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Biological Weapons: Gulf War Illness Probe To Advance With New Study

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By Paul Likoudis The Wanderer, January 21, 1999

 

Molecular biologists found genetically engineered mycoplasma bacteria in

50% of veterans with Gulf War Illness, which indicates that biological

warfare research was being tested on the troops. (GN)

 

Tom Clancy's latest novel, Rainbow Six, rivets readers with a fictional

account of environmentalist elites who decide that the only way they can

save the world is to radically eliminate over 95% of the human population.

Some of the world's leading scientists develop a strain of viruses, which

they call Shiva after the Indian goddess of death, and devise an ingenious

method to infect the world's population.

 

Part of Clancy's plot involves the development of two antibodies to fight

the new virus, one of which will be for the world's elite, to inoculate

them; the other for the sick, to make them sicker.

 

But there's a more riveting reallife scenario unfolding in the United

States--and around the world--that puts Clancy's fictional thriller into

the realm of the credible: the efforts of a small group of reputable

scientists, sick U.S. veterans, and a handful of investigative journalists

to unlock the secrets of Gulf War Illness (GWI), sometimes referred to as

Gulf War Syndrome, which has afflicted between 100,000 and 200,000 military

personnel who served in President George Bush's Desert Storm and their

families, and which is responsible for, perhaps, 15,000 deaths.

 

The number of military personnel who have died of the mysterious illness

remains a classified secret, one of GWI's top researchers, Dr. Garth

Nicolson of the Institute for Molecular Medicine, told The Wanderer.

For nearly ten years, since his daughter Sharron returned from the gulf

where she served with the 101st Airborne, Nicolson and his wife, Nancy, a

molecular biophysicist, have waged a lonely, frustrating, and often

dangerous campaign to discover the causes of GWI while working on a treatment.

 

Their first big break came last week (Jan. 12th) when they were notified by

the U.S. Army that their research had been validated and their Institute

for Molecular Medicine would be one of three centers, with the Armed Forces

Institute of Pathology and the University of Texas at San Antonio, involved

in a $12 million Veterans' Administration funded project to develop a

treatment for the debilitating and often fatal illness, an infection known

technically as mycoplasma fermentans.

 

Dr. Nicolson explains that slightly under one-half of the Gulf War veterans

he has tested have shown signs of infection by mycoplasma fermentans.

 

For the husband-wife team of researchers, the army's notice came as a

tremendous vindication after years of repeated attempts by government

agencies to ruin their careers, their credibility, and their research.

 

As both Nancy and Garth Nicolson wrote in the October, 1996 issue of

Criminal Politics, since he began researching the causes of GWI, he has

lived through a government-sponsored " nightmare. "

 

" We were attacked by high-level military physicians, ostracized by certain

colleagues who spread rumors about our sanity, forced out of academic

institutions by a concerted effort that involved nonstop administrative

harassment, mail and courier theft, wiretaps, credit card fraud, breaking a

tenure contract, computer and documents theft, attempts to block our

scientific and medical presentations, sabotage our clinical samples, and

undermine our employees. "

 

Their ordeal over the past eight years--since 1991--has convinced them that

certain sections of the U.S. government, working with what might be called

the " eugenics elite " at the country's top research labs in the fields of

biochemistry and genetic engineering, are testing new designer biologic

agents on the American public, starting with prisoners and military personnel.

 

Who They Are

 

The Doctors Garth and Nancy Nicolson are not your ordinary conspiracy

theory " nuts. "

 

Garth Nicolson--before setting up the Institute for Molecular Medicine, a

501c3 corporation, in Huntington Beach, Calif.--was the David Bruton, Jr.,

Chair in Cancer Research and professor at the University of Texas M.D.

Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, and professor of internal medicine and

professor of pathology and laboratory medicine at the University of Texas

Medical School at Houston.

