http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,1833723,00.html
US begins building treaty-breaching germ war defence
centre
Julian Borger in Washington
Monday July 31, 2006
The Guardian
Construction work has begun near Washington on a vast germ warfare
laboratory intended to help protect the US against an attack with
biological weapon, but critics say the laboratory's work will violate
international law and its extreme secrecy will exacerbate a biological
arms race.
The National Biodefence Analysis and Countermeasures Centre
(NBACC), due to be completed in 2008, will house heavily guarded and
hermetically sealed chambers in which scientists simulate potential
terrorist attacks.
To do so, the centre will have to produce and stockpile the
world's most lethal bacteria and viruses, which is forbidden by the
1972 Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention. Three years before that
treaty was agreed, President Richard Nixon halted the production of US
biological weapons at Fort Detrick in Maryland. The same military base
is the site for the new $128m (£70m), 160,000 sq ft laboratory.
The green light for its construction was given after the September 11
attacks, which coincided with a series of still-unsolved anthrax
incidents that killed five people. The department of homeland
security, which will run the centre, says its work is necessary to
protect the country. "All the programmes we do are defensive in
nature," Maureen McCarthy, director of homeland security research
and development, told the Washington Post. "Our job is to ensure
that the civilian population of the country is protected, and that we
know what the threats are."
The biological weapons convention stipulates that the signatories must
not "develop, produce, stockpile, or otherwise acquire or retain"
biological weapons, and does not distinguish between offensive and
defensive intentions.
A presentation given by Lieutenant Colonel George Korch said the NBACC
would be used to apply "red team operational scenarios and
capabilities" - military jargon for simulating enemy attacks.
Some analysts say the extraordinary secrecy surrounding the project
will heighten suspicions of US intentions and accelerate work on
similar facilities around the world.