mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-25 15:29:25 -05:00
885 lines
48 KiB
Plaintext
885 lines
48 KiB
Plaintext
<conspiracyFile>The following articles are extracted from New Dawn magazine,
|
|
Volume No. 1 & 2. (C) Copyright April 1992. Subscription rates are
|
|
as follows: $30 for 12 issues, $5 sample; Foreign US$40 & US$7.
|
|
New Dawn, GPO Box 3126FF, Melbourne, 3001, Australia.
|
|
Shocking Revelations on AIDS Research by Our North American
|
|
Correspondent
|
|
Dr. Abdul Alim Muhammad, national spokesman for Minister Louis
|
|
Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam, dropped a bombshell on the
|
|
nation's capital at a mass rally held at All Souls Unitarian
|
|
Church on September 8. Although the event had been planned for
|
|
some time to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Washington,
|
|
D.C. ministry of Dr. Muhammad, he turned the event into a report
|
|
on his recent fact-finding mission to the African nation of Kenya.
|
|
Dr. Muhammad startled the standing-room-only audience when he
|
|
announced that a research team working out of the Kenyan Medical
|
|
Research Institute, led by the Harvard-trained immunologist Dr.
|
|
David Koech, had made dramatic advances in the treatment of AIDS.
|
|
Dr. Muhammad also charged that the U.S. government was leading a
|
|
major effort by the international medical establishment to
|
|
suppress this groundbreaking research.
|
|
Among those who packed the church to hear Dr. Muhammad speak on
|
|
the theme "Can We Survive Genocide," were clergy from several
|
|
denominations along the East Coast, civil rights leaders,
|
|
community activists, leaders of the Nation of Islam, elected
|
|
officials and political leaders from Maryland, Virginia, and the
|
|
District of Columbia, and hundreds of ordinary citizens. The
|
|
introduction of Washington's former Mayor Marion Barry - the man
|
|
on whom the Bush administration spent millions to remove him from
|
|
office - brought the house to its feet in an extended ovation.
|
|
A Policy of Genocide
|
|
In his remarks, Dr. Muhammad quoted extensively from a 1985
|
|
article authored by Lyndon LaRouche, "The Looming Extinction of
|
|
the 'White Race'". In that piece, LaRouche documents that the
|
|
imperial policies intrinsic to oligarchism have set into motion
|
|
the self-destruction of the population levels and economies of
|
|
those "white" nations that have complicitly tolerated oligarchical
|
|
policies - most specifically the United States and Great Britain.
|
|
LaRouche states that since what the oligarchs call the "Great
|
|
White Race" is dying out at an accelerating rate, and threatening
|
|
the supremacy of the Anglo-American financial establishment, we
|
|
witness a fanatically Malthusian commitment to a policy of
|
|
genocide directed against people of colour; a genocide consciously
|
|
implemented through the conditionalities policies of the
|
|
International Monetary Fund (IMF).
|
|
"That," Dr. Muhammad charged, "is one of the reasons they've got
|
|
him locked up; because he's got the guts to tell the truth."
|
|
Dr. Muhammad went on to present extensive evidence that the policy
|
|
of deliberate genocide is fully operational. He described the
|
|
CIA's support for the cause of population control during George
|
|
Bush's tenure as Director of Central Intelligence, and reported
|
|
the contents of National Security Memorandum 200, written during
|
|
the Ford administration, which advised that the preservation of
|
|
U.S. political and commercial interests "will require that the
|
|
President and Secretary of State treat the subject of population
|
|
growth control in the third world as a matter of paramount
|
|
importance...." To the amazement of the audience, Muhammad
|
|
identified the authors of the internal memo as Henry Kissinger and
|
|
Gen. Brent Scowcroft, now Bush's national security adviser. (See
|
|
The New Dawn Vol.1 No.1, May, 1991)
|
|
Dr. Muhammad used the case of Brazil, which has the second largest
|
|
black population in the world, to prove that the memorandum was
|
|
being implemented. "Today in Brazil, 40% of the women of
|
|
childbearing age have been surgically sterilized with funds
|
|
provided by the USAID," he said, "and 90% of those sterilized
|
|
women are black."
|
|
He insisted that this genocide was the real agenda of Bush's New
|
|
World Order; that it not only motivated the invasion of Panama and
|
|
the kidnapping of Gen. Manuel Noriega, but also the continuing
|
|
murder of the nation of Iraq. He told the audience that these were
|
|
just the opening battles in the war of the advanced sector nations
|
|
of the North against the developing nations of the South. Dr.
|
|
Muhammad denounced George Bush as a wicked man who cherished his
|
|
membership in the satanic secret society Skull and Bones. He
|
|
reminded the audience that the "skull and bones" was also the
|
|
emblem on the flag flown by the slave traders who raided Africa,
|
|
as well as of the latter day pirates.
|
|
AIDS and 'population control'
|
|
Given the Anglo-American establishment's commitment to mass
|
|
murder, the effort to suppress the promising research of Dr. Koech
|
|
and his colleagues should come as no surprise to anyone, the
|
|
Nation of Islam leader said. In fact, he contended, there is
|
|
substantial evidence to indicate that AIDS was developed as a
|
|
race-specific population control measure. Dr. Muhammad ridiculed
|
|
the theory that AIDS originated when the virus made a species jump
|
|
from the African green monkey to the African population. "We lived
|
|
with the green monkey for thousands of years and never had any
|
|
problems. The green monkey isn't our enemy. The IMF is."
|
|
Dr. Muhammad, who is a trained surgeon, said he traveled to Kenya
|
|
to see for himself what the alpha interferon derivative, which
|
|
goes under the trade name Kemron, was really all about. Dr.
|
|
Muhammad reported that he interviewed the research team in their
|
|
laboratory, was permitted to review their data, and to examine
|
|
AIDS patients currently undergoing treatment with Kemron and with
|
|
a new, more advanced form of Kemron, the drug Immunex, which
|
|
contains a greater number of alpha interferon components than the
|
|
original drug. Dr. Muhammad stressed that although the new drug
|
|
was only a treatment and not a cure for the deadly HIV virus, he
|
|
was tremendously hopeful and encouraged by the dramatic
|
|
improvement in the condition of those undergoing treatment.