 

He was also adjunct professor of comparative medicine at Texas A & M

University. Among the most cited scientists in the world, having published

over 480 medical and scientific papers, edited 13 books, served on the

editorial boards of 12 medical and scientific journals, and currently

serving as editor of two (Clinical & Experimental Metastasis and the

Journal of Cellular Biochemistry), he has been the recipient of numerous

research grants from the U.S. Army, the National Cancer Institute, National

Institutes of Health, the American Cancer Society, and the National

Foundation for Cancer Research. In 1998, he received the Stephen Paget

Award from the Cancer Metastasis Research Society and the Albert Schweitzer

Award in Lisbon.

 

Nancy Nicolson, a molecular biophysicist, was on the faculty at Baylor

College of Medicine's Department of Immunology and Microbiology.

Both scientists have been nominated for a Nobel Prize for their

ground-breaking work in nucleoprotein gene tracking.

 

In 1987, Nancy Nicolson believes, she was deliberately infected with

mycoplasma incognitus because she refused to participate in research on

biological weapons and germ warfare, and had, in fact, publicly spoken in

opposition to such research programs which are, in fact, banned by

international treaties of which the U.S. is a signatory.

 

She became deathly ill, becoming partly paralyzed; her thyroid was affected

and she contracted meningitis. But during this illness, she found the

antibiotic Doxycycline helped her regain health.

 

In 1991, six months after the Nicolson's daughter returned from the gulf,

Sharron came down with an illness remarkably similar to what Nancy had just

recovered from: chronic fatigue, aching joints, diarrhea, vomiting, and

fevers. The symptoms seemed similar to mycoplasma infection, and so the

Nicolsons recommended treating her with Doxycycline.

 

Sharron then began contacting her veteran friends, who were reporting

similar problems, and of the 73 who tried the treatment, 55 reported an

improvement in health.

 

Now the plot thickens.

 

That same year, Garth Nicolson began receiving reports of a " mystery

illness " spreading among the employees of the Texas Department of Criminal

Justice in Huntsville. Using gene tracking, the Nicolsons discovered these

prison employees tested positive for mycoplasma fermentans infection.

 

Prisoners in Huntsville, Palestine, and Victoria, Texas, had been given

experimental flu vaccines purportedly developed by Tanox Biosystems of

Stella Link in Houston, a company with close ties to Baylor, and the

testing was part of a U.S. Army-sponsored program run by biotechnology firms.

 

The inmates at Huntsville then began spreading their disease to the prison

guards, who passed it on to family members and others in the general

population, who then started coming down with symptoms similar to those of

such dread diseases as Lou Gehrig's Disease, MS, and Guillian Barre Syndrome.

 

As Garth Nicolson reported his discoveries, he encountered increasing

hostility from his peers, including Dr. Charles LeMaistre, a friend of

George Bush and the past president of the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center; Dr.

George Young, chief of the VA in Houston; and Dr. Robert M. Couch, head of

the Baylor Influenza Program, because his findings implied illegal testing.

 

Among Tanox's investors are George Bush and his former Secretary of State

and fellow Texan James Baker III.

 

As opposition rose, so did their understanding of M.D. Anderson's deep

involvement in biological weapons research and testing since the late

1970s, and that M.D. Anderson was specifically engaged in research on

mycoplasma fermentans as a biological weapon.

 

Garth Nicolson resigned under pressure from M.D. Anderson in August, 1996,

and was ordered to remove all his research equipment and materials from

M.D. Anderson, where he had served as senior tenured professor and

department chairman for 16 years.

 

" The administration was trying to restrict our activities in the area of

GWI and I resigned because of my stand on academic freedom and my right to

pursue that particular line of investigation. I had unanimous internal

clinical review board approval for the research, " he told The Wanderer,

" but I suspect that then Major General Ronald Blanck, currently surgeon

general of the army, was pressuring the M.D. Anderson administration to

stop our research. "

 

Spreading The Disease

 

In dozens of research reports for professional medical journals, and in

four separate, sworn testimonies before congressional committees, the

Doctors Nicolson state their belief that Gulf War Illness was caused both

by the vaccines soldiers sent to the gulf received and by airborne

chemicals released when U.S. troops destroyed tons of Saddam Hussein's

chemical weapons.

