DefenseTech Military.com
  • Categories
  • Full Archives
  • Monthly Archives
  • About Defense Tech
Subscribe to RSS

About Defense Tech

Defense Tech exam­ines the inter­sec­tion of tech­nol­ogy and defense from every angle and pro­vides analy­sis on what’s ahead.

Tip Us Off

Tip for Defense Tech?

SEND IT!

It’s Confidential!

Categories

  • 'Canes
  • Afghan Update
  • Ammo and Munitions
  • Armor
  • Around the Globe
  • Av Week Extra
  • Axe in Iraq (and Elsewhere)
  • Bizarro
  • Blimps
  • Blog Bidness
  • Body Armor Blues
  • Bomb Squad
  • Brownshoes in Action
  • Bubbleheads, etc.
  • Cammo Green
  • Catch the "Buzz"
  • Chem-Bio
  • Civilian Apps
  • Cloak and Dagger
  • Commandos
  • Comms
  • Contingency Ops
  • Cops and Robbers
  • Cyber-warfare
  • Data Diving
  • Defense Tech Poll
  • Defense Tech Radio
  • Dissent Tech
  • Door Kickers
  • Drones
  • DT Administrivia
  • Eat DT's Dust
  • Extra! Extra!
  • Eye on China
  • Fast Movers
  • FCS Watch
  • Fire for Effect
  • FOS Files
  • Friday Funnies
  • Gadgets and Gear
  • Going Green
  • Grand Ole Osprey
  • Ground Vehicles
  • Guns
  • Homeland Security
  • In the Weeds with Eric
  • Info War
  • Iraq Diary
  • Jarhead Jazz
  • JSF Watch
  • Just War Theories
  • Lasers and Ray Guns
  • Less-lethal
  • Logistics
  • Los Alamos and Labs
  • M4 Monopoly
  • Medic!
  • Mercs
  • Missiles
  • Money Money Money
  • Most Wanted
  • MRAP Edge
  • Net-Centric
  • Nukes
  • Old Skool
  • Our Shrinking Planet
  • Planes, Copters, Blimps
  • Podcast
  • Politricks
  • Polmar's Perspective
  • Popular Mechanics
  • Rapid Fire
  • Raptor Watch
  • Red Team
  • Retro-Futuro
  • Robots
  • Roll Your Own
  • Sabra Tech
  • Ships and Subs
  • Snipertech
  • Soldier Systems
  • Space
  • Special Ops
  • Star Wars
  • Strategery
  • Stray Trons
  • Tactical Development
  • Terror Tech
  • The Deadlies
  • The Defense Biz
  • The Peoples' Site
  • The Sunday Paper
  • The Tanker Tango
  • The View from Av Week
  • Those Nutty Norks
  • Training and Sims
  • Trimble on the Case
  • Uncategorized
  • Video Lounge
  • War Update
  • Ward'z Wonderz
  • You can run…

Archives

  • November 2009
  • October 2009
  • September 2009
  • August 2009
  • July 2009
  • June 2009
  • May 2009
  • April 2009
  • March 2009
  • February 2009
  • January 2009
  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007
  • March 2007
  • February 2007
  • January 2007
  • December 2006
  • November 2006
  • October 2006
  • September 2006
  • August 2006
  • July 2006
  • June 2006
  • May 2006
  • April 2006
  • March 2006
  • February 2006
  • January 2006
  • December 2005
  • November 2005
  • October 2005
  • September 2005
  • August 2005
  • July 2005
  • June 2005
  • May 2005
  • April 2005
  • March 2005
  • February 2005
  • January 2005
  • December 2004
  • November 2004
  • October 2004
  • September 2004
  • August 2004
  • July 2004
  • June 2004
  • May 2004
  • April 2004
  • March 2004
  • February 2004
  • January 2004
  • December 2003
  • November 2003
  • October 2003
  • September 2003
  • August 2003
  • July 2003
  • June 2003
  • May 2003
  • April 2003
  • March 2003
  • February 2003
  • January 2003

Home » Chem-Bio » Bioterror in DC?

Bioterror in DC?

What if Washington DC got hit with a bioter­ror­ist attack — and no one noticed? That’s the sce­nario Mark Benjamin sketches out in Salon.
tularemia.GIF

