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William Scott
Malone - Before joining the world of
corporate security, W. Scott Malone spent
twenty-five years as a four-time Emmy award
winning investigative reporter-producer,
primarily for PBS’ documentary series, FRONTLINE.
His reports have covered such subjects as
organized crime, Islamic terrorism, Ferdinand
Marcos' ill-gotten gains, the Jim and Tammy
Faye Bakker scandal, CIA involvement with
Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega, the
bombing of Pan Am 103, Saddam Hussein's
arsenal of ‘super’ weapons, and the 1993
three-hour FRONTLINE special, “Who Was Lee
Harvey Oswald?”
Malone’s 1989 FRONTLINE report on the John
Walker-Navy Spy Ring was the recipient of
the prestigious Dupont-Columbia Gold Baton
Award. Malone’s 1995 FRONTLINE documentary,
“Waco: The Inside Story,” was awarded the
George Foster Peabody Award for “investigative
journalism of global significance.” Malone’s
most recent National Emmy Award was for
the 1996 “The Navy Blues,” about women in
the Navy. His reporting on the 1998 FRONTLINE,
“Ambush in Mogadishu,” was heralded as “a
tour de force” by The New York Times, and
was recently awarded the Edward R. Murrow
Award by the Overseas Press Club.
Malone has also
written extensively for The Washington Post,
LIFE Magazine, United Press International
and other publications.
Malone is "Senior
Editor" for NavySEALs.com BlackNET Intel
service of NavySEALs.com - a collection
of real-time intelligence analysis and reporting
from around the world. Some 600-man years
of counter-terrorism experience is represented
therein.
Order
Vaccine-A through Amazon
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October 25, 2004
by Scott Malone
In these times of panicked waiting lines for flu vaccine, here comes
a new and even more frightening look at the US military's ill-fated
anthrax vaccine program.
In "Vaccine - A: The Covert Government Experiment That's Killing
Our Soldiers And Why GI's Are Only The First Victims," author
Gary Matsumoto tells an amazing, six-year scientific mystery story,
unraveled literally strand by strand and lab sample by lab sample.
It is a real-life and death CSI show, and perhaps a tragic mistake
of gargantuan proportions, affecting thousands if not hundreds of
thousands of US fighting men and women.
In a crash effort to boost the effectiveness and lessen the required
doses of existing anthrax vaccines, US military researchers apparently
turned to squalene, a naturally-occurring oil distantly related
to cholesterol. The squalene was added to various "experimental"
batches of the vaccine administered to troops destined for the first
Gulf
War in 1991. But when injected, even in the minutest of amounts,
squalene oil can cause the body's immune system to create its own
specialized anti-bodies which then indiscriminately attack all such
other oils in the body. These auto-immune reactions have the exact
same symptoms as those of the victims of the so-called Gulf War
Syndrome.
Proving that this additive, called an 'adjuvant' (a word not often
heard outside of microbiology), was causing these adverse reactions
has been an uphill battle for a handful of dedicated civilian researchers.
And it is their stories, along with those of some fearless victims,
that become the focus of Matsumoto's book.
Matsumoto has done his research and it shows. He is very precise
and careful. His book is also well-written, with the occasional
clever turn of phrase, such as "Rube Goldberg immunology," to help
walk readers through some of the tougher technical data.
And Matsumoto writes with a sad heart and weeping pen. His father
and three uncles all proudly served in the US Army. As a former
NBC foreign correspondent he served in Iraq covering the first Gulf
War. Matsumoto is also an award-winning magazine journalist, and
has even been published in the very prestigious, scientist peer-reviewed
journal, "Science." He is clearly not your run-of-the-mill author/journalist.
The book starts off with a very scary, up-close look at a secret
outbreak of anthrax in the then dark out reaches of Soviet Russia
in 1979, with hemorrhaging patients coughing themselves literally
to death. The Soviet Union had reinvented the bug wars. It was to
remain a top-secret until after the end of the Cold
War. But as US intelligence began to pick up hints at the scale
of the bio-warfare program, they were then faced with a dramatic
choice--they would have to prepare and update US defenses against
such a weapon.
