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BOOK
REVIEW
Bracing For Armageddon? by
William R. Clark
Review
By John R. Guthrie
With appreciation to first publisher: California Literary
Review - http://calitreview.com
“An Event of Low Probability but High Consequence”
He proclaimed himself “the Sacred Emperor of
Japan.” He is also legally blind and as malicious in his intent as Hannibal
Lector. His menacing appearance is accentuated by his fixed stare, his long and
unkempt hair and scraggly beard. Shoko Asahara was
the founder in 1984 of Aum Shinrikyo;
the “religion of Truth.” The group adhered unquestioningly to Shoko Asahar’s messily eclectic blend of Buddhism, Christianity,
Nostradamus and Asahar’s endless ipse dixitisms that were as disheveled
and ill-organized as his coiffure. He had some 49,000 followers in Japan,
10,000 more in Russia and offices in Manhattan and elsewhere.
Asahara amassed hundreds of
million dollars and sent agents to far-flung destinations to ferret out
information and materials for use in bioweapons.
In 1995, he sought to hasten the apocalypse
and seize earthly power by spreading an unlikely sacrament, sarin
gas, in the Tokyo subway system. This event killed twelve people outright and
injured another thousand or more, many of them seriously. The group had carried
out a previous gassing, a sort of practice run for the Tokyo event, in the
outlying town of Matsumoto. Seven died.
Aum Shinrikyo
did not limit itself to nerve gas as an agent of terror. A subsequent detailed
investigation into their activities in the years preceding the subway attack
revealed, that cult scientists had also endeavored to develop lethal biological
terror weapons as early as 1990….They never did manage to produce an effective
weapon based on biological agents.
There were perhaps a dozen ineffective
attempts by Aum Shinrikyo
to create acts of terror with biological agents. In instances astounding for
their sheer audacity, the group attempted to use botulism toxin in attacks
against the Japanese Parliament, a portion of Tokyo Airport, and ships of the
mighty United State Seventh Fleet that were moored in Yokohama Harbor. Though
the Aum Shinrikyo used
millions of dollars in such efforts and possessed a well-equipped lab staffed
by individuals of considerable scientific expertise, the assaults were totally
ineffective. Asahara is now imprisoned in Japan
awaiting hanging. His descent into infamy is deftly summarized by William R.
Clark in Bracing for Armageddon? The Science and Politics of Bioterrorism in America.
In the same chapter one reads the story of
the Rajneesh cult. In 1981 the group established an incorporated township, Rajeeshpuram, on 40,000 acres in Oregon. Rajneesh is
notable not only because of the guru’s ownership of 90 Rolls Royces, five private jets, and a helicopter, but for the
fact that in 1985 members of the group took enough time off from their
demanding regimen of sex, drugs and meditation to seed the salad bars of local
restaurants with generous dollops of Salmonella. This organism caused violent
digestive upsets in a number of local residents. The intent was to affect the
outcome of a local election by disabling voters. The event is categorized by
Clark as biocrime as opposed to bioterrorism.
Clark also provides an account of “Amerithrax,” the mailing of anthrax spores in 2001. The
account is all the more interesting in that it was written prior to the recent
suicide of Bruce Ivins, a United States government
microbiologist and vaccinologist for 36 years. He was
a senior biodefense researcher at the United States
Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases in Fort Detrick, MD. Ivins remains the
FBI’s prime suspect in Amerithrax. In Bracing for Armageddon, Clark wrote “the
spores involved were very unlikey to have been made by a nonscientists in a garage laboratory, and certainly not
in a cave in Afghanistan.” Presciently enough, Clark refers to “…disgruntled
American scientists, as was likely the case with the case with the spores used
in Amerithrax….”
And there are others: The Minnesota Patriots
Council: “A group of disgruntled right-wing individuals” manufactured the
deadly poison ricin to exact revenge against assorted
government entities.
Larry Wayne Harris, a member of a group
called The Christian Patriots and an officer of the Neo-Nazi group Aryan Nation
is a trained microbiologist. He carried out research on weaponizable
pathogens such as bubonic plague in his home laboratory.
These bioterrorists and their followers are
fascinating because of their peculiar and occasionally lethal combination of
criminality and psychopathology. Yet their stories are but one chapter of ten
in Bracing for Armageddon. The book
also provides thought-provoking overviews of a number of other aspects of
bioterrorism; its history, the likely agents now available and those that may
become available.
