-Caveat Lector-

This story details links between Gulf War Syndrome,
a prison inmate medical testing program by a company
that George Bush had investments in, and the bombing of
the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma.


" In his congressional testimony, Dr. Garth Nicolson stated
 that the Gulf War was the first time in history that vaccine
 records on the troops were classified and remain classified
 to this day. The Department of Defense has admitted,
 however, that over 400,000 records have disappeared."

 "Former Air Force Captain Joyce Riley, a Gulf War vet and
 another major figure working to expose the causes of
 GWI, has concluded that medical records of approximately
 70% of all Gulf War vets are listed as "missing."

 *"Another bizarre twist to this tale is that the army's
 medical records from the Gulf War were in storage at the
 Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City when it was
 bombed."

 "As Garth Nicolson reported his discoveries,
[on prison inmate testing of mycoplasma fermentans]
 he encountered  increasing hostility from his peers, including
Dr. Charles  LeMaistre, a friend of George Bush and the past
 president  of the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center; Dr. George Young,
 chief of the VA in Houston; and Dr. Robert M. Couch, head
 of the Baylor Influenza Program, because his findings
 implied illegal testing.

 Among Tanox's investors are George Bush and his former
 Secretary of State and fellow Texan James Baker III.

 As opposition rose, so did their understanding of M.D.
 Anderson's deep involvement in biological weapons
 research and testing since the late 1970s, and that M.D.
 Anderson was specifically engaged in research on
 mycoplasma fermentans as a biological weapon."


Dave Hartley
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com
http://www.ioa.com/~davehart


           Heroic Nicholsons Get Funding
                      As GWI Explodes Into
           US Population
                      By Paul Likoudis
                       The Wanderer
                      Feature Article


   Gulf War Illness Probe To Advance With New Study

Tom Clancy's latest novel Rainbow Six rivets readers with
a fictional account of environmentalist elites who decide
that the only way they can save the world is to radically
eliminate over 95% of the human population. Some of the
world's leading scientists develop a strain of viruses, which
they call Shiva after the Indian goddess of death, and
devise an ingenious method to infect the world's population.

Part of Clancy's plot involves the development of two
antibodies to fight the new virus, one of which will be for
the world's elite, to inoculate them; the other for the sick,
to make them sicker.

But there's a more riveting reallife scenario unfolding in
the United States and around the world that puts Clancy's
fictional thriller into the realm of the credible: the efforts
of a small group of reputable scientists, sick U.S. veterans,
and a handful of investigative journalists to unlock the
secrets of Gulf War Illness (GWI), sometimes referred to
as Gulf War Syndrome, which has afflicted between
100,000 and 200,000 military personnel who served in
President George Bush's Desert Storm and their families,
and which is responsible for perhaps 15,000 deaths.

The number of military personnel who have died of the
mysterious illness remains a classified secret, one of
GWI's top researchers, Dr. Garth Nicolson of the
Institute for Molecular Medicine, told The Wanderer.

For nearly ten years, since his daughter Sharron returned
from the gulf where she served with the 101st Airborne,
Nicolson and his wife, Nancy, a molecular biophysicist, have
waged a lonely, frustrating, and often dangerous campaign
to discover the causes of GWI while working on a
treatment.

Their first big break came last week (Jan. 12th) when they
were notified by the U.S. Army that their research had
been validated and their Institute for Molecular Medicine
would be one of three centers, with the Armed Forces
Institute of Pathology and the University of Texas at San
Antonio, involved in a $12 million Veterans'
Administrationfunded project to develop a treatment for
the debilitating and often fatal illness, an infection known
technically as mycoplasma fermentans.

Dr. Nicolson explains that slightly under onehalf of the Gulf
War veterans he has tested have shown signs of infection
by mycoplasma fermentans.

For the husband/wife team of researchers, the army's
notice came as a tremendous vindication after years of
repeated attempts by government agencies to ruin their
careers, their credibility, and their research.

As both Nancy and Garth Nicolson wrote in the October,
1996 issue of Criminal Politics, since he began researching
the causes of GWI, he has lived through a government
sponsored "nightmare."

