| The
Gulf Bio War: How a New AIDS-like Plague Threatens Our Armed
Forces
Alan
R. Cantwell, Jr., M.D.
What
is the common thread which weaves through the occurrence of
the highly contagious disease known as the Gulf War Syndrome,
which has struck as many as 60,000 veterans? Dr. Cantwell
has found a biowarfare connection. Since the Nuremberg trials,
it has been against international law to use people as guinea
pigs in experiments without their informed consent. In an
unprecedented legal decision, the FDA allowed the Pentagon
to give un-approved drugs and vaccines to soldiers without
their consent. The Pentagon also refused to identify the types
of drugs and injections the troops were given forcibly, rendering
them powerless against genetically altered "supergerms."
As many as 60,000
of the 700,000 Gulf War vets who served in Desert Storm in 1991
are ill with a variety of symptoms lumped together as Persian
Gulf War Syndrome (GWS). Symptoms include chronic fatigue, severe
neurological disorders, muscle and joint pain, shortness of
breath, gastrointestinal problems, memory loss, insomnia, rashes,
depression, headaches, and other complaints. GWS is a sexually
transmitted disease, and is contagious via the airborne route.
Soldiers are passing the illness on to wives and family members;
and their children appear to have an increased incidence of
birth defects.
The government and
the Pentagon stand accused of ignoring the vets by denying they
were exposed to chemical or biological agents in the Gulf. Originally
many vets were told by military doctors that their symptoms
were caused by stress. The large number of sick vets led to
an official inquiry.
In August 1995, a
massive government study of GWS indicated no evidence of so-called
Gulf War disease. Dr. Stephen Joseph, assistant secretary of
defense for health affairs, claimed the soldiers were suffering
from "multiple" diseases not stemming from any one cause, and
that their collective health was no worse than their counterparts
in civilian life. The report denied that vets were exposed to
chemical agents in the Gulf.
Reynaldo Negrete,
in a letter of protest to the Los
Angeles Times (8/20/95), wrote:
"When my
son Ruben, a career Navy Seebee of 14 years, was sent to
the Gulf he was a healthy young man weighing 185 pounds.
When he came back four months later he had lost 20 pounds
and his health. He continued to lose weight for more than
a year, but the doctors at Port Hueneme and his command
did nothing. Not until I had my congressman, Matthew G.
Martinez, intervene on his behalf was our son admitted to
the Naval Hospital in San Diego a year after arriving from
the Gulf War a very sick young man. He then spent a year
in the hospital, until he was medically discharged from
the Navy no better off than the day he was admitted. Yet,
my son continues to suffer, as does his family. My son has
served his country very well, for more than 14 years. He
has been deployed all over the world, and in just four short
months in the Persian Gulf he comes home an invalid."
A year later, in
1996, the Department of Defense finally admitted that 400 soldiers
(later changed to 5,000; still later to 20,000) may have been
exposed to toxic agents when, after the war had officially ended,
the military blew up an ammunition storage depot in Kamisiyah
in southern Iraq on March 4 and again on March 10, 1991. After
the bombings, a U.N. inspection team informed Pentagon officials
that the buildings contained chemical weapons. However, the
Pentagon immediately classified the U.N. report and the troops
were never alerted about possible exposure to toxic chemicals.
Despite the cover-up,
exposure to chemicals cannot account for so many sick soldiers.
Not all sick vets were stationed in the Kamisiyah area. Many
left the Iraqi war zone before the war actually started, or
arrived after the fighting stopped. In addition, exposure to
chemicals cannot explain why some cases of GWS are contagious.
The first media reports
of a Gulf illness surfaced in the spring of 1992, a year after
the war ended. As time passed, the transmissibility of the disease
was downplayed, as well as the fact that wives complained about
miscarriages and "burning semen" after sex with their husbands.
Veteran's groups now claim that a third of Gulf War babies are
born with birth abnormalities. LIFE magazine (November
1996) featured a story on these Gulf babies entitled "The tiny
victims of Desert Storm: Has our country abandoned them?" Pictured
on the cover was U.S. Army Sgt. Paul Hansen holding his three-year-old
son, born with hands and feet attached to twisted stumps.
In the search for
a cause of GWS, epidemiologists have been looking for a common
factor that could have exposed so many Gulf War vets. Some sick
vets were in the war zone for months, while others were stationed
there for as little as nine days. And the illness has affected
troops stationed in widely scattered geographic areas in the
region.
