The September 11 terrorist attacks on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon made starkly clear how vulnerable
Americans are to terrorism at home. But as devastating as those
attacks were, the likelihood is growing that terrorists may soon
decide to use biological agents as weapons to extract even higher
death tolls. Evidence of this includes the startling fact that the
number of criminal investigations in the United States related to
the use of biological materials as weapons of mass destruction more
than doubled between 1997 and 1998:
-
In 1997, 22 of
the 74 criminal investigations--or 30 percent--involved biological
materials.
-
In 1998, 112 of
the 181 criminal investigations--or 62 percent--involved biological
materials. 2
As
the facts about possible biological agents and the figures about
their potential effects become known, the challenges for terrorists
in mounting a biological attack against America may appear
daunting, but they are not impossible to meet. Biological warfare
is neither new nor theoretical; it has been waged effectively, in
fact, since the 14th century. 3
The
most likely targets for bioterrorist attacks on America are people,
crops, and livestock. Moreover, some of the agents are relatively
easy to obtain: In 1996, an Ohio man was able to purchase bubonic
plague cultures through the mail. 4 And there are
various means of delivery. Biological agents can be spread by
airborne release; by injection or direct contact; through food,
pharmaceutical, and water contamination; or by animal vectors such
as fleas and hair. And as recent simulated exercises in various
U.S. cities have shown, the United States is still ill-prepared to
respond to such attacks.
According to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC), biological agents pose a risk to
national security because they are easily disseminated; cause high
mortality, which would have a major impact on public health
systems; cause panic and social disruptions; and require special
action and funding to increase public preparedness. 5 As
the following facts and figures show, the challenges facing the
Bush Administration, the new Office of Homeland Security, and
Congress in responding to the growing threat of bioterrorism are
immense.
The Use of Biological
Weapons
Biological weapons can be produced from widely available pathogens
that are manufactured for legitimate biomedical research or
obtained from soil or infected animals and humans. (See Table 1.)
In fact, many of the infectious diseases that are associated with
biological warfare are endemic to the same countries that are most
often suspected of trying to develop biological weapons. And
because biological agents may be cheap and easy to obtain, any
nation with a basic industry or facility such as a brewery has a de
facto capability to produce biological weapons. 6
Past Bioterrorist Attacks
|
Did You Know?
-
In the past century, plague-infested fleas, cholera, anthrax,
and biological agents such as glanders have been used or field
tested by aggressor nations in times of war and hostility.
-
Offensive biological weapons programs are known to exist in a
dozen countries, including Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, and
Syria.
-
An accident at a Soviet biological weapons facility in 1979
released a plume of anthrax that killed 66 people and livestock up
to 100 kilometers downwind.
-
An airborne release of 250 pounds of anthrax spores over
Washington, D.C., could cause more deaths than a 1-megaton hydrogen
bomb.
-
The economic impact of an anthrax attack could range from $478
million to $26 billion for every 100,000 people affected.
- A recent war game exercise concluded that, within three months
of a terrorist attack in Oklahoma City using smallpox, over 3
million people would be infected and over 1 million would die.
|
Since 1346, when the Mongols catapulted
corpses contaminated with plague over the walls into Kaffa (Crimea)
and forced the besieged Genoans to flee, there have been many
documented cases of the use of biological agents against people.
7
-
In 1767, during
the French and Indian Wars, the British gave hostile Indians the
blankets they had used to wrap British smallpox victims. The
disease quickly spread among the Indians. 8
-
During World War
I, the Germans used glanders and other microbial agents to infect
draft animals herded into ports within the United States and
Argentina en route to the western front. 9
-
From 1932 to
1945, Japanese forces in Manchuria experimented with
plague-infected fleas, anthrax, cholera, and several other diseases
to use as biological weapons. Japan conducted field trials against
Chinese cities in the late 1930s. The agents were sprayed from
aircraft and placed in water or food supplies, with mixed results.
