En defensa del neoliberalismo |
THE WEST NILE VIRUS: IS CASTRO'S BIOTERRORISM THREAT BEING IGNORED?Ernesto F. Betancourt With terrorism of unbelievable
cruelty and daring, the hypothesis that the West Nile virus
epidemiological mystery was a bioterrorist preparatory operation should
be looked over again. More so, in view of the possibility that our
previous approaches to this subject could have been in any way
influenced by Ana Belen Montes, the DIA analyst for Cuban afffairs
arrested as a Castro spy, opinions or conclusions. There is an
unwillingness to face up to this unpleasant possibility. It is
written off as a distraction or a manifestation of acute Castritis.
Keep in mind that a bioterrorist attack could be substantially
more costly thatn what happened on 9/11.
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When the West Nile virus first emerged in the U.S as
the cause of the encephalitis outbreak in NY, it was considered an
epidemiological mystery. The discovery made by an alert
veterinarian in the Bronx Zoo, Ms Tracey McNamara, baffled the CDC
because that virus had never been present in the Western Hemisphere.
There was an initial search for explanations and one
writer, Robert Preston, published a story in the October 18-25 issue of
The New Yorker, that this was being investigated under the
hypothesis that it could be the work of Saddam Hussein. In that
story (105) Saddam is quoted as referring to "his final weapon,
developed in laboratories outside Iraq...Free of UN inspection, the
laboratories will develop strain SV1417 of the West Nile virus."
Needless to say that in the complacent environment
that prevailed at the time, the possibility to select birds to
"host" the introduction of viruses, such as the West Nile, in
the US was perceived as insane as, say, flying passenger planes as
missiles into the World Trade Center. The whole idea was utterly
rejected by an anonymous CIA spokesman who, in a story in The Washington
Post of October 12, 1999, stated categorically that "to imply that
there is an investigation gives more credibility to that hypothesis than
it deserves." End of the story. In the light of the awesome terrorist aggresion we
suffered on 9/11, shouldn't we, at least, undertake some investigation
of this hypothesis? Particularly, since the colossal breach in our
security resulting from the arrest of Ana Belen Montes, the top
intelligence analyst on Cuba at the Pentagon, as a Castro spy. Is
it possible that previous categoric rejections of such hypotheses were
tainted by opinions uttered or influenced by this Castro agent? True,
we have to learn to live normal lives under the most absurd threats, but
we must also stop rejecting these threats as hypotheses because they do
not fit preconceived notions of what may or may not happen, or our
ideological inclinations. This tragedy shows that anything
is possible and, therefore, all hypotheses should be validated or
rejected. That is why the above hypothesis should be open for
investigation. This suggestion is based on the fact that this was
not so farfetched. And that there is enough circunstancial evidence to
justify its being investigated. Here is why. If Saddam was using another country as a surrogate in
his efforts to develop biological weapons, the most logical one was
Cuba. There are several reasons: i) Cuba has been developing
biological weapons since the 1980s and has thousands of scientists and
technicians working in its bioengineering and genetic industry, which is
attached to Castro's office; ii) Castro is an ally of Saddam Husseim and
shares with him a pathological hatred of the US; iii) Cuba is not
subject to UN inspection; iv) it is an Stalinist society where there is
no freedom of the press and an overwhelming repressive apparatus allows
the regime to work in utmost secrecy; and, v) it is very close to the US
mainland, allowing the use of migratory birds as "hosts" for
viruses. Additionally, in a book, Natumaleza Cubana, published
the previous year--and it must be emphasized that the book came out in
1998--the author Carlos Wotzkow, narrates how he was fired from his work
as an ornithologist at the Institute of Zoology in the early 1980s.
