosis (undulant fever), botulinus toxin, plague, ricin, southern
blight of grains, potatoes and sugar beets (Sclerotium rolfoil), late
blight, late blast, brownspot of rice, plant growth inhibitors,
rinderpest, glanders and melioidosis..., tularemia (Rabbit fever),
mussel poisoning, coccidioidomycosis, rickettsia, psittacosis,
neurotropic encephalitis, Newcastle disease and fowl plague," write the
authors.

"The first to receive concentrated attention were anthrax and botulinus
toxin... It also was Detrick�s mission to mass produce agents for
operational use."

Meanwhile the Detrick scientists, among them George Merck, head of the
pharmaceutical giant Merck & Co., was recruited by the FDR
administration to head the War Research Service (WRS) Committee.
However, because of internal ethical arguments by Admiral William D.
Leahy and others, "there remained certain constraints in the use of
biological and chemical weapons. One was the lingering fear that US and
world opinion would morally condemn this extension of the limits of war.
The burden of using chemical weapons was politically great because the
United States had ratified the 1925 Geneva Protocol against chemical
weapons. Its failure, along with Japan, to ratify the protocol banning
biological weapons relieved the US from arms-limitation obligations in
that direction, but it raised nagging questions about US intentions
before the international community."

The Lucky Accident

It wasn�t until 1980 that American journalist John William Powell
discovered the "smoking gun" of US biological warfare. "In one of those
lucky accidents that sometimes befall researchers," write the authors,
"he uncovered evidence of the US deal with the Japanese biological
warfare criminals by getting his hands on an exchange of memoranda
involving General MacArthur, his intelligence chief General Charles
Willoughby" and others. Powell�s exposure of the cover-up appeared first
in the Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars and, later in abbreviated
form, in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, according to the
authors.

"The US government continued to make denials, but two years later Japan
officially acknowledged its World War II biological warfare program, as
well as the fact that General Ishii [its head] had received a large
retirement pension."

Continuous lying by successive administrations, denials of wrongdoing,
and complicity with Nazi and Japanese war criminals has contributed
enormously to the current distrust of the US government. Ironically,
lying to the American public is called "psychological warfare" (PsyWar).
Directed at not only so-called enemies but the public in general, PsyWar
has historically included biological warfare.

The Psychological Warfare Division was assigned to "integrate
capabilities and requirements for BW [biological warfare] and CW
[chemical warfare] into war plans," write the authors.

"The innocuous sounding rubric �psychological warfare� concealed the
fact that this division had a special responsibility to direct and
supervise covert operations in the scope of unconventional BW and CW
operations and programs, warfare that went beyond normal propaganda
activities."

"Psychological warfare included a host of activities aimed at creating
delays, confusion, fear, anxiety and panic among the enemy," write
Endicott and Hagerman.

"It employed a variety of means including a mandate to use atomic,
bacteriological, chemical and radiological warfare."

Leaflets Loaded with Bios

"And not to be forgotten with respect to the Psychological Warfare
Division�s responsibility for determining munitions requirements for
bacteriological warfare -- the most advanced propaganda weapon of
psychological warfare units, the leaflet bomb, was adapted as a standard
bacteriological munition," write Endicott and Hagerman.

What does that mean? Leaflets dropped on enemy targets were used as
carriers for germ warfare, imbedded with bacteria. Also the practice of
using "chaff," bundles of tin foil to confuse enemy radar, or chopped up
bits of grass straw and leaves, were also used for spreading bacteria
against enemy troops during the Korean War.

"Chaff was one of several unusual things that the North Koreans and
Chinese reported falling on their heads in 1952," write the authors.
Combined with reports of disease epidemics, there is enough evidence
that germ warfare during the Korean War was a fact, and not communist
propaganda.

"The 581st ARC Wing operating in Asia under cover of a transportation
service as a means to carry out its mandate" is an example of covert
warfare by the CIA, an example of using a "cutout," or a third-party, to
distance itself from illegal or compromising activities.