On Sept. 24, 2005, tens of thou­sands of pro­test­ers marched past the White House and flooded the National Mall near 17th Street and Constitution Avenue…
Unknown to the crowd, biological-​​weapons sen­sors, scat­tered for miles across Washington by the Department of Homeland Security… sucked in trace amounts of deadly bac­te­ria called Francisella tularen­sis. The gov­ern­ment fears it is one of six bio­log­i­cal weapons most likely to be used against the United States…
The DHS scram­bled… on Sept. 30 — six days after the deadly pathogens set off the sen­sors and well into the incu­ba­tion period for tularemia — alerted pub­lic health offi­cials across the coun­try to be on the look­out for tularemia, the deadly dis­ease caused by F. tularen­sis…
Sept. 24 was not the first time the Bio Watch sen­sors had detected pos­si­ble bio­log­i­cal weapons pathogens. Since the sys­tem was deployed, sen­sors around the United States have iden­ti­fied pathogens that could be used as bio­log­i­cal weapons on five sep­a­rate occa­sions, Jeffrey Stiefel, pro­gram man­ager for Bio Watch chem­i­cal coun­ter­mea­sures, said at an open lec­ture at the National Institutes of Health on Oct. 6. In all of those cases, the detec­tions were appar­ently the result of nat­ural phe­nom­ena. Indeed, some crit­ics have long wor­ried that one weak­ness of the Bio Watch pro­gram might be the dif­fi­culty of dis­tin­guish­ing between nat­ural events and ter­ror­ism…
As for how the bac­te­ria may have erupted through nat­ural processes, says [Dr. Steven] Hinrichs of the University of Nebraska Center, “I can’t imag­ine how it could have hap­pened…“
Regardless of the source, [Alan Pearson, a for­mer DHS offi­cial, who is now the bio­log­i­cal and chem­i­cal weapons direc­tor at the Center for Arms Control and Non-​​Proliferation] says he was trou­bled that it took the gov­ern­ment nearly a week to alert the pub­lic. “It points out that the sys­tem is still not work­ing fast enough,” he says. “If it turned out to be some­thing that really affected peo­ple, which it turned out not to be, the sys­tem was too slow.” 

All true. But doesn’t this “attack” also show how unat­trac­tive a weapon f. tularen­sis really is? Until now, Al-​​Qaeda and Co. have grav­i­tated towards spec­tac­u­lar strikes — one with lots of explo­sions — and towards sim­ple ones, that require a min­i­mum amount of tech­nol­ogy and exper­tise to pull off. Spreading f. tularen­sis over the Mall vio­lates both of those rules of thumb. Could this be the har­bin­ger of a new wave of bioter­ror attacks? I guess, maybe. But I’d worry more about sub­way bombs and hijacked planes instead.
THERE’S MORE: Jason Sigger, a chem-​​bio spe­cial­ist, is less diplo­matic. He says the Salon piece is “full of crap.”

This is the prob­lem with BioWatch, in that many nat­ural pathogens will set these things off just fine with­out stir­ring up ideas of ter­ror­ist inci­dents. They’re not that sen­si­tive, they’re air sam­plers that allow techs to take sam­ple swabs to the labs for analy­sis. Tularemia is a nat­ural bioor­gan­ism found in the envi­ron­ment. Lots of peo­ple kick­ing up dust on the Mall, the organ­isms float around. The BioWatch sen­sors HAVE false alarmed in Houston and LA at least (pretty sure) and prob­a­bly other places unre­ported. The false alarm rate is in the sin­gle dig­its, but that still gen­er­ates a num­ber of false alarms. The pub­lic health peo­ple want this to be taken as a ter­ror­ist inci­dent because it would increase their chances of get­ting more money into the gen­eral pub­lic health infra­struc­ture, which is their goal to answer bioter­ror­ism.
Tuli is a great BW agent, very infec­tious but not con­ta­gious, not a lethal agent as noted here — too easy to treat once detected. But the idea that this was a ter­ror­ist test? come on. If the feds were excited, it’s because the com­bi­na­tion of a large pub­lic event and the alarms were sus­pi­cious, but there’s no big deal here. False alarm from detec­tors, fuel for the bioter­ror­ism talk­ing heads, good Tom Clancy mate­r­ial, noth­ing more. Bottom line, no one got sick, no one died, it wasn’t a ter­ror­ist incident.

He’s got more to say over at his blog, Armchair Generalist.

Share |

October 19th, 2005 | Chem-Bio | 171530 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2005/10/19/bioterror-in-dc/Bioterror+in+DC%3F2005-10-19+14%3A43%3A23dupont You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

« « Last Best Reminder | Rapid Fire 10/​20/​05 » »

This website uses IntenseDebate comments, but they are not currently loaded because either your browser doesn't support JavaScript, or they didn't load fast enough.

  1. pb says:
    October 25, 2005 at 9:22 pm

    William Stanhope, asso­ciate direc­tor for spe­cial projects at the St. Louis University School of Public Health’s Institute for Biosecurity, was inter­viewed on Tuesday 10.25 on the Pam Stone show, to fur­ther dis­cuss the dan­gers of tularemia.
    http://​www​.pam​banana​.com/​a​u​d​i​o​/​1​0​2​5​0​5​_​s​t​a​n​h​o​p​e​.​mp3

    Reply
  2. ragnarok zeny says:
    August 1, 2008 at 10:14 pm

    I tried to point the mouse in front of the open spaced, magic hap­pened, in my eyes is a wear­ing armor rid­ing a bird in the above fig­ures. RO I became the most incred­i­ble world in my eyes. I first arrived in RO, I did not know any­thing. Wave played on the four with me. First time I knew that the world of RF was also can sit air­craft, fight mon­ster, and earn rag­narok zeny. I always behind with the wave, some­times clearly in front of him, I would be with the peo­ple lost, and then he will be very angry to say that he did not play with me, behind with peo­ple also can lost. There almost every time we went out to play, I would be very unfor­tu­nate to kill the mon­ster, related to the wave also was killed. Every such times, he would very angry and said he did not play with me, played with me always die.