"We were attacked by high level military physicians,
ostracized by certain colleagues who spread rumors about
our sanity, forced out of academic institutions by a
concerted effort that involved nonstop administrative
harassment, mail and courier theft, wiretaps, credit card
fraud, breaking a tenure contract, computer and
documents theft, attempts to block our scientific and
medical presentations, sabotage our clinical samples, and
undermine our employees."

Their ordeal over the past eight years since 1991 has
convinced them that certain sections of the U.S.
government, working with what might be called the
"eugenics elite" at the country's top research labs in the
fields of biochemistry and genetic engineering, are testing
new designer biologic agents on the American public,
starting with prisoners and military personnel.

Who They Are

The Doctors Garth and Nancy Nicolson are not your
ordinary conspiracy theory "nuts."

Garth Nicolson before setting up the Institute for
Molecular Medicine, a 501c3 corporation, in Huntington
Beach, Calif. was the David Bruton, Jr., Chair in Cancer
Research and professor at the University of Texas M.D.
Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, and professor of
internal medicine and professor of pathology and
laboratory medicine at the University of Texas Medical
School at Houston.

He was also adjunct professor of comparative medicine at
Texas A&M University. Among the most cited scientists in
the world, having published over 480 medical and scientific
papers, edited 13 books, served on the editorial boards of
12 medical and scientific journals, and currently serving as
editor of two (Clinical & Experimental Metastasis and the
Journal of Cellular Biochemistry), he has been the recipient
of numerous research grants from the U.S. Army, the
National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health,
the American Cancer Society, and the National Foundation
for Cancer Research. In 1998, he received the Stephen
Paget Award from the Cancer Metastasis Research Society
and the Albert Schweitzer Award in Lisbon.

Nancy Nicolson, a molecular biophysicist, was on the faculty
at Baylor College of Medicine's Department of Immunology
and Microbiology.

Both scientists have been nominated for a Nobel Prize for
their groundbreaking work in nucleoprotein gene tracking.

In 1987, Nancy Nicolson believes, she was deliberately
infected with mycoplasma incognitus because she refused
to participate in research on biological weapons and germ
warfare, and had, in fact, publicly spoken in opposition to
such research programs which are, in fact, banned by
international treaties of which the U.S. is a signatory.

She became deathly ill, becoming partly paralyzed; her
thyroid was affected and she contracted meningitis. But
during this illness, she found the antibiotic Doxycycline
helped her regain health.

In 1991, six months after the Nicolson's daughter returned
from the gulf, Sharron came down with an illness
remarkably similar to what Nancy had just recovered from:
chronic fatigue, aching joints, diarrhea, vomiting, and
fevers. The symptoms seemed similar to mycoplasma
infection, and so the Nicolsons recommended treating her
with Doxycycline.

Sharron then began contacting her veteran friends, who
were reporting similar problems, and of the 73 who tried
the treatment, 55 reported an improvement in health.

Now the plot thickens.

That same year, Garth Nicolson began receiving reports of
a "mystery illness" spreading among the employees of the
Texas Department of Criminal Justice in Huntsville. Using
gene tracking, the Nicolsons discovered these prison
employees tested positive for mycoplasma fermentans
infection.

Prisoners in Huntsville, Palestine, and Victoria, Texas, had
been given experimental flu vaccines purportedly
developed by Tanox Biosystems on Stella Link in Houston, a
company with close ties to Baylor, and the testing was part
of a U.S. Army sponsored program run by biotechnology
firms.

The inmates at Huntsville then began spreading their
disease to the prison guards, who passed it on to family
members and others in the general population, who then
started coming down with symptoms similar to those of
such dread diseases as Lou Gehrig's Disease, MS, and
Guillian Barre Syndrome.

As Garth Nicolson reported his discoveries, he encountered
increasing hostility from his peers, including Dr. Charles
LeMaistre, a friend of George Bush and the past president
of the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center; Dr. George Young,
chief of the VA in Houston; and Dr. Robert M. Couch, head
of the Baylor Influenza Program, because his findings
implied illegal testing.

Among Tanox's investors are George Bush and his former
Secretary of State and fellow Texan James Baker III.