There were several plague outbreaks in Chinese cities. Japan
reportedly has killed 1,700 of its own troops through mishaps in
developing biological weapons. 10
-
The Bulgarian
secret police are known for developing a means to assassinate
someone by shooting a pellet enriched with ricin, a highly lethal
toxin cultivated from a poisonous protein in the castor bean, from
the tip of an umbrella into the victim's skin. In September 1978,
the Bulgarian secret police used this method to assassinate
dissident Georgi Markov in London. 11
-
In 1979, a plume
of anthrax released in Sverdlovsk, Russia, killed 66 of 77 reported
infected people who were downwind from the release point. Livestock
10 to 100 kilometers downwind also died. In 1992, President Boris
Yeltsin admitted that the tragedy was due to an accident at a
former Soviet biological weapons facility. 12
-
In 1984 in
Oregon, the Rajneeshee religious cult contaminated salad bars in
local restaurants with salmonella bacteria in an effort to prevent
people from voting in a local election. Although no one died, 751
people were diagnosed with the food-borne illness.
13
-
In 1986, Tamil
guerrillas operating in Sri Lanka poisoned tea with potassium
cyanide in an effort to cripple the Sri Lankan tea export industry.
14
-
In 1993, Iran
reportedly plotted to contaminate water supplies in the United
States and Europe with an unspecified biological agent, and Israeli
Arabs plotted to poison the water in Galilee with an "unidentified
powder." 15
-
In 1994, the Aum
Shinrikyo cult attempted to release anthrax from the tops of
buildings in Tokyo. 16 In 1995, the cult placed three
briefcases designed to spray botulinum toxin in the Tokyo subway in
an attack that ultimately failed. 17
-
In 1995, two
members of a Minnesota militia, the Patriots Council, were
convicted of possessing ricin that they planned to use against
law-enforcement officers who had served legal papers on members of
the group. 18
Clearly, the threat of biological
terrorism is real and growing.
Possible Biological Agents
As Table 1 shows, the menu of biological agents that could inflict
massive harm on Americans is broad. The viruses, bacteria, or other
toxins can be relatively easy to acquire, process, and disseminate
or very difficult and unstable, with many possibilities between
those extremes. The likelihood that a terrorist will use one agent
over another depends on these factors as well as on how lethal the
agent is and whether there is a vaccine or treatment readily
available to counter its effects.


Anthrax
The focus on anthrax as a possible biological weapon for a
terrorist attack grew significantly following the recent death from
anthrax of a man in Florida and the discovery that his coworker has
anthrax spores in his nostrils. Anthrax infections can occur either
from inhalation of the spores or from skin contact. Inhalation
anthrax is almost always fatal once the symptoms--which mimic
influenza--appear.
The
anthrax bacterium (Bacillus anthracis) is most prevalent in
agricultural regions, where the spore occurs naturally among
animals. These regions include South and Central America, Southern
and Eastern Europe, Asia, Africa, the Caribbean, and the Middle
East. Outbreaks occur in both wild and domestic cattle, sheep,
goats, camels, antelopes, and other herbivores, but they can also
occur in humans who have been exposed to infected animals or to
tissue from infected animals. 19
Additional facts affecting its possible
use by terrorists include the following:
-
Anthrax can be
cultured from almost any soil that supports livestock. Anthrax seed
stock, however, is difficult to process and disseminate with great
success. 20 The minimal lethal dose for
inhalation of anthrax (reportedly 5,000 to 10,000 spores) is
high compared with other biological agents. 21
-
Most infections
(about 95 percent) occur when the bacterium enters a cut or skin
abrasion--for example, in unprotected workers handling the
wool, hides, leather, or hair products (especially goat hair) of
infected animals. Skin infection begins as an itchy bump resembling
an insect bite; within two days, it develops into a vesicle and
then a painless ulcer, usually 1-3 cm in diameter, with a
characteristic black necrotic (dying) area in the center. Lymph
glands in the area may swell. About 20 percent of untreated cases
of infection through the skin result in death. Deaths are rare with
appropriate antimicrobial therapy. 22
-
The anthrax vaccine is effective for
preventing anthrax infection through the skin. It appears to be
effective for some, but not all, strains of inhalation anthrax in
some animal species. 23 Testing to determine the
effectiveness and possible side effects of this vaccine is
ongoing.