One factor common
to all the troops is that they were given experimental and potentially
dangerous drugs and vaccines employed to protect them against
Iraqi chemical and biowarfare agents. As early as December 1990,
there were warnings about using our servicemen as medical guinea
pigs. In an unprecedented legal decision, the FDA allowed the
Pentagon to give unapproved drugs and vaccines without requiring
consent of the soldiers. Claiming security reasons, the Pentagon
also refused to identify the types or the number of drugs and
injections they forced the troops to take.
An angry serviceman
stationed in Saudi Arabia maintained his civil rights were violated,
and sued the government in January 1991. Ever since the post
World War II Nuremberg trials, which convicted many top-ranking
Nazis for crimes against human nature, it has been unethical
and unlawful to use people as guinea pigs in experiments without
their informed consent. This legal requirement was waived when
the lawsuit was dismissed by U.S. District Judge Stanley S.
Harris, who cited the necessity of the military to protect the
health of its troops.
Soldiers who rejected
the injections were given them forcibly. Physicians who refused
to cooperate with the military's experimental vaccine program
were treated harshly. Army reservist Dr. Yolanda Huet-Vaughn
protested it was her duty under the Nuremberg Code of Justice
not to vaccinate personnel with experimental vaccines without
their consent. At Huet-Vaughn's court-martial trial, a military
judge ignored these considerations of international law and
medical ethics, and sentenced the mother of three children to
30 months in prison. Under pressure from activist groups, the
doctor was released from military prison after serving eight
months.
Allegations that
experimental drugs and vaccines are a cause of GWS have been
downplayed for obvious reasons. The Pentagon does not want to
publicize the idea that PGS could be a man-made disease due
to unethical experiments with dangerous and possibly contaminated
vaccines. Furthermore, the military has a long history of conducting
covert medical experiments on its own personnel, as well as
civilians; and the Agent Orange cover-up is still fresh in the
minds of Vietnam war vets.
GWS is not limited
to American soldiers. More than 1,100 British vets are ill.
Many blame the injections they received against anthrax and
plague. Englishman Tony Flint, associated with the Gulf War
Veterans and Families Association, claims more than 100 vets
have died of ailments ascribed to the inoculations. He says
he was forced to take 13 inoculations in one week, and states
there is no evidence of GWS among French troops who did not
receive these vaccines.
The HIV Connection
Garth Nicholson and his wife Nancy, both respected microbiologists,
have recently discovered a bacterium, a so-called "mycoplasma"
in the blood of half the vets ill with GWS. The microbe associated
with GWS has been identified as Mycoplasma fermentans (incognitus
strain). Discovered a century ago in plants, mycoplasmas are
the smallest known self-replicating microbes. Larger than viruses
and much smaller than common bacteria, mycoplasmas have been
implicated in a variety of diseases.
The mycoplasma in
GWS could not be identified using standard lab tests. Through
special genetic testing Garth Nicolson was able to discover
the mycoplasma. Incredibly, the microbe had a piece of the envelope
gene of the AIDS virus (HIV-1) attached to it! The HIV gene
makes the mycoplasma even more aggressive, allowing it to attach
to cells, which it then penetrates and poisons. According to
Nicolson, a mycoplasma combined with the envelope gene of the
AIDS retrovirus could never have originated in nature, but only
through gene splicing in a laboratory.
Both Nicolsons contracted
GWD from their daughter when she returned home from Desert Storm.
Because of the contagious nature of the disease, the microbiologists
suspected an infectious agent, rather than a chemical weapon.
When the mycoplasma was identified, the research team discovered
that treatment with antibiotics, particularly doxicycline, was
helpful in some cases.
In an interview on
the Dave Emory radio show (10/20/96), Garth Nicolson theorizes
that the microbe could have been deployed through contaminated
vaccines, through the deliberate release of Iraqi bioweapons,
from blowback from destroyed Iraqi bioweapon factories, or possibly
from scud missile attacks. He says there has been a Mycoplasma
Unit at the University of Baghdad for 22 years, manned by Iraqi
scientists who were trained in the U.S. Before the war, the
U.S. government exported to Iraq various biological agents,
both classified and unclassified, that could be used or developed
as biological warfare agents.