As opposition rose, so did their understanding of M.D.
Anderson's deep involvement in biological weapons
research and testing since the late 1970s, and that M.D.
Anderson was specifically engaged in research on
mycoplasma fermentans as a biological weapon.

Garth Nicolson resigned under pressure from M.D.
Anderson in August, 1996, and was ordered to remove all
his research equipment and materials from M.D. Anderson,
where he had served as senior tenured professor and
department chairman for 16 years.

"The administration was trying to restrict our activities in
the area of GWI and I resigned because of my stand on
academic freedom and my right to pursue that particular
line of investigation. I had unanimous internal clinical review
board approval for the research," he told The Wanderer,
"but I suspect that thenMajor General Ronald Blanck,
currently surgeon general of the army, was pressuring the
M.D. Anderson administration to stop our research."

Spreading The Disease

In dozens of research reports for professional medical
journals, and in four separate, sworn testimonies before
congressional committees, the Doctors Nicolson state their
belief that Gulf War Illness was caused both by the
vaccines soldiers sent to the gulf received and by airborne
chemicals released when U.S. troops destroyed tons of
Saddam Hussein's chemical weapons.

Their testimony is that soldiers were exposed to five
possible sources of exposure: vaccines, some of which were
questionable and were contaminated by microorganisms;
blowback from destroyed biological and chemical weapons;
factories and bunkers which stored the agents;
approximately 60 Italianmade biological weapons sprayers
that were fully deployed in southern Iraq and Kuwait; as
well as airburst SCUD missiles equipped for delivery of
chemical and biological weapons.

Prior to deployment, the army administered vaccines,
ostensibly, against weaponsborn anthrax, to 150,000
soldiers, often eight or nine shots at a time. Eightyfive
percent of soldiers were told by their commanders that
they could not refuse the vaccines, under threat of
courtmartial, and 43% experienced immediate side
effects.

Together, the vaccines and Saddam's chemical weapons
produced a toxic cocktail producing GWI, the symptoms of
which include: aching joints, chronic fatigue, memory loss,
night sweats, headaches, skin rashes, depression, muscle
spasms, dizziness, nausea, vision problems, sex problems,
urination problems, hair loss, bleeding gums, vision
problems, and eye pain.

Perhaps the most frightening facet of GWI is that a large
fraction of it is a communicable disease caused by the
biological weapons which Gulf War vets have passed on to
their wives, their children, including those in utero, and
even to pets.

In his congressional testimony, Dr. Garth Nicolson stated
that the Gulf War was the first time in history that vaccine
records on the troops were classified and remain classified
to this day. The Department of Defense has admitted,
however, that over 400,000 records have disappeared.

Former Air Force Captain Joyce Riley, a Gulf War vet and
another major figure working to expose the causes of
GWI, has concluded that medical records of approximately
70% of all Gulf War vets are listed as "missing."

Another bizarre twist to this tale is that the army's
medical records from the Gulf War were in storage at the
Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City when it was
bombed.

What has alarmed the Nicolsons, and other researchers, is
that mycoplasmal infections are often relatively benign, but
preliminary investigations of some mycoplasma found in
some Gulf War veterans contains the HIV1 envelope gene,
a component of the AIDS virus which renders the
mycoplasma invasive, enabling it to spread throughout the
body, alter DNA, and cause birth defects.

Another frightful scenario is the possibility that some vets,
who have been infected with the mycoplasma disease but as
yet show no symptoms, may be donating blood, and thereby
infecting the larger population.

This is the view of Dr. Patricia Axelrod, one of the first to
speak out about Gulf War Illness. In a Dec. 12th, 1996
Montel interview, she said: "We are dealing with bacterial
warfare agents. We are dealing with chemical warfare
agents. We are dealing with radiation poisoning...The
Department of Defense is covering this up."

Already, as Life magazine reported in 1995, an abnormally
high percentage of children with birth defects have been
born to Gulf War vets.

More Mysteries

On Feb. 9th, 1994, former Michigan Sen. Don Riegle, Jr.,
took to the floor of the U.S. Senate and reported:

"Records available from the supplier for the period from
1985 until the present show that during this period,
pathogenicbiologic agents meaning poisonous and other
materials were exported to Iraq pursuant to application
and licensing by the U.S. Department of Commerce.