Smallpox
Smallpox is also mentioned frequently as a possible biological
weapon. The reasons: The disease is highly infectious and
associated with a high mortality rate. Little vaccine is available,
and there is no effective treatment for the disease.
Currently, no one under the age of 30 has
been vaccinated against smallpox. For physicians, the most
difficult aspect of diagnosing the disease is a lack of familiarity
with it. 24
In
1980, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared endemic smallpox
eradicated, with the last occurrence in Somalia in 1977. Currently,
there are only two WHO-approved and inspected repositories: the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the United
States and Vector Laboratories in Russia. However, clandestine
stockpiles may exist.

Potential Means of Delivery
Biological agents can be spread by aerosol
sprays, explosives, or the contamination of food or water supplies.
25 The effectiveness of an attack can be affected by the
particle size of the agent itself, the stability of the agent under
desiccating conditions, exposure to ultraviolet light, wind speed
and direction, and atmospheric stability. 26
In
most terrorist incidents that involved chemical or biological
contamination, the method of dissemination is unknown. (See Chart
1.) In cases where the method has been identified, the terrorists
have relied on airborne dissemination (17 percent); pharmaceutical
contamination (16 percent); food or drink contamination (15
percent); injection or direct contact (13 percent); and water
contamination (11 percent). 27
Additional facts regarding delivery of
biological weapons that counterterrorism planners must consider
include the following:
-
No reliable fixed means exist for detecting
biological agents released into the atmosphere over large areas
such as cities. 28 Biological attacks are
likely to be recognized only after affected people start to become
sick. In some cases, this may not occur for weeks after an
attack.
-
There are
various plausible scenarios for biological and chemical
contamination of agricultural products (similar, for example,
to the German practice in World War I). These include infecting
livestock with hoof and mouth disease, pigs with African Swine
Fever, chicken with the Newcastle disease virus, or crops (such as
wheat, corn, rice, or soy beans) with Karnal Bunt, stem rust, or
leaf rust.
-
Imported
materials could be used by terrorists to introduce pathogens into a
country. These include straw, animal feed, and fertilizer.
Imports infected before they leave the country of origin could
facilitate multiple outbreaks over large geographic areas in
recipient countries, mimicking a natural event (such as the recent
outbreak of hoof and mouth disease in Japanese cattle in two widely
separated areas). 29
-
The greatest
number of potential casualties involves the airborne release of
biological and chemical agents. Releases within enclosed spaces
(such as subways, buildings, domed sports arenas, airports, or
train stations) require less of these agents but are likely to be
quite lethal because the agent remains concentrated in the confined
airspace. Such releases would require less than about 1 gram of
biological agents. 30
-
Open-air
release of biological and chemical weapons can affect the broadest
area with the highest number of casualties. Temperature
inversions, in particular, could trap these agents close to the
ground, substantially increasing the level of surface doses. Rain
washes most of these agents out of the air. Some biological and
chemical agents may remain harmful in groundwater for a period of
time; however, most become harmless. 31
-
Biological
agents may be aerosolized by explosion or by use of a spray
nozzle. Explosive release tends to be inefficient (according to
one estimate, leaving approximately 0.1 percent to 1 percent of the
agents in the 1 to 5 micron size range), with the heat and shock of
the explosion destroying much of the agent. 32 Spray
release is more efficient (up to 25 percent efficient for liquid
slurries and up to 40 percent for dry biological agents that are
ground to the proper size before dispersal). 33
-
Being indoors
during an airborne attack can lessen the exposure depending on the
building. The degree of exposure for people inside a closed
building when a biological or chemical plume passes outside is
reduced by a factor of two or more for typical American homes and
by a factor of as much as 10 or more for hermetically sealed office
buildings, depending on the quality of the air filters in the
heating, ventilation, and air conditioning system. 34
Producers of Biological
Weapons
Offensive biological weapons programs reportedly exist today in a
dozen countries, particularly in the Middle East and Asia.
