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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Skywatcher who wrote (197681)10/30/2001 12:25:18 PM
From: Judgement Proof.com  Respond to of 769670
 
Anthrax preparation indicates home-grown origin

16:04 29 October 01
Debora MacKenzie
newscientist.com
As anthrax continues to turn up in US postal facilities, and postal
workers, evidence is emerging that it is an American product. Not
only are the bacteria genetically close to the strain the US used in
its own anthrax weapons in the 1960s, but New Scientist can reveal
that the spores also seem to have been prepared according to the
secret US "weaponisation" recipe.

This is troubling, say bioterrorism specialists. While the terrorists
behind the anthrax-laced mail US might have got hold of the strain
of anthrax in several laboratories around the world, the method the
US developed for turning a wet bacterial culture into a dangerous,
dry powder is a closely-guarded secret.

Its apparent use in the current spate of attacks could mean the
secret is out. An alternative is that someone is using anthrax
produced by the old US biological weapons programme that ended
in 1969 - in which case the scope for further attacks could be
limited. Experiments to determine which is true are underway now
in the US.

Particle size

Analysis of the physical form of the anthrax powder used in the
attacks has lagged behind the genetic analysis. Bacteria from
patients or contaminated surfaces can be multiplied up to provide
enough DNA for analysis. But a physical examination requires a
sample of the actual powder, and so far, only two are known. One is
from the letter opened in Senator Tom Daschle's office in
Washington on 15 October, the other from a letter sent to the New
York Post.

Last week, US Senator Bill Frist announced that the powder in the
Daschle letter was in particles 1.5 to 3.0 microns wide, a very
narrow size range. The results of the physical analysis of the New
York Post letter are not yet known.

The actual bacterial spore is ovoid and around half a micron wide.
The whole trick to making anthrax weapons, says Ken Alibek, the
former deputy head of the Soviet Union's bioweapons programme,
is to turn wet cultures of bacteria into dry clumps of spores that are
each between one and five microns wide, the optimal size to
penetrate a human lung and stay there.

But dried spores tend to form larger particles, with a static electric
charge that makes them cling doggedly to surfaces rather than
floating through the air where they can be inhaled.

Fluidising agent

The Soviet Union got around this by grinding dried cultures along
with chemicals that cause the particles to remain separate. Iraq is
the only other state known to have tried making such a weapon, and
it dried anthrax cultures along with bentonite, a clay used as a
fluidising agent in powders. But last week the White House said
there was no bentonite in the Daschle letter.

For its weapon, say informed sources, the US added various
molecules, including surfactants, to the wet spores so that when
they were dried, they broke up into fine particles within a very narrow
size range of a few microns. There was no need to grind the powder
further. Chemical tests are now being conducted to see if any traces
of the US additives are present.

Grinding was considered the most likely way for terrorists to create
anthrax powders, as the milling machinery is not hard to obtain. But
it results in a wider range of particle sizes. Large particles can be
filtered out, but smaller ones remain. The Daschle anthrax, say
sources, looks instead like it was made according to the US recipe.

Anthrax stockpile

The question is, when? At its peak, the US bioweapons programme
made 900 kilograms of dry anthrax powder per year at a plant in
Arkansas. That stockpile was destroyed when the US renounced
bioweapons in 1969. But small samples might have been saved
without being noticed.

Experiments are now underway in the US to determine how many
bacterial generations separate the anthrax being used in the
attacks from the most closely related strains in a reference
collection of anthrax, which includes the US weapons strain.

If the number is very small, and the anthrax closely resembles the
weapons strain genetically, it could be a leftover from weapons
production before 1969.

If, however, the bacteria have gone through many cell divisions
since the most closely related strain was frozen, they might have
been produced more recently. That would mean someone has
obtained not only a virulent strain of anthrax, but the know-how to
turn it into what was probably the most sophisticated anthrax
weapon ever produced.



To: Skywatcher who wrote (197681)10/30/2001 1:03:02 PM
From: Rollcast...  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Are you smiling? Gloating?

You'll be jumping for joy over the next anthrax death, wont you?