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To: foundation who wrote (5997)3/14/2003 8:06:20 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12231
 
Marine Pigeon Force May Detect Attack

March 14, 2003
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 6:55 p.m. ET

LIVING SUPPORT AREA 7, Kuwait (AP) -- Nearly a month ago,
the Marines of the 7th Regiment were given 43 chickens to
raise and nurture, chickens that were to repay them by
helping detect a possible Iraqi chemical or biological
attack.

Within a week and a half, 42 were dead, although no one
suspects foul play.

On Friday, the Marines got a new avian force -- a company
of pigeons.

The birds are meant to be the military equivalent of a
canary in a coal mine. During a possible invasion of Iraq,
they are to ride with a caretaker in armored vehicles. If
they start to get sick, it could indicate a chemical attack
and give the Marines a chance to put on their gas masks.

The United States says Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has
several chemical and biological weapons at his disposal for
use against U.S. troops. President Bush has threatened to
invade Iraq to force it to give up those weapons.

U.S. troops have prepared for the worst.

They have been
vaccinated against anthrax and smallpox. They have gas
masks belted to their hips at all times and have been
trained to put them on in nine seconds with their eyes
closed and while holding their breath.


They have been issued special camouflage suits with
charcoal linings, rubber boots and gloves, atropine to
counteract nerve gas, and packets of charcoal to deactivate
any chemicals that may land on them.

To detect an attack, the Marines have special chemical
sensitive tape and paper, a chemical agent monitoring
machine, a packet filled with detection ampules and a
vehicle, the Fox, designed to take test samples while
moving.

``And we've got the pigeons. Hoorah!'' said Chief Warrant
Officer Rob Garcia, 34, of West Paterson, N.J., who's in
charge of chemical and biological defense training for his
battalion.

But first came the chickens.

They arrived at this Marine camp in northern Kuwait more
than three weeks ago and were billeted in a coop.

Things were going fine until three of them died one night.

``It was pretty much steady like that, except some nights
when we had major massacres of like nine,'' said Lance Cpl.
John Frawley, 20, of Stony Point, N.Y. ``About a week, week
and a half, they were done.''

One chicken, nicknamed ``Turkey Thunder,'' was rescued from
the coop by the 3rd Battalion, 11th Regiment. It now lives
in a tent with Marines from the artillery battalion, though
it appeared to have a little cough Friday night.


It is unclear why the chickens died.

Some believe they
had the flu.

Others said chickens were simply not meant to live in the
desert.

Lt. Col. Michael Belcher, commanding officer of the 3rd
Battalion, does not blame his Marines for the deaths. The
chickens looked a little peaked that first day, and he
believes the birds' death warrants were signed long before
they ever moved to Living Support Area 7, as the camp is
called.

But he wanted to do everything possible to make sure their
pigeon replacements did not meet the same fate.

``They get bottled water,'' he told Frawley, who was
charged with finding ``pigeon qualified personnel'' to care
for the birds. ``I don't want them spooked.''

Belcher held out hope that if all goes well, the birds
could receive a most honorable discharge.

``We'll release them in Baghdad,'' he said. ``Like
doves.''

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company.



To: foundation who wrote (5997)3/14/2003 10:12:08 PM
From: foundation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12231
 
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