Countries currently listed as "proliferation concerns" by the Henry
L. Stimson Center, a think tank in Washington, D.C., include China,
Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Libya, North Korea, Syria, and Taiwan.
35
- China continues to maintain some
elements of an offensive biological weapons program that it is
believed to have started in the 1950s. It possesses biotechnology
infrastructure sufficiently advanced to allow it to develop and
produce biological agents. Its munitions industry is sufficient to
allow it to weaponize such agents, and it has a variety of means
that could be used for delivery.
China's offensive
biological warfare capability is believed to be based on technology
developed before its accession in 1984 to the Biological and Toxin
Weapons Convention (BWC). Since then, China has claimed that it has
never researched, produced, or possessed any biological weapons and
would never do so. Nevertheless, its declarations under the BWC
guidelines for confidence-building purposes are believed to be
inaccurate and incomplete. 36
-
India has
many well-qualified scientists, numerous biological and
pharmaceutical production facilities, and biocontainment facilities
suitable for research and development of dangerous pathogens. At
least some of these facilities are being used to support research
and development for biological warfare defense work. 37
- Iran has a growing biotechnology industry, significant
pharmaceutical experience, and the overall infrastructure to
support a biological warfare program. Tehran has expanded its
efforts to seek considerable dual-use biotechnical materials and
expertise from entities in Russia and elsewhere, ostensibly for
civilian purposes. Outside assistance, which Iran needs, is
difficult to prevent because of the dual-use nature of the
materials and equipment it seeks and the many legitimate end uses
for these items.
Iran's biological
weapons program began during the Iran-Iraq war. Iran is believed to
be pursuing offensive biological warfare capabilities, and its
effort may have evolved beyond agent research and development to
the ability to produce small quantities of agents. 38
- Libya ratified the BWC but has
continued its biological warfare program. The program has not
advanced significantly beyond research and development, though it
may be capable of producing small quantities of biological agents.
It has been hindered by a poor scientific and technological base,
equipment shortages, a lack of skilled personnel, and U.N.
sanctions from 1992 to 1999.
Without foreign
assistance and technical expertise on dual-use materials, Libya's
biological warfare program is not likely to make significant
progress. However, with the suspension of U.N. sanctions, Libya's
ability to acquire biological-related equipment and expertise will
increase. 39
-
North
Korea has acceded to the BWC but nonetheless has pursued
biological warfare capabilities since the 1960s. Pyongyang's
resources include a rudimentary (by Western standards) biotechnical
infrastructure that could support the production of infectious
biological warfare agents and toxins such as anthrax, cholera, and
plague. North Korea is believed to possess a munitions-production
infrastructure that would allow it to weaponize biological warfare
agents, and it may have biological weapons available for use.
40
-
Pakistan is believed to have the resources and
capabilities to support limited biological warfare research and
development. It may continue to seek foreign equipment and
technology to expand its biotechnical infrastructure. Pakistan has
ratified the BWC and participates actively in compliance protocol
negotiations. 41
- Iraq is known to have
manufactured relatively large quantities of anthrax and botulinum
toxins; however, its scientists apparently have had difficulty
developing efficient spray nozzles, forcing them to rely on
explosive release by Scud missiles equipped with these toxins. 42
Iraq may have produced up to 10 billion doses of anthrax, botulinum
toxin, and aflatoxin. 43
Under supervision
by the U.N. team of inspectors (UNSCOM), 38,537 filled and unfilled
munitions, 690 tons of agents, 3,000 tons of chemical precursors to
chemical weapons agents, and thousands of pieces of production
equipment and analytical instruments were destroyed in Iraq
before UNSCOM was expelled in December 1998. Since then, no
complete accounting of Iraq's chemical weapons program has been
possible. 44 Moreover:
-
Iraq had removed
chemical weapons, equipment, and materials from the main site of
the al-Muthanna State Establishment before the first UNSCOM
inspection team arrived in June 1991; no full accounting of these
materials has been forthcoming.