Did this mycoplasma
+ HIV bioweapon originate in the U.S. or in the Gulf? It would
be extremely helpful to know if there are cases of GWS in Iraq,
Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and elsewhere in the Middle East.
Surprisingly, the government and the media are silent on this
question, although Nicolson claims 300,000 Iraqis have died
and one million are sick since the war. It is rumored that 15-20%
of the population of the countries surrounding Iraq are ill
with GWS.
In a 40-page report
entitled "Germ Warfare against America: The Desert Storm Plague
and Cover-Up, Nicolson reports: Mycoplasma
fermentans (incognitus) has been tested on the Texas Department
of Corrections prisoners in the late 1980s prior to the Gulf
War. It was tested on death row inmates as well as other inmates
in Huntsville, Texas. The guards then contracted it from the
inmates, and the guards then gave it to their families and
community. This mycoplasma vaccine testing was funded by the
U.S. Army, and today there is an outbreak of 350 people in
the Huntsville area with a strange disease resembling GWS.
Garth Nicolson's
important research has appeared in the underground press, but
until recently his research has been ignored by the mainstream,
corporate-controlled media. On the Emory show Nicolson was asked
how many soldiers have died of GWS. Although there are no official
figures, he estimates that 12-15,000 vets have died of "unusual"
diseases, and several thousand have died of cancer. If true,
these death rates are very high considering the young age (under
25) of many of our soldiers. Apparently doctors, nurses, and
medical personnel are contracting GWS from sick patients, indicating
another AIDS-like epidemic in the making.
Further complicating
the epidemiology of GWS is that soldiers' shot records and even
medical records have disappeared or are unavailable. In addition,
the Los Angeles Times (12/5/96) reports that military
logs "crucial to Gulf War veterans who believe their health
problems are linked to chemical weapons" are also missing and
can't be found. These important logs cover the period March
4-10, during the bombings at Kamisiyah. The Senate Veterans
Affairs Committee has recently won permission to examine General
Norman Schwartzkopf's personal logs.
At the request of
Rep. Norm Dicks of Washington state, a group of military and
civilian scientists and Pentagon experts met on December 23,
1996, at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington, to discuss
Nicolson's research. Walter Reed spokesman Ben Smith said the
Army would agree to study his mycoplasma research as part of
its investigation into the cause of GWS.
On December 27, 1996,
a story about Garth Nicolson's research appeared on the front-page
of the Los Angeles Times. However, the most significant part
of Nicholson's research, namely that the mycoplasma had a piece
of HIV attached to it, was not mentioned. The origin of the
microbe was left in doubt, the writer simply stating that Nicolson's
research suggests "the primitive bacterium, called mycoplasma,
was deliberately altered for Iraqi use as a biological weapon."
Also not mentioned
in the media was previous mycoplasma research conducted by the
military a decade earlier. In 1986 Dr. Shyh-Ching Lo, a molecular
biologist at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington,
D.C., reported a "virus-like agent" derived from Kaposi's sarcoma,
the "gay cancer" associated with AIDS. Using highly technical
methods of molecular biology, Lo's "virus" was subsequently
identified as the bacterium Mycoplasma fermentans (also known
as M. incognitus). In 1989, Lo also reported similar mycoplasma
infection as the cause of death in six young, previously healthy
military personnel from New Jersey, Virginia, Guam, and Turkey,
all of whom died within one to seven weeks from a progressive
and mysterious "flu-like disease." In 1991 Lo found yet another
mycoplasma, Mycoplasma penetrans, in the urine of gays with
AIDS. Luc Montagnier, the co-discoverer of the AIDS virus, has
confirmed Lo's mycoplasma research. The Pasteur Institute virologist
believes mycoplasmas are a necessary "co-factor" that allows
HIV infection to progress to full-blown AIDS.
Are mycoplasmas being
developed as biological warfare weapons? Certainly all known
infectious agents are screened for possible military use by
biowarfare scientists around the world. As stated, there was
a Mycoplasma lab in Iraq. Before the Gulf War the Iraqis freely
used nerve gas against the Kurds in Northern Iraq; and after
the war they used mustard gas against Shiite Muslim nomads in
southern Iraq. And the U.S. Army conducted mycoplasma research
in Huntsville, Texas.