    Reply
  3. http://www.buyageofconan.com says:
    August 5, 2008 at 8:05 pm

    Buycheap aoc gold , Therefore we’ve been mind­ful from the out­set to cre­ate a world which is true to Howard’s writ­ing. There is majesty in Hyboria but it’s of a mono­lithic, bru­tal and prim­i­tive kind — it cer­tainly isn’t “high fairie” where every­thing appears as though it was built only yes­ter­day and is devoid of context.”

    Reply
  4. ??? says:
    August 7, 2008 at 8:24 pm

    William Stanhope, asso­ciate direc­tor for spe­cial projects at the St. Louis University School of Public Health’s Institute for Biosecurity, was inter­viewed on Tuesday 10.25 on the Pam Stone show, to fur­ther dis­cuss the dan­gers of tularemia

    Reply
  5. Sword of the New World Gold says:
    August 7, 2008 at 11:34 pm

    By allow­ing play­ers to com­bine up to three per­son­al­ized classes at once, Sword of the New World Gold deliv­ers a pre­vi­ously unseen level of depth in char­ac­ter devel­op­ment and game­play strategy.

    Reply
  6. Tibia coins says:
    August 7, 2008 at 11:35 pm

    As a pre­mium player you can travel to the mys­te­ri­ous islands of Edron and Darama that are loom­ing large to the east of the main con­ti­nent. Also the leg­endary Shattered Isles in the South are def­i­nitely cheap Tibia coins worth a visit.

    Reply
  7. buy cabal alz says:
    August 13, 2008 at 8:36 pm

    Now when boy heard his col­leagues buy cabal alz or dis­cuss which place can buy the cheap cabal alz, he often thinks of the girl, but he knows that all things already finished.

    Reply
  8. buy dofus kamas says:
    August 13, 2008 at 8:38 pm

    you are very impor­tant, but now say any­thing was later, you already left, although now I have enough dofus gold, but all things were changed, if in the game only have myself, then I think I will leave too.

    Reply
  9. sass says:
    August 18, 2009 at 9:28 pm

    ?????????????????
    ?????
    ???????

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Click here to cancel reply.

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree

    Most Popular Posts
    • What Does this Handle Do?
    • Marines Quiet About Brutal New Weapon
    • Starship Troopers Meets G.I. Joe
    • Dowd's Bogus Grief Deficit
    • Semi-auto Grenade Thrower
    • Adapting Women to Subs
    • Fort Hood Rampage
    • Keep it Simple
    • Mystery Drone Revealed
    • REPLACEMENT ARM, GOOD AS NEW
    Recent Comments
    • Fort Hood Rampage
      "And no, the Koran does not say anything about killing...
      bdwilcox
    • Fort Hood Rampage
      When the Lord your God brings you into the land you are entering to...
      DualityOfMan
    • Fort Hood Rampage
      Fascism? Last time I heard, the fascists promoted christianity. Or,...
      DualityOfMan
    • Semi-auto Grenade Thrower
      I see an M16 firing, and I see a 40 mm grenade launcher...
      DualityOfMan
    • Fort Hood Rampage
      "I'd say go read some history on fascist ideology and then compare...
      Sam
    • Semi-auto Grenade Thrower
      No. I am not saying a grenade launcher on a rifle is a hoax. I...
      Zandor
    • Semi-auto Grenade Thrower
      For someone who trashes all the readers of the blog you sure do...
      a1189
    • Market for Acoustic Defense Systems Heats Up
      These devices vibrate tissue and bone not just...
      WJS
    • Semi-auto Grenade Thrower
      So are you saying the grenade launcher is a hoax or the M-16?...
      WJS
    • Fort Hood Rampage
      Dear Cannon Fodder; Only politically correct patriots should be accepted...
      Zandor
    Recent Articles
    • Semi-​​auto Grenade Thrower
    • Market for Acoustic Defense Systems Heats Up
    • Fort Hood Rampage
    • Keep it Simple
    • Airbag Defense
    • Dowd’s Bogus Grief Deficit
    • Did Someone Move the Furniture Around?
    • Lockheed Says Sbirs Still on Track For 2010
    • What Does this Handle Do?
    • Adapting Women to Subs
  • Channels: Military.com | Military Benefits | Military News | Off Duty | Join the Military | Military Education | Veteran Jobs | Military Money | Military Deals | Military Family | Military Community
  • Military.com Network: Military.com | MilBlogging | Defense Tech | DoD Buzz | SpouseBuzz | Fred's Place | GI Bill Express
  • Services: Army | Navy | Air Force | Marine Corps | Coast Guard | National Guard | Military Spouse
  • About Military.com About Us | Advertise With Us | Press | Affiliate Program | Monster Network | Help | Feedback | Privacy Policy | User Agreement | © 2009 Military Advantage