|
A Visit to a Government Germ Factory
- Kate Silver
For little more than a million smackeroos, some shiny equipment
bought from your neighborhood hardware store, and a wee bit
of science know-how, you could start your own germ-making
factory.
That's right: Choose from anthrax, Ebola, typhus, whooping
cough, smallpox or any number of lethal pathogens to make
in your own designer-disease lab.
That's just what they did at Building 12-7 of the Nevada
Test Site, some 100 miles north of Las Vegas, from 1998 to
2000. Germ warfare has been referred to as "the poor
man's atomic bomb."
So it's no surprise the Nevada Test Site, which was once
the proverbial mecca for nuclear weapons testing -- and Monday
was proposed for use as a national anti-terrorism training
center by Sen. Harry Reid -- was the premier destination for
the simulation. The Test Site was mostly closed down when
the 1992 nuclear weapons testing moratorium was enacted.
The germs they were making weren't lethal, say officials
from the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA), a Department
of Defense agency in charge of safeguarding national security.
And their purpose wasn't to disperse the biological agents.
Rather, they wanted to see just how difficult and costly it
would be to manufacture a germ-making plant. From there, they
performed tests to see if any "signatures" were
given off from the factory that would enable outside detection,
according to Public Affairs Officer Army Maj. Linda Ritchie.
Hence the project's name: BACUS, an acronym for Biotechnology
Activity Characterized by Unusual Signatures.
"A signature is any change in activity. They were looking
for signatures to see if they could pick up something that
would allow them to know what was going on within this building,"
Ritchie explained. She refused to elaborate on what any of
those signatures were, or whether there were any at all. That's
classified -- as is most of the information from the project.
Big surprise.
Spores Galore and the Fungus Among Us BACUS consisted of
two tests, one in November 1999 and the second in August 2000.
It was in an old recreation hall, about 50 miles inside the
Rhode Island-sized site. Though the hall has been closed to
recreational activity for years, its spirit remains.
Getting to the room where the lab is located is an eerie jaunt:
Follow the old signs reminiscent of the fallout days -- "In
case of fire awaken sleeping employees slowly to prevent nervous
shock and leave as fast as you do at quitting time" --
past the musty pool tables and the dusty bar, beyond the barren
barbershop and unsightly urinals and into The Lab.
No fancier than a standard biology lab, the room -- about
20 feet by 10 feet -- is filled with metallic machinery, valves,
beakers, tubing, funnels, gauges, pumps, scales, sterilizers
and plastic baggies. You'd never know they were producing
a spore-forming agent to simulate anthrax here a little more
than a year ago.
"What happened was the project provided a realistic
environment. That's why this particular location was chosen.
The biological technology equipment and all of the equipment
(used here) is commercially available," Ritchie explained.
The products they were using -- Bt and Bg -- are non harmful
biological agents found in pesticides and soil. Ritchie stressed
these agents were what she called "simulants" only,
and were never dispersed. The goal lay in the preparation
and detection, not in their release. She also said that none
of the scientists became ill during the experiments.
"In the tests, no actual biological warfare agents were
involved," she said. "Bt and Bg are normally found
in soil. Bt is commonly used in pesticides under the name
of Dipel, and Bg is a benign simulant that is not commercially
used.... Bt and Bg are spore formers, they were used to simulate
the biological agent anthrax, which also forms spores."
Ritchie wouldn't elaborate on why the tests were launched,
but insisted they weren't prompted by an imminent threat.
She stressed the threat of biological terrorism is always
out there.
"The concern is that there may be people out there who
have the intention of doing this. And we would want to be
able to detect it if that were happening," she said.
DTRA seemed to carry out the project with ease, for a mere
$1.6 million. And though a simple lay person may not be able
to do this, it doesn't take a rocket scientist.
"There was some technical knowledge that would be required
for someone to do this," Ritchie said. "You would
have to have some knowledge of maybe microbiology, electricity,
how to operate a biological agent production system. It would
be difficult for someone like me, with no technical background,
to come in and do it."
Classified Information
Ritchie was unable to answer a wide range of questions about
the lab, such as: Are there labs like these elsewhere in the
country? Was this part of a series of tests, or does it stand
alone? How many people would have been affected by the germs
made here. Were they anthrax? How many people worked here?
Did the tests yield any results?
It's no surprise that these questions remained unanswered.
It is the military we're dealing with -- and with the increased
emphasis on national security in the wake of war, what could
you expect? What was surprising, however, was the agent's
reaction to the attention the lab had been receiving.
"It's not that exciting of a story!" Ritchie said,
laughing in disbelief over the barrage of questions she resisted
answering.
If a million-dollar germ-making factory isn't deemed exciting
-- it makes you wonder what billion-dollar biological enterprises
our country could have up its pestilence-producing sleeve.
|