During World
War II, the Imperial Japanese Army secretly tested anthrax and
other bugs as weapons, and in response, the US and the British did
the same. Fortunately for all, they were never used. And in 1969,
President Nixon unilaterally put the US military out of the bio-warfare
business.
All that remained in the US arsenal was the "weakest [possible]
vaccine" for anthrax. US military researchers would soon find themselves
secretly following a long tradition of testing new drugs on uniformed
military personnel without their informed consent. Despite the precedent
of the Nuremburg trials, the US had secretly hired Japanese bio-war
criminals and later the CIA conducted unwitting LSD experiments.
Unfortunately, because of the nature of war, US military personnel
are exempt from such disclosure requirements, and barred by a Supreme
Court precedent from ever suing.
During the 1980s, US intelligence began reporting that Iraq had
developed a lethal, "dusty" form of anthrax mixed with silica for
use against Iran. It was a scary new threat, and the US bio-weaponeers
immediately began planning an antidote. The secret US program became
a crash program when the Soviet fear factor again raised its ugly
head, this time in the form of a Russian bio-weapons defector, in
1989. Not only did the Soviets pose a previously unknown bio-threat,
but they were also known to share deadly military technologies with
Saddam
Hussein's Iraq.
It would be hard to blame US military researchers then, as Matsumoto
accurately points out, for preparing for a possible new nightmare
threat. If the Iraqis or Soviets had employed anthrax and US troops
been caught unprotected, there would have been hell to pay. Just
ask the flu vaccine manufacturers of today.
In secret, the military researchers began to labor away with adjuvants,
rushing to increase the potency of the weak, but licensed vaccine,
before US troops faced a deadly Iraqi anthrax attack. However, these
efforts would be labeled as "unique research opportunities," according
to a recently declassified US document uncovered by Matsumoto.
But when Persian Gulf War vets later began to return home and complain
of a whole myriad of debilitating auto-immune symptoms, the potentially
heroic medical efforts to 'boost' the vaccine with squalene were
quietly hushed up.
The symptoms included rashes, malaise, fatigue, muscle pain, joint
pain, weakness and sweating, neurological problems, pneumonia, and
Lupus. And in some cases even blindness and death.
What was most glaring, in hindsight, was that only vaccinated US,
British, Australian and Canadian troops had acquired these various
maladies. And some US troops had not even actually been sent to
the Gulf, but had been vaccinated in preparation. Further, no local
Arab troops or even press members, unvaccinated all, ever came down
with any of these autoimmune maladies.
While a media controversy revved up for several years over the
newly-named Gulf War Syndrome, in 1997 the government floated a
red-herring theory in the form of a CIA "simulation" of a possible
gas plume from the detonation of Iraq's captured Sarin nerve gas
stockpiles. All of the sudden, the simple solution-seeking media
lost all interest, even though the "simulation" had totally failed
the basic logic test.
Problem was, most of the affected troops were no longer in theater
when the detonation occurred on March 10th, 1991. Further, again,
none of the indigenous troops suffered any such consequences. And
nerve gas exposure is instant, with much different symptoms.
Complicated medical research, however, is not the usual purview
of the American media. An 'adjuvant crossover,' with one wrong injected
squalene molecule affecting the entire human immune system, was
apparently beyond the comprehension of the average journalist, not
to mention most medical professionals. What Matsumoto has managed
to dig up is not comforting. Military researchers had ignored animal
studies clearly showing the autoimmune pathologies of injected squalene
as an adjuvant. These animal studies showed precisely the same symptoms
as those experienced by the Gulf vets.
During his investigation, Matsumoto soon crossed paths with medical
researchers Pam Asa and Bob Garry, who, working through Tulane Medical
Center at Tulane University, had actually been the first to measure
the actual anti-bodies caused by injected squalene. They began to
test veterans for these anti-bodies.
Dr. Garry dug out an old batch of some 300 blood serum samples
from veterans sent to him in 1993 by the Veterans Administration.
Out of 86 who had served in the Gulf War, 95% of the sick ones tested
positive for the squalene anti-bodies. The number of healthy Gulf
vets with the anti-bodies was zero.