Before the Gulf
War the mixing of the AIDS virus (HIV) with mycoplasmas in
the laboratory by Lo and Montagnier was recorded in the scientific
literature. When mycoplasma was added to HIV-infected blood
cells in test tubes, it made the AIDS virus more pathogenic.
Silver-leaf monkeys experimentally infected with Lo's mycoplasma
all developed infections, immunosuppression, and died within
7 to 9 months with an AIDS-like "wasting syndrome."
A "Mycoplasma
Workshop," sponsored by The National Institutes of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases, was held in San Antonio, Texas, in
December 1989. Lo's research was featured. When asked if his
fatal mycoplasma "flu cases" were contagious, Lo replied,
"We don't know." Interestingly, some of Lo's patients improved
with the antibiotic doxycycline, the same drug Nicolson has
found effective in some cases of GWS.
Most physicians
know little about mycoplasma infection, and even less about
testing for these microbes. For many years this writer has
reported mycoplasma-like organisms discovered in the damaged
tissue of cancer, AIDS, and in auto-immune disease. This research
has been published in medical journals and summarized in two
books by this author: AIDS: The Mystery and the Solution
(1984) and The Cancer Microbe (1990). Unfortunately,
this research has been largely ignored by the AIDS and cancer
establishments, as well as by so-called mycoplasma experts.
These bacteria can be easily seen microscopically in the diseased
tissue of AIDS (including Kaposi's sarcoma), cancer, and certain
other diseases of unknown cause.
As some people in
medical science are aware, important and valid scientific discoveries
are ignored because they are "politically incorrect." Lo's mycoplasma
research has been largely ignored by the leading virologists
who direct AIDS research. Similarly, Lo has ignored the published
research of hundreds of other researchers who have shown mycoplasma-like
microbes in cancer, AIDS, and immune diseases. The inability
of scientists to consider "politically incorrect" scientific
findings may explain why physicians currently have such difficulty
understanding and treating new epidemics like AIDS and GWS,
in which these microbes are operative.
Why does the military
ignore GWS and deny its existence? Undoubtedly, chemical and
biological weapons were employed in the Gulf War. Was the military
fully capable of detecting these bioweapons? Or was the detection
of chemical agents and bioweapons ignored or covered up? Is
the military capable of protecting its troops from modern day
biowarfare? Are soldiers now powerless against genetically engineered
"supergerms" deployed by biowarfare scientists? In
the future, will soldiers willingly go into battle knowing
that exposure to bioweapons will be ignored by their government,
and knowing that no one is immune from the effects of these
man-made microbes of death?
References
"Government study
of veterans finds no evidence of a Gulf War disease," by Art
Pine, Los Angeles Times,
August 2, 1995.
"Gulf War toxins:
Pentagon's credibility sinks even lower," Editorial, Los
Angeles Times, October 24, 1996.
"U.N. aide fears
Iraq could turn imported medicine into weapons," by Paul Lewis,
The New York Times, November 11, 1990.
"Troops may get unlicensed
drug," by Gina Kolata, The
New York Times, January 4, 1991.
"Guinea pigs and
disposable GIs," by Tod Ensign, Covert
Action Bulletin, Winter 1992-1993.
"Gulf War veterans
seek restitution for ailments," by William D Montalbano, Los
Angeles Times, November 30, 1996.
"Were biological
weapons used against our forces in the Gulf War?," by Garth
and Nancy Nicolson, Townsend
Letter for Doctors & Patients, May 1996.
"Papers on Gulf War
Missing," Los Angeles Times,
December 5, 1996.
"Army to Review Link
Between Germ, Gulf War Syndrome," by Renee Tawa, Los
Angeles Times, December 27, 1996.
"Isolation and identification
of a novel virus from patients with AIDS," by Shyh-Ching Lo,
American Journal of Tropical
Hygiene, Vol 35(4), 1986, pp. 675-676.
"Mycoplasma and AIDS:
what connection?," Lancet,
January 5, 1991.
Dave Emory's "One
Step Beyond" interview with Nicolson, available from Spitfire,
Box 1179, Ben Lomond, CA 95005.
Cantwell Jr, Alan,
The
Cancer Microbe, Los Angeles, Aries Rising Press,
1990. Cantwell
Jr, Alan, AIDS: The Mystery
& The Solution, Los Angeles, Aries Rising Press,
1986.
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