When American fliers captured in Korea subsequently revealed that they
were engaged in biowarfare, the CIA denied everything. The Department of
Defense characterized the flights as "routine" while "some American
congressmen worked themselves in to a fury against the hated Chinese who
supposedly were able to brainwash their captives in to making false
confessions."

Charges by the Chinese were dismissed "despite the fact that to there
was considerable overlap between the kinds of diseases that the United
States was preparing for its biological warfare program and those which
the Chinese claim followed attacks by US aircraft in the spring of
1952."

"With respect to methods of delivering infected insects, feathers,
bacteria, viruses, fungi and other materials, according to the Chinese
and North Koreans� observations, the most important were spraying,
non-exploding objects and paper packets, air-bursting leaflet bombs,
cardboard cylinders with silk parachutes..."

"The US archives show that spray methods and the leaflet bomb were part
of the covert biological warfare program during 1952-53," conclude the
authors.

Plausible Deniability & Media Hacks

"Another aspect of the CIA office of Policy Coordination activity came
under the heading of psychological warfare," write the authors. "The
National Security Council gave the CIA responsibility for covert
psychological warfare in 1947 and 1948, and the agency somewhat
ironically spent much of its time and money in propaganda activities to
refute enemy claims and in covering up traces of US covert activities so
as to avoid scrutiny by the American people and allies abroad. The CIA
had to make good the government�s demand for plausible deniability of
questionable or illegal acts, such as using biological warfare."

"To accomplish its propaganda objectives, the CIA infiltrated news
agencies, established radio networks, gave money to journalists,
financed student organizations, subsidized academic journals and
influenced publishers. All this was done through a web of fictitious
corporate structures, sham cultural foundations and financial
arrangements that cost up to $200 million annually by 1953," write
Endicott and Hagerman.

What makes this history so deliciously ironic is that CIA disinformation
through the media seems to be alive and well. Two months prior to the
publication of this book, US News and World Report (November 16, 1998)
published an article by Bruce B. Auster called "Unmasking an old lie:
The Korean War charge is exposed as a hoax."

Without even the pretense of "objectivity," Auster parrots the CIA
legend that germ warfare during the Korean War was a hoax, pointedly
ignoring the book by Endicott and Hagerman.

In a brief telephone interview with Auster, he denied being paid by the
CIA to continue its disinformation. He also denied having seen or read
the book. When asked if he received payment for his "services" by the
CIA in an offshore account, he said he "resented" any such inference.
His disingenuous response belies the curious synchronicity of the book�s
release and his own article which ignores evidence of US germ warfare.

In an interview with Hagerman, the book�s author said that "just before
he [Auster] wrote that story, he called me one late Friday afternoon,
with a message that he had to go to press immediately."

Hagerman said, "if I could contact him in two hours, he�d like my
opinion on the Soviet documents which purport that the biowarfare story
was disinformation concocted by the Soviets. So I called him back the
next Monday, after the story had gone, and I suggested that he read our
book, perhaps balancing the story somewhere down the line. He said �he�d
think about it.� "

The presumption is that Auster is still thinking. Ignoring the real news
is a standard modus operandi by Big Media, and media hack Auster seems
to be no exception.

"I offered to have a book sent to him," says Hagerman. "He said that if
he was interested, he would let me or the publisher know, but he has not
in fact asked for a book."

The United States and Biological Warfare is a premier analysis of
America�s secret history. Deconstructing reality, buried by
disinformation, is an awesome task. This carefully documented,
well-referenced, and highly readable work will remain an important
contribution to its understanding.



------------------------------------------------------------------------

The United States and Biological Warfare: Secrets from the Early Cold
War and Korea, by Stephen Endicott and Edward Hagerman, University of
Indiana Press, 1999, 273 pp. ISBN: 025334721.



------------------------------------------------------------------------

Uri Dowbenko is the CEO of New Improved Entertainment Corp. He can be
reached by e-mail at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

-30-

from The Laissez Faire City Times, Vol. 3, No. 8, Feb. 22, 1999
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