 

Their testimony is that soldiers were exposed to five possible sources of

exposure: vaccines, some of which were questionable and were contaminated

by microorganisms; blowback from destroyed biological and chemical weapons;

factories and bunkers which stored the agents; approximately 60 Italianmade

biological weapons sprayers that were fully deployed in southern Iraq and

Kuwait; as well as airburst SCUD missiles equipped for delivery of chemical

and biological weapons.

 

Prior to deployment, the army administered vaccines, ostensibly, against

weapons-born anthrax, to 150,000 soldiers, often eight or nine shots at a

time. Eighty five percent of soldiers were told by their commanders that

they could not refuse the vaccines, under threat of courtmartial, and 43%

experienced immediate side effects.

 

Together, the vaccines and Saddam's chemical weapons produced a toxic

cocktail producing GWI, the symptoms of which include: aching joints,

chronic fatigue, memory loss, night sweats, headaches, skin rashes,

depression, muscle spasms, dizziness, nausea, vision problems, sex

problems, urination problems, hair loss, bleeding gums, vision problems,

and eye pain.

 

Perhaps the most frightening facet of GWI is that a large fraction of it is

a communicable disease caused by the biological weapons which Gulf War vets

have passed on to their wives, their children, including those in utero,

and even to pets.

 

In his congressional testimony, Dr. Garth Nicolson stated that the Gulf War

was the first time in history that vaccine records on the troops were

classified and remain classified to this day. The Department of Defense has

admitted, however, that over 400,000 records have disappeared.

 

Former Air Force Captain Joyce Riley, a Gulf War vet and another major

figure working to expose the causes of GWI, has concluded that medical

records of approximately 70% of all Gulf War vets are listed as " missing. "

 

Another bizarre twist to this tale is that the army's medical records from

the Gulf War were in storage at the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma

City when it was bombed.

 

What has alarmed the Nicolsons, and other researchers, is that mycoplasmal

infections are often relatively benign, but preliminary investigations of

some mycoplasma found in some Gulf War veterans contains the HIV-1 envelope

gene, a component of the AIDS virus which renders the mycoplasma invasive,

enabling it to spread throughout the body, alter DNA, and cause birth defects.

 

Another frightful scenario is the possibility that some vets, who have been

infected with the mycoplasma disease but as yet show no symptoms, may be

donating blood, and thereby infecting the larger population.

 

This is the view of Dr. Patricia Axelrod, one of the first to speak out

about Gulf War Illness. In a Dec. 12th, 1996 Montel interview, she said:

 

" We are dealing with bacterial warfare agents. We are dealing with chemical

warfare agents. We are dealing with radiation poisoning. . . . The

Department of Defense is covering this up. "

 

Already, as Life magazine reported in 1995, an abnormally high percentage

of children with birth defects have been born to Gulf War vets.

 

More Mysteries

 

On Feb. 9th, 1994, former Michigan Sen. Don Riegle, Jr., took to the floor

of the U.S. Senate and reported:

 

" Records available from the supplier for the period from 1985 until the

present show that during this period, pathogenicbiologic agents meaning

poisonous and other materials were exported to Iraq pursuant to application

and licensing by the U.S. Department of Commerce.

 

" Records prior to 1985 were not available, according to the supplier. These

exported materials were not attenuated or weakened and were capable of

reproduction. Thus, from at least 1985 through 1989, the United States

government approved the sale of quantities of potentially lethal biological

agents that could have been cultured or grown in large quantities in an

Iraqi biological warfare program. . . .