|
|
Dr. Muhammad introduced Dr. Barbara Justice, a well-known New York
|
|
City-based cancer surgeon who has sent 54 AIDS patients to Kenya
|
|
for treatment over the past year. Dr. Justice reported that 97% of
|
|
her patients showed marked improvement within weeks of beginning
|
|
treatment, and that most were able to regain some degree of
|
|
normalcy in their ability to function.
|
|
It has been almost impossible for anyone outside of Kenya
|
|
administering Kemron on an experimental basis in the to assess the
|
|
work of the Kenyan team, which has been treatment of AIDS since
|
|
1989, since it has been systematically blacked out of the
|
|
scientific literature. Dr. Koech was to present his data, first at
|
|
the International AIDS Conference in the United States in 1987,
|
|
and then again at the 1991 AIDS Conference in Italy. On both
|
|
occasions, his invitation was inexplicably withdrawn.
|
|
Last year, Dr. Koech decided to take his data directly to the U.S.
|
|
medical community, and an extensive U.S. lecture tour was planned.
|
|
That tour was abruptly cancelled when the State Department refused
|
|
to issue Dr. Koech the necessary permission to enter the United
|
|
States.
|
|
This is certainly not the first time that important AIDS research
|
|
has been suppressed. Quite the contrary, it is part of a
|
|
continuing criminal pattern of lies and cover-up. The importance
|
|
of a rapid evaluation of Dr. Koech's work with Kemron and Immunex
|
|
is obvious. Currently, the only treatment available to AIDS
|
|
victims is the drug AZT; however, AZT therapy is prohibitively
|
|
expensive and carries with it extremely destructive side effects,
|
|
especially with prolonged use. Additionally, a recent study
|
|
conducted by the U.S. Army showed that, for unexplained reasons,
|
|
AZT therapy is not only largely ineffective in the treatment of
|
|
blacks, but that, in fact, AZT seems to aggravate symptoms in an
|
|
alarming number of black patients.
|
|
Kenya's President Daniel Arap Moi clearly finds the Koech team's
|
|
findings to be convincing. He recently announced that his
|
|
government was building a factory to allow the mass production of
|
|
alpha interferon.**
|
|
<div>
|
|
AIDS - Man-Made Holocaust
|
|
The fact that AIDS is a man-made virus created in U.S.
|
|
laboratories has been covered up
|
|
By JASON JEFFREY
|
|
"America should withdraw from the Mediterranean, Europe and all
|
|
foreign bases and it should save that money to create jobs for 12000000
|
|
unemployed Americans, and contribute towards the
|
|
elimination of the diseases it manufactured like AIDS which was
|
|
produced by the CIA at its laboratories and tested on American
|
|
prisoners who took the virus with them to the outside world when
|
|
released from prison and then it spread throughout the world."
|
|
- Muammar Al-Qadhafi speaking at the International Conference for
|
|
Peace in the Mediterranean, 4-6 May, 1990.
|
|
On July 4, 1984, the Indian daily Patriot published a
|
|
horrifying report that the disease AIDS was believed to
|
|
have originated from a virus created in the laboratories
|
|
at the U.S. germ warfare research institute at Fort
|
|
Detrick, Maryland. The editor explained that the
|
|
information had come from a well-known American scientist
|
|
and anthropologist who expressed the fear that India might
|
|
face a danger from the disease in the near future. The
|
|
American had to remain anonymous. He was obviously in
|
|
danger for having disclosed so deadly a secret. At that
|
|
time, when the full horror of the incurable disease was
|
|
not known Patriot reported that the World Health
|
|
Organisation believed AIDS posed the gravest threat to the
|
|
entire population of the world. More on the World Health
|
|
Organisation later. The British Sunday Express, 26
|
|
October, 1986, with banner headlines, and an "exclusive"
|
|
label, announced "AIDS made in lab. shock." The front-page
|
|
story said that the virus was created during laboratory
|
|
experiments which "went disastrously wrong." It added that
|
|
a massive cover-up had kept the secret from the world. The
|
|
Sunday Express quoted a British expert, Dr. John Seale,
|
|
who first reported his conclusion that the virus was
|
|
man-made last August, 1986, in the Royal Society of
|
|
Medicine Journal. He said that his report was met with a
|
|
"deadly silence" from the medical profession, and that
|
|
made him very suspicious. The editor of the Journal
|
|
agreed, according to Dr. Seale, that "it sounded like a
|
|
conspiracy of silence." The second expert quoted by the
|
|
Sunday Express, was Prof. Jacob Segal, retired Director of
|
|
the Institute of Biology in Berlin. It said, "our
|
|
investigators have revealed that two U.S. Embassy
|
|
officials made a two-hour visit to Prof. Segal at his home
|
|
two weeks ago questioning him about what he knows, what he
|
|
thinks, where he got his information, and what he intends
|
|
doing with his report." The Professor told the reporters,
|
|
"one said he was a historian, and the other said he was a
|
|
political consul. But I am positive they were from the
|
|
CIA, and that they were deeply concerned that the cover-up
|
|
over the origin of AIDS was going to be exposed." I told
|
|
them I had known that in the mid-70s experiments were
|
|
being carried out at Fort Detrick, where the U.S. Army
|
|
Medical Research Command has its headquarters, on
|
|
volunteer long-term prisoners who were promised their
|
|
freedom after the tests. Almost certainly the scientists
|
|
were unaware of the extent of their terrible creation -
|
|
the AIDS virus.
|
|
WHO Involvement?
|
|
The third expert quoted in the Sunday Express was Dr.
|
|
Robert Strecker, an internist and gastroentarologist from
|
|
Glendale, California, who stated "it must have been
|
|
genetically engineered." Strecker believes, after years of
|
|
exhaustive research, that the AIDS virus is indeed
|
|
man-made. Strecker has alleged that AIDS was engineered at
|
|
the request of the World Health Organisation and other
|
|
scientific groups who, according to Strecker, injected the
|
|
disease during preventative vaccines. WHO, he says, along
|
|
with the International Agency for Research on Cancer and
|
|
The National Institute on Health, requested the production
|
|
of a virus that would attack the immune system's T-cells.