The reason, among others, his objecting to a Castro order
creating the Biological Front, an effort to develop viruses that could
be carried by "host" birds or other means into the US. This
work was assigned to the Institute of Zoology, and its institutional
derivatives, in collaboration with the Pedro Kouri Tropical Medicine
Institute. The question that comes to mind is why would Castro do
that? This was answered in the book Biohazard by Ken
Alibek, a former deputy head of the Soviet Biological Warfare program,
who defected about six or seven years ago and is now working as a
consultant for the CIA and the Pentagon. In his book, Alibek reports
that Castro's decision to seek Soviet assistance to develop a biological
warfare capability was linked to his blaming the US for outbreaks in
Cuba. He also reports that such capability was developed. To further document this explanation, the reader is
referred to Granma Internacional, where the front page of the Spanish
version carries a permanent window to report on "La Guerra
Biologica de los Estados Unidos contra Cuba." The current insert is
a six part report on a roundtable broadcast on December 8, 2000 with the
Minister of Science, Technology and environment, Dr. Rosa Elena Simeon,
and several of her collaborators. Previously, it included the
pertinnt section of the sentence in Cuba's trial of the US for
aggression, which had been twice presented to the UN General Assembly. In a further confirmation of this motivation, there
is a report of a personal conversation between a defecting officer and
Raul Castro, during which Castro's brother and Minister of the Armed
Forces, stated early in the eighties that "we are aware the US is
waging biological warfare against us and what the Americans do not know
is that Cuba is going to pay them back the same way." For
security reasons, the name and occasion of this conversation cannot be
revealed. It so happens that Dr. Rosa Elena Simeon is the
person responsible for the Frente Biologico that is developing the
capability to wage biological warfare directly under Castro's oversight.
She attended the UN General Assembly in 1999, the year of the
encephalitis outbreak, a strange diplomatic assignment for an official
responsible for science, technology and the environment. More so,
since upon her return with the delegation to Cuba they were welcomed in
person by Castro in an unusual event at Havana University during which
Castro made reference "to their historic and victorious battle in
the heart of the Empire." Could this battle have been the
encephalitis outbreak? Was this a battle won by the Biological
Front? Strange wording, indeed. To add more concrete evidence to the Cuban efforts in
developing the capability to wage such a campaign against the US, one
can refer to the testimony of Dr. Luis Roberto Hernandez, an
entomologist trained in Great Britain, who defected in London in 1995
and resides now in Puerto Rico. In a recent article in Encuentro
en la Red, Dr. Hernandez debunks the regime's accusations of biological
warfare by the US against Cuba. And, in an earlier interview to El
Nuevo Herald, on October 18, 1999, Dr. Hernandez asserted that he worked
in the Biological Front and that "those were laboratories to
identify and produce viruses to be used in birds as "hosts"
for their dissemination." These laboratories were kept under
"strict secrecy." A significant leak on the Cuba/Iraq link took place
precisely at the time of the encephalitis outbreak. According to a
Reuters dispatch, (6/24/99), Dr. Rafael Limonta, who had been director
of the Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnoly had been cleared
of corruption in his dealings with Iraq and was going to return to his
activities as a researcher. This seems to indicate that there are some
financial relations between the two countries involving biotechnology.
Since the Center is a huge research operation with more than 1200
scientists and technicians in its staff, it is logical to assume that
any research undertaken on behalf of Saddam is done there. Saddam
has close personal links with Castro. In fact, liaison between the two
countries is handled through Dr. Rodrigo Alvares Cambria, an orthopedic
surgeon with close links to Castro, who performed surgery on Saddam's
son when he hurt his back in an accident.
And the potential complementarity of interests is
indicated by the fact that Cuba has no financial resources to invest in
what has been a non-productive industry, while Saddam has access to
substantial oil revenues but severe limitations to undertake research.
According to an article by Jocelyn Kaiser in Science, dated
November 28, 1998, Cuba had invested one billion dollars in its
Biotechnology industry. Cuba is a bankrut country that does not
have the financial resources or credit mobilization capability to
finance such an investment. And, the 2,000 report by ECLAC on the
Cuban economy did not have any statistics of the output of this industry
or its exports. Isn't it reasonable to assume that this is due to
the fact that these investments are not undertaken for economic reasons
but for military purposes? This does not mean that we must reach any conclusions
or, much less, take any punitive actions. Nobody is advocating
that. But, borrowing from police argot, these facts provide enough
circunstantial evidence to indicate motive, means and opportunity.
At least, in view of the surprising nature of the WTC and Pentagon
attacks and the possibility that our previous judgments on the West Nile
virus may have been tainted by a key intelligence analyst working for
Castro, they warrant an investigation. That is all. Of
course, the problem this poses, if the results reveal the hypothesis is
valid, are very serious. But failing to find out and take
preventive action could end in much worse results. |
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