-
Iraq's claims
that it has destroyed 15,620 chemical munitions are unverified. It
also has provided no documentation regarding 16,038 chemical
munitions it claims to have discarded.
- UNSCOM
inspectors reportedly were closing in on an Iraqi program for the
production of VX, a deadly chemical agent, when the standoff
between Iraq and the U.N. Security Council began in the autumn of
1997. In November 1997, the inspectors found new evidence that Iraq
had obtained at least 750 tons of VX precursor chemicals. Evidence
of VX production was first revealed in 1995.

Comparative Effects of Different Bioterrorist
Attacks
Various government and defense-related studies on the potential
effects of nuclear, chemical, or biological attacks on the United
States have been conducted. Much of this information is available
to the intelligence and policy communities, as well as the American
public and those who would harm them.
In
1993, for example, an expert at the Office of Technology Assessment
(OTA), a now-defunct arm of the U.S. Congress, released his
assessment of the damage that could be caused in two scenarios
based on the method of delivery.
SCENARIO #1: Agents Delivered by
Missile Warheads
This scenario assumes that an agent successfully reaches U.S.
soil aboard one Scud-sized warhead with a maximum payload of 1,000
kilograms. The study also assumes that the maximum use of this
payload capability was not used. It is unclear whether this
assumption is realistic.
The effects of such an attack by a missile
loaded with a biological, chemical, or nuclear warhead can be seen
in Table 2.

SCENARIO #2: Agents Delivered by
One Aircraft. This scenario assumes that the agents are delivered
by one aircraft carrying 1,000 kilograms (kg) of Sarin nerve gas or
100 kg of anthrax spores. It assumes the aircraft flies in a
straight line over the target at optimal altitude and dispenses the
agent as an aerosol. It also assumes that maximum use of this
payload capability was not used. It is unclear whether this last
assumption is realistic.
Table 3 shows the effects of such attacks
on America.

Economic and Other Effects
Even
the mere threat of a bioagricultural attack could have a
devastating effect on the economy. For example, an anonymous caller
to the U.S. embassy in Santiago, Chile, in 1989 claimed that
Chilean grapes destined for U.S. and Japanese markets were
contaminated with cyanide. The United States placed a quarantine on
Chilean grapes and forced the growers to recall those that had been
shipped, causing approximately $333 million in damage to the
Chilean grape industry. 45
Government Estimates of the
Impact
Several official reports highlight the risk posed to Americans
and the effects such attacks would have on the U.S. economy.
-
The CDC has
estimated that an anthrax attack by a terrorist would result
in an economic impact of $477.8 million to $26.2 billion for every
100,000 persons exposed. 46
-
A 1993 OTA report
estimated that 250 pounds of anthrax spores, spread
efficiently over the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area, could
cause up to 3 million deaths, more than from a 1-megaton hydrogen
bomb. 47
-
A senior-level
war game in June 2001, called "Dark Winter," looked at the
national security, intergovernmental, and information challenges of
a biological attack on the U.S. homeland. One conclusion of the war
game, hosted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies,
the Johns Hopkins Center for Civilian Biodefense Studies, the ANSER
Institute for Homeland Security, and the Oklahoma National Memorial
Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism: Within three months
of a biological attack on Oklahoma City using smallpox, over 3
million Americans could be infected, and over a million would be
killed. 48
Moreover, the
study concluded:
an attack on the
United States with biological weapons could threaten vital national
security interests. Massive civilian casualties, breakdown in
essential institutions, violation of democratic processes, civil
disorder, loss of confidence in government and reduced US strategic
flexibility abroad are among the ways a biological attack might
compromise US security. 49
- According to a U.S. Army study, a Scud
missile (launched at a U.S. city from a ship lying outside U.S.
territorial waters 50 carrying a warhead filled with
botulinum could contaminate an area of 3,700 square km if
weather conditions were ideal and an effective dispersal mechanism
was available. This is 16 times greater than the reach of the
same warhead filled with Sarin gas. By the time symptoms began
to appear, treatment would have little chance of success; rapid
field detection methods for biological warfare agents do not yet
exist. 51