|
|
AIDS, he says, is a hybrid of two animal viruses - bovine
|
|
leukemia (found in cattle) and a sheep brain virus called
|
|
visna. This new virus was given as vaccinations in Haiti,
|
|
Brazil, Africa and the Caribbean by WHO in a 13-year
|
|
campaign against smallpox in Third World nations, reports
|
|
indicate. Strecker, in his 97-minute videotape, "The
|
|
Strecker Memorandum," cites specific documentation
|
|
supporting theories that AIDS is a result of that direct
|
|
request. For example, from Volume 47 of Bulletin of the
|
|
World Health Organisation (1972), page 259: "The effects
|
|
of virus infection of different cell types (e.g.,
|
|
Macrophages, T and B lymphocytes) should be studied in
|
|
greater detail with morphological changes perhaps serving
|
|
as an indication of functional alteration..." "The
|
|
possibility should also be looked into that the immune
|
|
response to the virus may itself be impaired if the
|
|
infecting virus damages more or less selectively the cells
|
|
responding to the viral antigens..." In fact, a May 11,
|
|
1987 frontpage article in the London Times, headlined
|
|
"Smallpox Vaccine Triggered AIDS Virus," said WHO was
|
|
investigating new evidence suggesting that "immunization
|
|
from the smallpox vaccine Vaccinia awakened the
|
|
unsuspected, dormant human immuno defense virus infection
|
|
(HIV)." Vaccinia was the actual vaccine given as smallpox
|
|
deterrents during the WHO project. Were the AIDS
|
|
infections intentional, accidental or coincidence?
|
|
According to Strecker in his "Memorandum," a key part of
|
|
the actual study "was to be the time relationship between
|
|
infection and antigen administration," which suggests WHO
|
|
officials - and other agencies who were directly dependent
|
|
on the United States government for research grants - had
|
|
to have known. The denials were not long in coming. But
|
|
the British Sunday Telegraph exposed itself. It said the
|
|
story (the Sunday Express article) was invented by the
|
|
Russians "to smear the Americans," and recalled that it
|
|
had appeared in the Soviet journal, Literary Gazette. It
|
|
said this paper based its report on the Patriot - and that
|
|
the Patriot report did not exist! Professor Segal
|
|
describes as "ludicrous and scientifically incredible" the
|
|
theory that the virus came from African green monkeys. One
|
|
thing is certain: the controversy surrounding the AIDS
|
|
virus will not die.
|
|
A Weapon Against Black People?
|
|
Zear Miles, a Black industrial engineer, who has studied
|
|
the AIDS virus and its origins for about six years has
|
|
stated that he has proof from various documentation and
|
|
letters from other AIDS researchers to prove that the
|
|
virus was made in an American military lab as a means to
|
|
suppress Blacks. In his document entitled "Rape Africa",
|
|
Miles researched the origin of the AIDS virus from 1952,
|
|
when the federal government had enough blood types and
|
|
characteristics of every nationality in the world up to
|
|
the King Alfred plan which called for the extinction of
|
|
Blacks in national security emergencies. Miles learned
|
|
that through National Security Council Memorandum 46,
|
|
dated 1978, which called for a possible way to gauge and
|
|
control the impact of the growing Black movement, the
|
|
government was researching possible ways to suppress Black
|
|
hostility toward the authorities. Later called the King
|
|
Alfred plan, the scheme called for the extinction of
|
|
Blacks by the year 2000 with an AIDS-like virus. Miles
|
|
said he also gauged the increasing number of AIDS cases in
|
|
which the number of Black contractors have gone up
|
|
significantly compared with Whites, citing that the AIDS
|
|
virus attacked a Black person's immune system and
|
|
destroyed it in six weeks as opposed to a White person's
|
|
time of six months.
|
|
The Evidence
|
|
What is the evidence available to the layman. First, the
|
|
initial cases were reported in New York and there is no
|
|
dispute that Fort Detrick was working on immunological
|
|
defence against infection. The British Guardian reported
|
|
on October 27, 1986, that in 1969 evidence was given to a
|
|
Washington Appropriation Committee that "within the next
|
|
five or ten years it would probably be possible to make a
|
|
new infective micro-organism which would differ from any
|
|
known disease causing organism. Most important, that it
|
|
might be refractory to the immunological and therapeutic
|
|
properties on which we depend to maintain our relative
|
|
freedom from infectious disease." "Refractory" means,
|
|
according to the Oxford Dictionary, "not yielding to
|
|
treatment." AIDS answers precisely to that description.
|
|
On September 24, 1986, the Daily Telegraph reported from
|
|
Washington, "Enough of a debilitating virus to infect the
|
|
whole world, disappeared from an American germwarfare
|
|
laboratory five years ago, and has never been traced, an
|
|
environment group claimed yesterday in a Washington Court
|
|
action aimed at halting biological weapons research." In
|
|
1968, the J.D. Bernal Peace Library organised a conference
|
|
on the dangers of biological warfare research. Ritchie
|
|
Calder said then that among the weapons being stockpiled
|
|
were some designed to bring about genetic changes. He said
|
|
the "doomsday bug was under wraps" and that there was a
|
|
conspiracy of silence about germ weapons because the
|
|
implications were so frightening." He told the British
|
|
Daily Mirror after his address that "somewhere in the
|
|
world a germ is being cultured to which we would have no
|
|
natural resistance and to which there would be no sure
|
|
defence." A precise description of AIDS. The British
|
|
Observer, on June 30, 1968, quoted from an article in the
|
|
Journal of General Microbiology by W.D. Lawton of Fort
|
|
Detrick, and R.C. Morris and T.W. Burrows of the British
|
|
microbiological research station at Porton. One paragraph
|
|
said, "By engineering the genetics of individual strains,
|
|
microbiologists aim to produce a single strain containing
|
|
the most deadly combination of properties." Again, a
|
|
description of AIDS. The article says that at that time
|
|
Porton, according to the government, was concerned only
|
|
with defence applications of research, but Fort Detrick
|
|
was only committed to developing microbiological weapons
|
|
for offence. The Japanese carried out germ warfare
|
|
research in occupied China during the war. Some of these
|
|
criminals were captured by the Soviets and duly tried and
|
|
sentenced. Others were given immunity by the Americans and
|
|
taken to work at Fort Detrick. In 1969, after the AIDS
|
|
virus was loose, negotiations began on a Convention
|
|
banning biological weapons, and it came into force in
|
|
1972. In its first review conference in 1980, it was
|
|
reported that 80 countries had ratified. But there is no
|
|
provision in the Convention to ban research or for
|
|
verification. Nichola Sims, who has written a book on
|
|
biological disarmament, wrote recently, "the failure of
|
|
the Convention to impose any restrictions even on
|
|
'offensive' biological warfare research, has been
|
|
frequently criticised." And she refers to popular fears
|
|
that a "super germ breakthrough in the means of waging
|
|
biological or toxin warfare is just around the corner and
|
|
may induce the possessor of such a germ to break out of
|
|
the Convention." She quotes Dr. Robert K. Mikulak of the
|
|
U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency for the statement
|
|
that "there is no justification for classified military
|
|
research on the question in any country." But so far there
|
|
is no inspection or verification. A much more recent
|
|
accusation against the United States for the manufacturing
|
|
of the AIDS virus comes from the Libyan UN Ambassador, Mr.
