And the bottom line is...
The US Military and the Ebola Outbreak
I continue to suspect that the Ebola outbreak in western Africa
may have been the result of U.S. military biowarfare research gone
awry.
As I previously
reported:
The epicentre of the current Ebola epidemic is the Kenema Government Hospital in Sierra Leone. BeforeItIsNews claims
the hospital houses a US a biosecurity level 2 bioweapons research lab.
That claim is unconfirmed, however, this we do know.
Analysis of
clinical samples from suspected Lassa fever cases in Sierra Leone
showed that about two-thirds of the patients had been exposed to other
emerging diseases, and nearly nine percent tested positive for Ebola
virus. The findings, published in this month’s edition of Emerging
Infectious Diseases, demonstrates that Ebola virus has been circulating
in the region since at least 2006—well before the current outbreak,reports Global BioDefense.
According
to GBD, the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases
has been operating in the area since 2006, supposedly working on
"diagnostic tests."
Author Randal J. Schoepp, PH. D. reports that
because the USAMRIID team just happened to be working on disease
identification and diagnostics in the area, they had pre-positioned
assays in the region to address the ebola outbreak:
We had people on hand who were already evaluating samples
and volunteered to start testing right away when the current Ebola
outbreak started.
The laboratory testing site in Kenema is supported by
the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center-Global Emerging Infections
Surveillance and Response System. Other contributors to the work include
the Department of Defense Joint Program Executive Office-Critical
Reagents Program, the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) Cooperative
Biological Engagement Program, and the DTRA Joint Science and
Technology Office.
Metabiota Inc., a non-government organization
(NGO) is also involved in the testing. It lists among its partners, the
Department of State, Biological Engagement Program and the Department of
Defense, Defense Threat Reduction Agency. Advisors to the NGO
include Admiral Gary Roughead, former US Chief of Naval Operations.
In an August 1 story, the Army Times
informed:
Filoviruses like Ebola have been of interest to the Pentagon
since the late 1970s, mainly because Ebola and its fellow viruses have
high mortality rates — in the current outbreak, roughly 60 percent to 72
percent of those who have contracted the disease have died — and its
stable nature in aerosol make it attractive as a potential biological
weapon.
Since the late 1970s and early 1980s, researchers at the
U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases have sought
to develop a vaccine or treatment for the disease.
Last year,
USAMRIID scientists used a treatment, MB-003, on primates infected with
Ebola after they became symptomatic; the treatment fully protected the
animals when given one hour after exposure.
Two-thirds of
infected primates were protected when treated 48 hours after exposure,
according to a report published last August in Science Translational
Medicine.
As I
reported earlier,
MB-003 appears to be part of the "secret serum" treatment being
administered to the two Americans that are now in the U.S. and who
contracted Ebola.
Friday in a television interview on Defense
News with Vago Muradian, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health
Affairs Dr. Jonathan Woodson said, "One of the things I don’t think many
people realize is what a huge valuable asset the military health system
is to this nation."
“Not only are we a key enabler so that
service members, men and women who ... go in harm’s way will be taken
care of, but we are a public health system, an education system, a
research and development system,”
“The recent development with infectious disease issues in Africa — they are turning to the U.S. military to provide expertise.”
The Defense Department earlier this week issued a
statement, which said:
A small group of military and civilian personnel assigned to
the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, or
USAMRIID, is in Liberia as part of a larger U.S. interagency response to
the world’s worst outbreak of the Ebola virus which continues to spread
in West Africa, a Defense Department spokesman said today.
Army
Col. Steve Warren told reporters that personnel assigned to USAMRIID
have established diagnostic laboratories in Liberia and Sierra Leone,
two of three countries where the outbreak has been spreading in recent
months.
“We also evaluate and develop diagnostic instruments and
technologies for use in forward field medical laboratories and with the
Joint Biological Agent Identification and Detection System, called
JBAIDS, the diagnostics platform used across the DoD,” the statement
added.
It's really not a big jump to suspect that the military has also been
doing research on Ebola as a bioweapon. As the Army Times notes about
Ebola, "its stable nature in aerosol make it attractive as a potential
biological weapon." What better place, via the eyes of the U.S.
military, to be messing around with such research than Africa? The
thinking might go: If there is a misstep with the virus, research
blowbacks don't happen around US civilian populations.
It appears that some locals in eastern eastern Sierra Leone may have just such suspicions.
Specifically,
they appear to be very suspicious of the "help" US personnel want to
provide Ebola victims. Some of this suspicion may be the result of a
failure by the locals to appreciate the techniques of modern medicine,
but some may also be the result of whispers and rumors from locals who
may have been low level workers close to US military research before the
outbreak blew up.
Mainstream US media is now claiming that
rumors about the early lab work at the Kenema hospital, where US
military research may have been going on, were being spread by a
"mentally ill former nurse."
According to Bloomberg,
the nurse is now in custody. Bloomberg also said that the nurse charged
that health workers were using Ebola as a ruse to kill people and
collect body parts. Whatever the nurse was really saying, the locals are
certainly not happy with the research and the hospital.
Residents of Kenema in eastern Sierra Leone threw stones at the hospital and a police station, reports Bloomberg.
There
is no smoking gun here, but one can certainly draw dots around the
facts that suggest the U.S. military was the bad actor in this Ebola
breakout.
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