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Chemical Weapons Tests by US in 60s

 
 
Reply Wed 9 Oct, 2002 09:37 pm
By MATT KELLEY, Associated Press Writer



http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=542&u=/ap/20021009/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/chemical_weapons_tests_

4&printer=1

The United States held open-air biological and chemical weapons tests in at least four states ?-

Alaska, Hawaii, Maryland and Florida ?- during the 1960s in an effort to develop defenses against such weapons, according to

Pentagon documents.

A series of tests in Alaska from 1965-67 used artillery shells and bombs filled with the nerve

agents sarin and VX, the records show.

The Defense Department planned to release summaries of 28 chemical and

biological weapons tests at a House Veterans Affairs Committee hearing Wednesday. The Associated Press obtained the summaries

Tuesday.

The documents did not say whether any civilians had been exposed to the poisons. Military personnel exposed

to weapons agents would have worn protective gear, the Pentagon says.

The Pentagon previously acknowledged that it

had conducted biological and chemical tests, but this was the first time it disclosed that some tests were conducted over

land and not out at sea.

The tests were part of Project 112, a military program in the 1960s and 1970s to test

chemical and biological weapons and defenses against them. Parts of the testing program done on Navy ships were called

Project SHAD, or Shipboard Hazard and Defense.

The tests were directed from the Deseret Test Center, part of a

biological and chemical weapons complex in the Utah desert.

Some of those involved in the tests say they now suffer

health problems linked to their exposure to dangerous chemicals and germs. They are pressing the Veterans Affairs Department

to compensate them and the Defense Department to release more information about the tests.

In response to pressure

from veterans and Congress, the Pentagon began releasing details of the tests last year. Earlier this year, the Defense

Department acknowledged for the first time that some of the 1960s tests used real chemical and biological weapons, not just

benign stand-ins.

"The Cold War era experiments of Project SHAD, which we are now learning used live toxins and

chemical poisons on American servicemen on American soil, must be aggressively investigated in as open and transparent a

manner as possible," said the House Veterans Affairs Committee chairman, Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J. "Our focus must be on

quickly identifying those veterans who were involved, assessing whether they suffered any negative health consequences and,

if warranted, providing them with adequate health care and compensation for their service."

The Defense Department

has identified nearly 3,000 soldiers involved in tests disclosed earlier, but the VA has sent letters to fewer than half of

them. VA and Pentagon officials acknowledged at a July hearing that finding the soldiers has been difficult.

The

tests described in the latest Pentagon documents include:

_ Devil Hole I, designed to test how sarin gas would

disperse after being released in artillery shells and rockets in aspen and spruce forests. The tests occurred in the summer

of 1965 at the Gerstle River test site near Fort Greeley, Alaska, the documents said. Sarin is a powerful nerve gas that

causes a choking, thrashing death. It killed 12 people in a Tokyo subway attack in 1995 and the Bush administration says it

is part of Iraq's chemical arsenal.

_ Devil Hole II, which tested how the nerve agent VX behaved when dispersed with

artillery shells. The test at the Gerstle River site in Alaska also included mannequins in military uniforms and military

trucks. VX is one of the deadliest nerve agents known and is persistent in the environment because it is a sticky liquid that

evaporates slowly. Iraq has acknowledged making tons of VX.

_ Big Tom, a 1965 test that included spraying bacteria

over the Hawaiian island of Oahu to simulate a biological attack on an island compound, and to develop tactics for such an

attack. The test used Bacillus globigii, a bacterium believed at the time to be harmless. Researchers later discovered the

bacteria could cause infections in people with weakened immune systems.

Descriptions of some of the tests:

http://deploymentlink.osd.mil/current_issues/shad/shad_intro.shtml
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Pharon
 
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Reply Wed 9 Oct, 2002 10:18 pm
But then again..you

don't hear much of American history in Africa. I doesn't surprise me though, they were very cloack & dagger in the

period in and surrounding the cold war and for quite a while afterwards too.
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