|
|
Ali Ahmed Elhouderi. On January 9, 1992, at a press
|
|
conference, he stated that the AIDS virus was produced in
|
|
a laboratory probably as a weapon. He said, "We think it
|
|
is man-made and it was done in laboratories. And it was
|
|
not, as suggested, coming from monkeys in Africa." He also
|
|
suggested that the virus had been manufactured at the time
|
|
of the Vietnam War. These statements fit perfectly into
|
|
place as research would have been carried out at that time
|
|
at Fort Detrick for offensive purposes against the North
|
|
Vietnamese.
|
|
AIDS Was Man-Made
|
|
On all the circumstantial evidence, the layman will almost
|
|
certainly reject the idea that the escape of the man-made
|
|
AIDS virus was the result of a disastrous error during
|
|
innocent civilian research. We can assuredly conclude that
|
|
it was the result of germ warfare research, and the finger
|
|
of guilt points to the United States. The scientists
|
|
could not have visualised that they would let loose a
|
|
so-far incurable disease that may and possibly will wipe
|
|
out millions, particularly in the Third World, where the
|
|
majority of the world's population lives. Never was the
|
|
need greater for the nations to drop their differences and
|
|
to concentrate all their skill and resources in a
|
|
world-wide battle against this terrible threat, and to end
|
|
the horror of germ warfare research.**
|
|
<div>
|
|
The Mystery of Skull Valley
|
|
By NIKOLAI FILIPPOV
|
|
Because of an error made by an airman testing a new germ weapon, a
|
|
deadly virus attacks the population of a small town in highland
|
|
Utah, USA. An incurable disease begins to kill people like a
|
|
plague epidemic. In an attempt to cover up the traces of their
|
|
crime, the military authorities artificially cause a landslide
|
|
that buries the town and doom chance survivors to lifelong
|
|
isolation.
|
|
This is the plot of Vector, a novel by Henry Sutton, an
|
|
American author. This book is based on dramatic events
|
|
during which the victims were fortunately not people but
|
|
animals. March 14-20, 1968 was a black week for American
|
|
farmers grazing sheep in the remote pasturelands of
|
|
semi-desert Skull Valley, Utah. About 6500 sheep died
|
|
there in those seven days under mysterious circumstances.
|
|
Even more of a mystery was that people, cattle and other
|
|
animals in the area were unscathed. Everybody - farmers,
|
|
residents of Utah, journalists - felt certain that the
|
|
accident was linked to the US Army chemical and
|
|
bacteriological testing ground in Dugway with an area of
|
|
several thousand square kilometres in the vicinity of
|
|
Skull Valley. Indeed, at that very time the thousands of
|
|
Dugway employees were carrying out large scale experiments
|
|
in preparation for further escalation of the chemical war
|
|
and the start of a germ war in Vietnam. For a whole year
|
|
the Defence Department emphatically denied that animals in
|
|
Skull Valley were being affected by the chemical or
|
|
biological agents disseminated in the atmosphere during
|
|
the test. In an attempt at a cover-up, experts at the
|
|
proving ground advanced hypotheses which must have seemed
|
|
untenable even to laymen about the sheep having been
|
|
killed by poisonous plants or a natural epizootic.
|
|
However, an inquiry by Utah authorities in collaboration
|
|
with veterinarians and health experts compelled the
|
|
Pentagon to admit its responsibility for the death of the
|
|
sheep. Even so, no one at Dugway was punished. The blame
|
|
for a terrible crime posing a real threat to people's
|
|
health due to a gross violation of safety standards in
|
|
conducting tests was placed on an unfortunate accident.
|
|
According to the official version formulated under the
|
|
direction of the U.S. military authorities, a test of
|
|
TMU-28/B spray tanks with nerve agent VX, was carried out
|
|
at Dugway on March 13, 1968. The gas was dispersed from an
|
|
F-4E jet bomber by means of two spray tanks with a total
|
|
capacity of 1200 litres. The bomber flew at an altitude
|
|
of 40 to 45 m. During the test something went wrong with
|
|
one of the tanks (or so the version ran), and besides, the
|
|
direction of the wind varied, with the result that part of
|
|
the nerve gas was carried beyond the proving ground. A
|
|
cloud of aerosol VX allegedly contaminated pasturelands on
|
|
an area of 400-500 sq. km. Skull Valley was not the only
|
|
area where sheep died, for a cloud of aerosol VX reached
|
|
Res Valley, killing sheep 70 km away from where the poison
|
|
gas had been released. Anyone who has read publications
|
|
dealing with the accident in Skull Valley and Res Valley
|
|
is bound to detect a contradiction between the military
|
|
authorities' version and the facts. The Pentagon has yet
|
|
to explain why a whole year passed before it made up its
|
|
mind about what chemical or biological agent caused the
|
|
death of the sheep outside Dugway. If the Dugway test had
|
|
to do only with VX, then that gas was the only cause of
|
|
the sheep's death and this could have been stated at once.