"Records prior to 1985 were not available, according to the
supplier. These exported materials were not attenuated or
weakened and were capable of reproduction. Thus, from at
least 1985 through 1989, the United States government
approved the sale of quantities of potentially lethal
biological agents that could have been cultured or grown in
large quantities in an Iraqi biological warfare program. . . .

"I find it especially troubling that, according to the
supplier's records, these materials were requested by and
sent to Iraqi government agencies, including the Iraqi
Atomic Energy Commission, the Iraq Ministry of Higher
Education, the State Company for Drug Industries, and the
Ministry of Trade. While there may be legitimate needs for
pathogens in medical research, closer scrutiny should be
exercised."

Among the chemicals sent to Iraq Riegle cited were
Bacillus Anthacis, Clostridium Botulinum, Histoplasma
Capsulatum, and Brucella Melitensis.

"If you look at what the Iraqis were ordering," said Dr.
Nicolson, "they were ordering far more than what they
would need for legitimate testing purposes as controls for
diagnostic testing."

Among the companies granted export licenses to ship these
toxic agents abroad was the American Type Culture
Collection of Rockville, Md., and the federal government's
own Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta was responsible
for shipping some of the materials, according to Riegle's
investigation.

Strange Twists

One of the strangest facts among the millions uncovered by
investigators such as the Nicolsons and Captain Riley is that
Nobel laureate Joshua Lederberg of Rockefeller
University is on American Type Culture Collection's board
of directors.

Lederberg is not only one of the world's leading experts on
cuttingedge molecular biology and genetics, but was also
named to lead the presidential commission to investigate
the Gulf War disease by President Clinton.

Lederberg, a member of the Department of Defense
Science Board and an advocate of biological warfare, has
helped steer Defense funds to organizations working on
biological warfare.

As chairman of the government's investigators into GWI,
Lederberg claimed that his researchers could not discover
any cause for Gulf War Illness.

Another Nobel laureate who figures in this drama is Dr.
James Watson, who won a Nobel in 1962 for physiology and
medicine with two British scientists, Francis Crick and
Maurice Wilson, for his role in unraveling the molecular
structure of DNA.

In 1968, Watson became director of the Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory of Quantitative Biology in New York,
where he is a leading researcher in the Human Genome
Project.

Watson, with other doctors, was involved in the
development of the flu vaccine which was used on the
inmates in Texas prisons.

Meanwhile, as the Clinton administration slowly changes its
official position that Gulf War Illness is a myth, the
Department of Defense acknowledges its past
shortcomings in handling complaints related to GWI and
research on its causes; the Veterans Administration has
reported that the activeduty tumor rate in the U.S. military
has increased more than 600% since 1990; there is a health
crisis in the gulf states, with an estimated 15%20% of
populations "sick" at any given time; birth defects and
infant deaths are soaring.

In a September, 1996 appearance at Washington
University in St. Louis, Nobel laureate Edward O. Wilson, an
environmental scientist, spoke on the subject of downsizing
the earth's population.

The mild mannered Harvard professor of entomology,
reported The St. Louis PostDispatch (Sept. 12th, 1996),
explained how the earth's population had to be brought
down to "'the hundreds of millions' for a true ecological
balance.

"A single global policy on population is unfeasible, he said.
But efforts are under way in this and other populous
nations to achieve zero population growth and even
depopulation, he said."

The March/April, 1996 edition of Foreign Affairs published
an article for its elite readership, "Why We Need a
Smaller U.S. Population and How We Can Achieve It."

The stuff of fiction? Not anymore.

"This story gets more and more tangled the deeper you
dig," Dr. Nicolson told The Wanderer.

Indeed it does, especially as GWI is exploding in the civilian
population.

+ + +

For Gulf War vets, there is some good news, Dr. Nicolson
said. "The Department of Defense and the Department of
Veterans Affairs are now allowing physicians to treat
microplasma infections in Gulf War Illness patients with
antibiotics, according to our published protocols.

"This was not allowed just a few months ago."


Copies of this article can be found at:
http://www.thewandererpress.com
and:
http://www.sightings.com/health/gwiexplodes.htm

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