 

" I find it especially troubling that, according to the supplier's records,

these materials were requested by and sent to Iraqi government agencies,

including the Iraqi Atomic Energy Commission, the Iraq Ministry of Higher

Education, the State Company for Drug Industries, and the Ministry of

Trade. While there may be legitimate needs for pathogens in medical

research, closer scrutiny should be exercised. "

 

Among the chemicals sent to Iraq Riegle cited were Bacillus Anthacis,

Clostridium Botulinum, Histoplasma Capsulatum, and Brucella Melitensis.

 

" If you look at what the Iraqis were ordering, " said Dr. Nicolson, " they

were ordering far more than what they would need for legitimate testing

purposes as controls for diagnostic testing. "

 

Among the companies granted export licenses to ship these toxic agents

abroad was the American Type Culture Collection of Rockville, Md., and the

federal government's own Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta was

responsible for shipping some of the materials, according to

Riegle's investigation.

 

Strange Twists

 

One of the strangest facts among the millions uncovered by investigators

such as the Nicolsons and Captain Riley is that Nobel laureate Joshua

Lederberg of Rockefeller University is on American Type

Culture Collection's board of directors.

 

Lederberg is not only one of the world's leading experts on cutting-edge

molecular biology and genetics, but was also named to lead the presidential

commission to investigate the Gulf War disease by President Clinton.

 

Lederberg, a member of the Department of Defense Science Board and an

advocate of biological warfare, has helped steer Defense funds to

organizations working on biological warfare.

 

As chairman of the government's investigators into GWI, Lederberg

claimed that his researchers could not discover any cause for Gulf War

Illness.

 

Another Nobel laureate who figures in this drama is Dr. James Watson, who

won a Nobel in 1962 for physiology and medicine with two British

scientists, Francis Crick and Maurice Wilson, for his role in unraveling

the molecular structure of DNA.

 

In 1968, Watson became director of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory of

Quantitative Biology in New York, where he is a leading researcher in the

Human Genome Project.

 

Watson, with other doctors, was involved in the development of the flu

vaccine which was used on the inmates in Texas prisons.

 

Meanwhile, as the Clinton administration slowly changes its official

position that Gulf War Illness is a myth, the Department of Defense

acknowledges its past shortcomings in handling complaints related to GWI

and research on its causes; the Veterans Administration has reported that

the active duty tumor rate in the U.S. military has increased more than

600% since 1990; there is a health crisis in the gulf states, with an

estimated 15%-20% of populations " sick " at any given time; birth defects

and infant deaths are soaring.

 

In a September, 1996 appearance at Washington University in St. Louis,

Nobel laureate Edward O. Wilson, an environmental scientist, spoke on the

subject of downsizing the earth's population.

 

The mildmannered Harvard professor of entomology, reported The St. Louis

Post-Dispatch (Sept. 12th, 1996), explained how the earth's population had

to be brought down to " 'the hundreds of millions' for a true ecological

balance. . . .

 

" A single global policy on population is unfeasible, he said. But efforts

are under way in this and other populous nations to achieve zero population

growth and even depopulation, " he said.

 

The March/April, 1996 edition of Foreign Affairs published an article for

its elite readership, " Why We Need a Smaller U.S. Population and How We Can

Achieve It. "

 

The stuff of fiction? Not anymore.

 

" This story gets more and more tangled the deeper you dig, " Dr. Nicolson

told The Wanderer.

 

Indeed it does, especially as GWI is exploding in the civilian population.

+ + +

For Gulf War vets, there is some good news, Dr. Nicolson said. " The

Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs are now

allowing physicians to treat microplasma infections in Gulf War Illness

patients with antibiotics, according to our published protocols.

" This was not allowed just a few months ago. "

 

 

 

******

Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentucky

thehavens

http://www.thehavens.com/

mail to: PerfectScience

606-376-3363

 

" Cancer was a blessing that continues to this day "

Expect Miracles

 

We only have one Earth.

There are NO SPARE PARTS.

We must PROTECT OUR WORLD!

Please protect your world.

..... Ayhan Doyuk, Chairman of Perfect Science

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