|
|
There is reason to presume that over a short period
|
|
experiments were carried out at Dugway involving a whole
|
|
range of poison gases and biological agents. But it is
|
|
logical to suppose that even in such a contingency experts
|
|
should know well the properties and casualty effects of
|
|
the test materials. And this implies that researchers must
|
|
have had no difficulty in ascertaining the nature of the
|
|
agent which killed so many sheep. The official story of
|
|
the experiment of March 13, 1968, says that the wind
|
|
carried beyond Dugway, in the form of vapours and highly
|
|
dispersed aerosol, a mere nine kg, or 0.8 per cent, of the
|
|
total amount of VX gas to be dispersed. Field chemical
|
|
control cannot ensure such a degree of accuracy. But the
|
|
authors of the version needed to cite some figure in order
|
|
to make people believe that the sheep had been killed by a
|
|
nerve gas. At the same time, the Pentagon wanted to
|
|
conceal from the public the real danger posed by chemical
|
|
weapon tests in the atmosphere to residents of Utah and so
|
|
it withheld information about the actual amount of gas
|
|
released over Skull Valley. The Pentagon officials
|
|
suggested that the contamination level in the Skull Valley
|
|
pastureland where deaths occurred among sheep averaged a
|
|
mere 0.02 gram per hectare. Let us note by way of
|
|
comparison that to kill humans, it would be necessary
|
|
according to U.S. data available to disseminate from one
|
|
to three kilograms of VX per hectare of target, or 100000
|
|
times more than the contamination level in Skull
|
|
Valley given in the official version. Reports said that in
|
|
a flock totalling 2800 sheep, 2500 or 90 per cent, were
|
|
killed. No such effect is possible where the VX
|
|
contamination level is 0.02 gram per hectare. A
|
|
publication put out by the Dugway proving ground said that
|
|
during the test on March 13, 1968, the greatest distance
|
|
at which VX drops spilled on the ground had been 5.4 km
|
|
and not 70 km, as the official version would have it. The
|
|
Pentagon's information on one and the same fact varies
|
|
from document to document and from period to period.
|
|
Surely this shows that the version is false. A
|
|
contaminated cloud spreading wide in the atmosphere only
|
|
retains vapours and minute particles of aerosol which do
|
|
not settle on the ground and can be inhaled. It follows
|
|
that had such a cloud really floated over Skull Valley, it
|
|
would have caused inhalational casualties in other animals
|
|
as well, including cattle and horses, but no such thing
|
|
happened, according to documentary evidence. In the early
|
|
days after the accident, before the hypothesis about VX
|
|
was advanced, doubts were expressed even by Brig. Gen.
|
|
William Stone. He rightly asked why the gas had only
|
|
killed sheep without affecting people. There were also
|
|
other moot points. Why were the diseased sheep shot dead?
|
|
Why was no attempt made to save them by evacuating them to
|
|
an uncontaminated area or by treating them with atropine
|
|
or other antidotes? Marr Fawcett, a veterinarian of Utah,
|
|
refused to believe that the sheep had been poisoned with
|
|
VX, for in that case many of them could, in his opinion,
|
|
have been saved by means of antidotes. Dr. Kent Van
|
|
Kampen, a veterinary pathologist in Utah, said in April
|
|
1968, shortly after the accident, that as early as March
|
|
17, 1968, the supposition that the sheep had been hit by a
|
|
chemical poison affecting the nervous system could have
|
|
been refuted without difficulty since all symptoms of such
|
|
poisoning were lacking. The death of an animal poisoned
|
|
with a nerve gas such as VX is accompanied by spasms and
|
|
paresis of muscles in the limbs. Yet judging by what sheep
|
|
herders said in the early days of the inquiry into the
|
|
accident, dying sheep had shown no signs of spasms. True,
|
|
later on someone saw to it that a videotape recording
|
|
allegedly illustrating the Skull Valley accident was
|
|
projected widely. The tape showed the death of a single
|
|
sheep shaking with spasms as a group of civilians looked
|
|
on. One year after the accident, Kent Van Kampen and Marr
|
|
Fawcett contributed in collaboration with other experts of
|
|
Utah an article to the Journal of the American Veterinary
|
|
Medical Association setting out the causes and
|
|
circumstances of the sheep's death in Skull Valley, their
|
|
version tallying with the Pentagon's. There was a footnote
|
|
saying that in writing their article, the authors had
|
|
enjoyed expert assistance (it is easy enough to guess what
|
|
kind of assistance) in particular from Dr. Mortimer
|
|
Rothenberg, the science director at Dugway, and Dr.
|
|
Bernard MacNamara of Edgewood Arsenal, the chief U.S. Army
|
|
centre for the development of chemical and germ weapons.
|
|
We might as well note at this point that shortly after the
|
|
sheep's death in Skull Valley Dr. Rothenberg, trying to
|
|
exonerate Dugway from blame for the accident, declared
|
|
that the symptoms displayed by the sheep had nothing
|
|
whatever in common with those of nerve gas poisoning. And
|
|
so, it took the Pentagon a year to invent an explanation
|
|
for the sheep's death and make the civilian experts
|
|
mentioned above present its version as their own, thereby
|
|
striking a bargain with their conscience. The videotape
|
|
which showed a sheep's death from VX was intended to serve
|
|
the same purpose. But the forgery was too crude for
|
|
knowledgeable people to mistake it for the truth. They
|
|
realised at once that the "documentary" showed a sheep
|
|
injected with a nerve gas by means of a syringe, that is,
|
|
in the same way as this is done in demonstrating the
|
|
effect of nerve gases on animals. They deduced this from
|
|
the absence of any other living or dead sheep on the
|
|
screen as well as from the presence of people wearing no
|
|
gas masks or protective clothes, whereas safety
|
|
regulations forbid anyone to enter without taking these
|
|
precautions in an area contaminated by VX to a degree
|
|
killing livestock. There is no such ban where a poison gas
|
|
is injected into the body of an animal outside a
|
|
contaminated area. A further fact worthy of note is that
|
|
the worker's teams which buried the dead sheep had no gas
|
|
masks on, judging by other videotapes and various
|
|
photographs. This is permissible only when the nature of
|
|
an agent which has caused the death of animals is known
|
|
for certain. Furthermore, it is necessary to note that the
|
|
agent used was completely harmless to humans. This detail,
|
|
like the others cited above, indicates that the sheep in
|
|
Skull Valley were killed by something other than nerve
|
|
gas. The death of livestock so far away from the testing
|
|
ground, as in the case of Skull Valley, could only be
|
|
caused by a biological agent. Experts could establish
|
|
without difficulty that nine litres of biological agent is
|
|
enough to generate a pathogenic aerosol cloud five km
|
|
long, two km deep and 100 m high. One litre of aerosol
|
|
cloud could contain several hundred units of pathogen.