Enter Patient X, who met with Asa in Memphis. He was suffering
from "auto-immune peripheral neuropathy," consistent with the Gulf
War Syndrome. But Patient X had never been in the military nor stationed
in Iraq or Saudi Arabia. His only exposure had been in a confidential
experimental herpes vaccine study. Further, he was a medical doctor.
And he knew exactly what the injection was that he had received-"MF59…squalene
and water."
Some British anthrax vaccine samples (a sister to the US program)
were later found dumped overboard and washed ashore, apparently
from a troop ship heading for the Gulf-which, when tested by Granada
Television, also contained the squalene adjuvant. And Matsumoto
even discovered a patent held by the Army for the potential new
vaccine with squalene in one of its several formulations
"It might even be the single most dangerous oil to come out of
a hypodermic needle," Matsumoto writes.
Matsumoto has found many nice historical asides, explaining how
disease and war have long been intertwined in US history. In 1775,
in a desperate ploy to stave off a smallpox epidemic which threatened
the collapse of the Continental Army with desertions, Gen. George
Washington ordered that healthy troops be "variolated" by having
smallpox pus placed into cuts on their arms. It worked, and the
rest is history.
The present day vaccine story is not so pretty a tale, however,
with descriptions of the occasional horrible death, including one
vet who died in excruciating pain as the skin on his entire body
withered away. The book is littered with stories of proud US soldiers
dealing with amazing pain, medical confusion and bureaucratic betrayal.
"Perhaps it was the importance of their apparent breakthrough [with
squalene] that blinded these scientists to do what they had done,"
Matsumoto can only sadly surmise.
"By 1997, hundreds of millions of dollars had been spent testing
the efficacy of vaccines formulated with squalene adjuvants," Matsumoto
reports. Scientists were also frantically looking to squalene to
help stem the tides of AIDs and cancer. Adverse news about squalene
could potentially threaten "billions of dollars worth of HIV research."
A tragic comedy of errors.
Matsumoto presents a long record of seeming deception by medical
and military officials at all levels. It apparently continues to
this very day, judging by the coming avalanche of press statements
emanating from the Pentagon in response to the book's publication.
After Matsumoto wrote a preliminary article about the squalene
adjuvant for Vanity Fair magazine back in 1999, the Air Force quickly
struck back.
"Let me say this as succinctly as I can," Air Force Surgeon General
Charles H. Roadman II told assembled airmen and pilots at Dover
Air Force Base in Delaware who had received the vaccine. "There
is not, there never has been, squalene as an adjuvant in the anthrax
immunization. And that's a fact."
The director of the Anthrax Vaccine Immunization Program, Major
Guy Strawder, went so far as to call Matsumoto's article "reckless,
irresponsible and wrong."
Yet, Matsumoto subsequently found, "contrary to General Roadman's
strenuous protests, that various batches of the new anthrax vaccine
[administered at Dover and elsewhere] had contained squalene since
1987." And when the supposedly independent Food and Drug Administration
finally found that the vaccine contained some amounts of squalene,
they too withheld that information from the public for another year
and half.
When Matsumoto requested under the Freedom of Information Act any
US contracts for adjuvants containing squalene, he was informed
that two contracts "and fifteen purchase orders" had, "unfortunately,
all…been destroyed."
Although the book can get bogged down occasionally, (but necessarily),
in some rather technical issues, Matsumoto does not overplay his
hand, perhaps even erring too closely on the side of caution.
And it even has a shocking surprise ending: Matsumoto reports that
scientists have only discovered this past summer that the latest
possible victims of adjuvant-induced squalene antibodies are the
recently returned Iraq
War II veterans-a few even suffering some of the same auto-immune
symptoms as their earlier comrades.
While the plot twists and turns throughout this excellent book,
by far the most ominous twist is that these vaccines are currently
stockpiled for use by US civilians in case of further terrorist
anthrax attacks on the general population.
This book is the very definition of "a seminal work"-one that cries
out for further studies.
Scott Malone is a multiple Emmy and Peabody award-winning investigative
journalist who is currently the editor of NavySEALs.com and its
counter-terrorism newsletter, "BlackNET Intelligence."
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