Chapter one of Bracing for Armageddon, “Tales of a Dark Winter,” provides a
chilling rendition of a 2001 “smallpox attack by bioterrorists.” Though it is
based on a government sponsored exercise, it is well written enough to be as
dramatic as any thriller. Clark notes that, “The question policymakers now face
is how much preparation is enough? How do we know when we are safe, or at least
as safe as we can expect to be? The underlying programs continue to be sold to
the Congress and the American public largely by playing on fears of
bioterrorism.”
According to the federal government’s
wide-ranging Model State Emergency Health Powers Act, a guideline for the fifty
states, bioterrorism is:
…the
intentional use of any naturally occurring microorganism, virus, infectious
substance, or biological product, or any bioengineered component to of such
microorganism, virus, infectious substance, or biological product, to cause
death, disease or other biological malfunction in a human, animal, a plant or
other living organism in order to influence the conduct of government, or
intimidate or coerce a civilian population.
The government’s “A list” pathogens include
agents of such ghastly diseases as Ebola, Marburg, and bubonic plague. The
threat that such natural viruses may be used in bioterrorist attacks is well
understood. Bracing for Armageddon also considers the threat of bioengineered
horrors: CIA research scientists believed Soviet scientists “spliced a gene for
diphtheria toxin into a plague genome, creating a genuine monster of a
pathogen. They were also thought to have stitched in genes that blocked a
victim’s immune system from responding, depriving the body of its first line of
defense.”
Clark describes various public health
measures in place as part of the defense against natural pandemics or
biological warfare. In cases of severe emergency, areas may be quarantined.
Available vaccines and remedies for the most likely threats are maintained in
agreed upon amounts by the manufacturer, the supplies kept fresh by systematic
rotation. There are also other disease fighting agents in top secret storage
facilities.
Considering the repeated failure of
bioterrorists produce any appreciable number of casualties, it isn’t surprising
that this mode of asymmetric warfare is characterized as “an event of low
probability but high consequence.” The effects on a community of a deadly
assault by agents that are invisible and generally ill understood can induce sheer
chaos.
Bracing
for Armageddon
provides a skillfully written and highly accessible overview of bioterrorism.
While some bits of information may be challenging for the non-scientist (e.g.
the details of the seasonal transformation of flu and related viruses), Clark’s
well-organized book includes extensive and helpful endnotes, an index, and a
glossary.
Clark points out that though we have spent
some fifty billion dollars on bioterrorism preparation, naturally occurring
influenza routinely kills 40,000 or so people each year in the United States.
The flu pandemic of 1918 happened to coincide with the final months of World
War I. “Half of our troops (who died) in this war died of the flu – not from
artillery shells, bullets, or poison gas….We don’t really know how many died
worldwide. Estimates range from twenty-five million to fifty or even a hundred
million….” In the United States, “between six and seven
hundred thousand perished…more than have died in all U.S. wars through
Vietnam.”
During the “Black Death,” the Bubonic Plague
epidemics of the 15th and 16th centuries — one half to one third of the
population died. Social institutions collapsed. Even the church came into
wide-spread disrepute. The feudal order was upended forever.
New microbial threats, such as antibiotic
resistant strains of disease germs evolve naturally. Their occurrence is
increased by modern agricultural methods such as feedlots for immense numbers
of cattle which are chronically fed antibiotics to keep them from sickening on
their unnatural grain-based diet, a regimen that makes them grow to slaughter
weight faster.
Is it possible, Clark asks, that some portion
of the amount spent on bioterrorism would be more wisely spent on general
public health measures? Since the challenges of global warming are undeniable,
where should our tax dollars best be spent in that respect? Is
the challenge of global warming and a reasoned expectation of more Katrina-like
occurrences a more serious consideration than the five lives lost so far in the
U.S. to bioterrorism? What preparation is appropriate for the challenges of
this and a bioterrorist attack? Chapter 10 involves challenging commentary on
such considerations.
Clark impresses one as a highly
knowledgeable, reliable narrator with no personal or political axe to grand.
His topic has implications that are remarkably far ranging for our society; for
our monetary and defense policy, for the nation’s health, culture, military,
work force, transportation system and even our religious institutions. Bracing for Armageddon provides a
valuable reference for an informed citizenry.
William R. Clark is the author of over 120
articles in scientific journals and has also written some half dozen books on
medical and scientific topics for the general public. He is also an
internationally recognized authority on “killer T Cell” lymphocytes,
specialized white blood cells that are produced in the bone marrow and
activated by the thymus. They are of importance in viral immunity and also in transplant
rejection. Dr. Clark is Chair Emeritus of the Immunology Department of UCLA.
The Chickasaw Plum - Volume VI - Number 10 - October 2009
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