|
|
Such a cloud can sail many dozens of kilometres without
|
|
losing its casualty effects. Consideration of the death
|
|
rate of biological agents during the drift of aerosol
|
|
particles in the atmosphere makes no difference as far as
|
|
the main conclusion is concerned. Poison gas tests
|
|
according to regulations in force at Dugway are generally
|
|
conducted in the morning to ensure that enough daylight
|
|
remains for collecting data on the results of tests and
|
|
cleaning the test site. The dissemination of VX on March
|
|
13, 1968, is alleged to have been carried out one hour
|
|
before sunset. Evening experiments are particularly
|
|
typical in the case of biological agents, for researchers
|
|
are careful to preclude the disastrous impact of sunrays
|
|
on pathogens. The year 1968, when the Skull Valley
|
|
accident occurred, has gone down in history as the peak of
|
|
U.S. chemical warfare in Vietnam, Laos and Kampuchea. In
|
|
thelate 1960s, the Pentagon worked at a frantic pace to
|
|
develop new chemical and germ weapons. A report by the
|
|
House Committee on Science and Astronautics said that in
|
|
the years preceding the accident, the Pentagon had been
|
|
engaged in a vast programme for germ weapon testing. The
|
|
tests were conducted at several military testing grounds,
|
|
on ocean islands, in the Panama Canal zone, Alaska, New
|
|
York City and San Diego as well as on airfields, in
|
|
subways and on highways. The Dugway test made on March 13,
|
|
1968, or somewhat earlier could be one of those tests. It
|
|
is reasonable to suppose that during that test use was
|
|
made of biological agents based on a virus selectively
|
|
killing sheep without doing any harm to humans. It could
|
|
be visna, a virus which has been intensively studied since
|
|
the late 1950s in several research centres, including Fort
|
|
Dettrick, Maryland, then the main U.S. centre for the
|
|
development of germ weapons. No visna-caused diseases have
|
|
been recorded among humans. This virus hardly affects
|
|
cattle, horses or other animals. Its properties in this
|
|
respect coincide entirely with those of the agent
|
|
responsible for the Skull Valley accident in 1968. Visna
|
|
affects the central nervous system of sheep, robbing their
|
|
body of immunity. The symptoms are progressive weakness,
|
|
shortness of breath, a wobbly gait, sagging withers and a
|
|
drooping head. The end affect is paresis and paralysis of
|
|
the skeletal muscles and then death. Similar symptoms were
|
|
registered in sheep affected with the Skull Valley
|
|
disease. The disease caused by visna is incurable. This
|
|
explains why the epidemiological service of Utah did the
|
|
right thing by deciding to slaughter the diseased sheep.
|
|
No antidotes could have helped the animals in the least
|
|
and were not used, either. If during the March 1968 tests
|
|
at Dugway visna was used as a simultant modelling the
|
|
properties of germ weapons, it is clear why the men who
|
|
buried the dead sheep used no gas masks or protective
|
|
clothes, since visna is harmless to man. And this invites
|
|
another conclusion: at that time, the nature of the agent
|
|
which affected the sheep was known to at least a small
|
|
group of people in charge of removing the effects of the
|
|
accident. The establishment of investigation committees
|
|
was merely designed to conceal the real objectives and
|
|
tasks of the Dugway experiments from the public. The
|
|
mystery of those criminal experiments has begun to come to
|
|
light in recent years. Competent scientists consider that
|
|
visna was used in the United States for genetic
|
|
engineering work which resulted in creating HIV, a
|
|
chimeric virus causing an incurable infectious disease of
|
|
man known as AIDS. Research into HIV at the molecular
|
|
level has shown that 60 per cent of its genome is
|
|
identical with that of visna and the rest is a built-in
|
|
nucleotide sequence isolated from the genome of another
|
|
retrovirus, HLTV-I. HIV, or the pathogen of AIDS, was
|
|
designed in U.S. genetic engineering laboratories on
|
|
instruction from the Pentagon. The purpose of this virus
|
|
is to augment the U.S. germ (biological) warfare potential
|
|
by acquiring a capability for depriving an enemy
|
|
population of vitally important immunity at the threshold
|
|
of a major or local armed conflict. The conclusion about
|
|
the complicity of the U.S. military authorities in the
|
|
appearance of AIDS, the new dangerous disease which
|
|
affects humans, is shared by John Seale of Britain, Jacob
|
|
Segal of Germany, Robert Strecker of the United States and
|
|
other noted scientists and experts who have carefully
|
|
analysed available scientific data. [See New Dawn Vol.2,
|
|
No.1] For the time being, they have discounted the events
|
|
and facts connected with the Skull Valley accident.
|
|
Nevertheless, they have come to the unanimous conclusion
|
|
that in designing HIV visna was made use of. Dr. Seale has
|
|
said that a scientist who wanted to evolve a virus capable
|
|
of destroying man's immunity system and provoking a
|
|
disease similar to AIDS would have to resort to visna.
|
|
The "patent" for inventing HIV should be issued to the
|
|
United States because it was there that the virus was
|
|
developed and also because Americans were the first
|
|
victims of AIDS. The disease, which broke out in New York,
|
|
was carried to other big cities in the United States and
|
|
then to other countries and continents. Its virus was
|
|
transmitted by infected Americans serving at overseas
|
|
military bases. Besides, AIDS was contracted in the United
|
|
States by Australian and European tourists vacationing
|
|
there. HIV spread to Middle East and other Arab countries
|
|
which imported blood from donors stricken with AIDS. In
|
|
October 1986, John Seale quoted during an interview with
|
|
the Guardian an extract from a report prepared by the
|
|
Pentagon in 1969. It said that in the next five to ten
|
|
years an infective micro-organism might be evolved that
|
|
would differ substantially from all pathogens known so
|
|
far. Its most important property, the report said, would
|
|
consist in attacking the immune system and internal organs
|
|
on which the ability of the human body to resist
|
|
infectious diseases depends. Consequently, the AIDS
|
|
pathogen was deliberately created and development was
|
|
planned and funded. The test at Dugway which killed so
|
|
many sheep in Skull Valley turned out to be part of the
|
|
Pentagon's programme for designing a new biological agent,
|
|
the AIDS pathogen.**
|
|
<div>
|
|
AIDS: As Biological & Psychological Warfare
|
|
By WAVES FOREST
|
|
It is hard to imagine that a cure for AIDS would be withheld for
|
|
economic reasons alone. Could there be some other motive?
|
|
Despite repeated denials from Defense Department
|
|
officials, allegations persist that AIDS is a genetically
|
|
altered virus, which has been deliberately released to
|
|
wipe out homosexuals and/or non-whites in the U.S. and
|
|
reduce populations in Third World countries. At first
|
|
glance it seems like the epitome of paranoia to accuse the
|
|
military of conspiring to exterminate citizens of their
|
|
own country, and even some of their own troops. However,
|
|
the vast majority of military personnel could be
|
|
completely unaware of such a plot in their midst, while a
|
|
relative handful of traitors in key positions could
|
|
conduct it under cover of classified operations. And the
|
|
circumstantial evidence is actually quite compelling, that
|
|
the AIDS virus was artificially engineered, and planted in
|
|
several different locations at about the same time through
|
|
vaccination programs, and possibly blood bank
|
|
contamination. At a House Appropriations hearing in 1969,
|
|
the Defense Department's Biological Warfare (BW) division
|
|
requested funds to develop through gene-splicing a new
|
|
disease that would both resist and break down a victim's
|
|
immune system. "Within the next 5 to 10 years it would
|
|
probably be possible to make a new infective
|
|
micro-organism which would differ in certain important
|
|
respects from any known disease-causing organisms. Most
|
|
important of these is that it might be refractory to the
|
|
immunological and therapeutic processes upon which we
|
|
depend to maintain our relative freedom from infectious
|
|
disease." (See A Higher Form of Killing: The Secret Story
|
|
of Chemical and Biological Warfare by R. Harris and J.
|
|
Paxman, p.266, Hill and Wang, pubs.) The funds were
|
|
approved. AIDS appeared within the requested time frame,
|
|
and has the exact characteristics specified. In 1972, the
|
|
World Health Organisation published a similar proposal:
|
|
"An attempt should be made to ascertain whether viruses
|
|
can in fact exert selective effects on immune function,
|
|
e.g. by... affecting T cell function as opposed to B cell
|
|
function. The possibility should also be looked into that
|
|
the immune response to the virus itself may be impaired if
|
|
the infecting virus damages more or less selectively the
|
|
cells responding to the viral antigens." (Bulletin of the
|
|
W.H.O., vol. 47, p.257-274.) This is a clinical
|
|
description of the function of the AIDS virus. The
|
|
incidence of AIDS infections in Africa coincides exactly
|
|
with the locations of the massive W.H.O. smallpox
|
|
vaccination program in the mid-1970's (London Times, May
|
|
11, 1987). Some 14000 Haitians then on UN secondment to
|
|
Central Africa were also vaccinated in this campaign.
|
|
Personnel actually conducting the vaccinations may have
|
|
been completely unaware that the vaccine was anything
|
|
other than what they were told. A striking feature of
|
|
AIDS is that it is ethno-selective. The rate of infection
|
|
is twice as high among Blacks, Latinos and Native
|
|
Americans as among whites, with death coming two to three
|
|
times as swiftly. And over 80% of the children with AIDS
|
|
and 90% of infants born with it are among these
|
|
minorities. "Ethnic weapons" that would strike certain
|
|
racial groups more heavily than others have been a
|
|
longstanding U.S. Army BW objective. (Harris and Paxman,
|
|
p.265) Under the current U.S. administration biological
|
|
warfare research spending has increased <data type="percent" unit="%">500%</data>,
|
|
primarily in the area of genetic engineering of new
|
|
disease organisms. The "discovery" of the AIDS virus
|
|
(HTLV3) was announced by Dr. Robert Gallo at the National
|
|
Cancer Institute, which is on the grounds of Fort Detrick,
|
|
Maryland, a primary U.S. Army biological warfare research
|
|
facility. Actually, the AIDS virus looks and acts much
|
|
more like a cross between a bovine leukemia virus and a
|
|
sheep visna (brain-rot) virus, cultured in a human cell
|
|
culture, than any virus of the HTLV3 group. The closest
|
|
thing in this case to a "smoking test tube" so far is the
|
|
AIDS virus itself. If it was possible for such a
|
|
monstrosity to occur naturally it would have done so ages
|
|
ago and decimated mankind at that time. Some other life
|
|
form would presently be in control of this planet
|
|
(assuming that is not already the case). The Hepatitis B
|
|
vaccine study in 1978 appears to have been the initial
|
|
means of planting the infection in New York City. The test
|
|
protocol specified non-monogamous males only, and
|
|
homosexuals received a different vaccine from
|
|
heterosexuals. At least 25-50% of the first reported New
|
|
York AIDS cases in 1981 had received the Hepatitis B test
|
|
vaccine in 1978. By 1984, 64% of the vaccine recipients
|
|
had AIDS, and the figures on the current infection rate
|
|
for the participants of that study are held by the U.S.
|
|
State Department of Justice, and "unavailable." The AIDS
|
|
epidemic emerged full-blown in the three U.S. cities with
|
|
"organised gay communities" before being reported
|
|
elsewhere, including Haiti or Africa, so it is
|
|
epidemiologically impossible for either of those countries
|
|
to be the origin point for the U.S. infections. Another
|
|
indication AIDS had multiple origin points is that the
|
|
14-month doubling time of the disease cannot nearly
|
|
account for the current number of cases if we assume only
|
|
a small number of initial infections starting in the late
|
|
1970s. Before dismissing the possibility that a U.S. Army
|
|
BW facility would participate in genocide, bear in mind
|
|
that hundreds of top Nazis were imported into key
|
|
positions in the U.S. military-intelligence establishment
|
|
following WWII. U.S. military priorities were then
|
|
reorientated from defeating Nazis to "defeating" communism
|
|
at any cost, and strengthening military control of
|
|
economic and foreign policy decisions. (See Project
|
|
Paperclip by Clarence Lasby, Atheneum 214, NY, and Gehlen:
|
|
Spy of the Century by E.H. Cookridge, Random House.)
|
|
There's no proof those Nazis ever gave up their longterm
|
|
goals of conquest and genocide, just because they changed
|
|
countries. Fascism was and is an international phenomenon.
|
|
It's not as if this was a total reversal of previous U.S.
|
|
military policy, however. Hitler claimed to have gotten
|
|
his inspiration for the "final solution" from the
|
|
extermination of Native Americans in the U.S. For that
|
|
matter the first example of germ warfare in the U.S. was
|
|
in 1763 when some of the European colonists gave friendly
|
|
Indians a number of blankets that had been infected with
|
|
smallpox, causing many deaths. One indication of the
|
|
actual U.S. military priorities regarding BW was the
|
|
importation of the entire Japanese germ warfare unit
|
|
(#731) following WW II. These people killed over 3000
|
|
POWs, including many Americans, in a variety of grisly
|
|
experiments, yet they were granted complete amnesty and
|
|
given American military positions in exchange for sharing
|
|
their research findings with their U.S. Army counterparts.
|
|
Consider also the callous attitude displayed by top
|
|
military officials toward veterans suffering from the
|
|
after-effects of exposure to Agent Orange and radiation
|
|
from nuclear weapons tests. In fact, since the end of WW
|
|
II over 200 experimental BW tests have been conducted on
|
|
civilians and military personnel in the U.S. One example
|
|
was the test spraying from Sept. 20-26, 1950 of bacillus
|
|
globigi and syraceus maracezens over 117 square miles of
|
|
the San Francisco area, causing pneumonia-like infections
|
|
in many of the residents. The family of one elderly man
|
|
who died in the test sued the government, but lost. To
|
|
this day, syraceus is a leading cause of death among the
|
|
elderly in the San Francisco area. Another case was the
|
|
joint Army-CIA BW test in 1955, still classified, in which
|
|
an undisclosed bacteria was released in the Tampa Bay
|
|
region of Florida, causing a dramatic increase in whooping
|
|
cough infections, including twelve deaths. A third example
|
|
was the July 7-10, 1966 release of bacteria throughout the
|
|
New York subway system, conducted by the U.S. Army's
|
|
Special Operations Division. Due to the vast number of
|
|
people exposed it would be virtually impossible to
|
|
identify, let alone prove, the specific health problems
|
|
resulting directly from this test. Despite the loyalty of
|
|
the vast majority of U.S. military personnel toward their
|
|
country, there are clearly some military officials who
|
|
have very different intentions, and they occupy high
|
|
enough positions to impose their priorities on military
|
|
programs and get away with it, so far. The first detailed
|
|
charges regarding AIDS as a BW weapon were published in
|
|
the Patriot newspaper in New Delhi, India, on July 4,
|
|
1984. It is hard to say where the investigations of this
|
|
story in the Indian press might have led, if they had not
|
|
been sidetracked by two major domestic disasters shortly
|
|
thereafter: the assassination of Indira Gandhi on Oct. 31
|
|
and the Bhopal Union Carbide plant "accident" that killed
|
|
several thousand and injured over 200000 on Dec. 3.
|
|
Apparently, homosexuals were an initial target in the U.S.
|
|
because their sexual practices would help in the rapid
|
|
spread of the disease, and because it was correctly
|
|
assumed that very few non-homosexual citizens would pay
|
|
much attention during the early years of the epidemic.
|
|
Also, the stigma of a "homosexual disease" would interfere
|
|
with rational analysis and discussion of AIDS. Bear in
|
|
mind that homosexuals were among the first to be
|
|
exterminated in Nazi Germany, before Jews and other
|
|
minorities, so fewer citizens would object. The details
|
|
of precisely how the AIDS virus was synthesized, mass
|
|
cultured, and spread by incorporating it into vaccination
|
|
programs are available but fairly intricate. Evil is hard
|
|
to confront, especially on the preposterous scale we have
|
|
here. If you acknowledge the presence of those who think
|
|
their only hope for survival is to kill off two thirds of
|
|
all the other kinds, and their ability to manage it, you
|
|
then pretty much have to do something about it.
|
|
Abridged from Now What #1.**
|
|
<div>
|
|
Immunex
|
|
The North American-based Nation of Islam (NOI) led by Minister
|
|
Louis Farrakhan launched an offensive in its battle against the
|
|
deadly "man-made" AIDS virus during its recent Saviours' Day
|
|
weekend. The following report is courtesy of The Final Call.
|
|
From the rostrum of Christ Universal Temple here, the
|
|
Honorable Louis Farrakhan announced that the NOI has
|
|
acquired exclusive distribution rights to the AIDS
|
|
fighting drug Immunex, an oral alpha-interferon treatment
|
|
developed in Kenya. "I just got a call from our chief of
|
|
staff 3 minutes before I came on the rostrum," Minister
|
|
Farrakhan said, regarding the confirmation of the Immunex
|
|
agreement that came from Leonard Muhammad in Kenya. "The
|
|
Nation of Islam is announcing to you that we have the
|
|
exclusive distribution rights of Immunex throughout the
|
|
United States of America. "As of this day," he continued,
|
|
"Min. Alim will still teach, but he is now the Minister of
|
|
Health and Human Services for the Nation of Islam." Dr.
|
|
Alim told the cheering audience that the war against AIDS
|
|
is being won but total victory will not come "until we
|
|
deal with those responsible for making the AIDS virus."
|
|
Since the early 1970s under the Nixon administration, he
|
|
said, the official policy of this government has been to
|
|
commit genocide against non-white people around the earth.
|
|
That policy continues under the administration of
|
|
President George Bush, he said. Dr. Muhammad and former
|
|
Final Call Editor-in-Chief Abdul Wali Muhammad were sent
|
|
to Kenya by Minister Farrakhan last year on a fact-finding
|
|
tour regarding the drug Kemron. While there, the NOI
|
|
representatives learned about Immunex. Both drugs have
|
|
shown remarkable effects in relieving AIDS symptoms, but
|
|
the drugs have received very little media coverage in the
|
|
U.S. "We would like FDA approval," said Min. Farrakhan,
|
|
"however we can't wait. We will take any risk, bear any
|
|
burden to free our people of a man-made disease designed
|
|
to kill us all." The Minister added that the drug will be
|
|
offered to all who need it "regardless of race, creed or
|
|
colour."**</conspiracyFile> |