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Germs: America's Secret War against Biological Weapons [Hardcover]

Judith Miller , Stephen Engelberg , William J. Broad
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Hardcover, 24 Sep 2001 --  
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster (24 Sep 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0684871580
  • ISBN-13: 978-0684871585
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 16 x 3.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,447,462 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

Jeff Stein "The Washington Post Book World" Compelling and highly readable...an authoritative book. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Description

Deadly germs sprayed in shopping malls, bomb-lets spewing anthrax spores over battlefields, tiny vials of plague scattered in Times Square -- these are the poor man's hydrogen bombs, hideous weapons of mass destruction that can be made in a simple laboratory.

In this groundbreaking work of investigative journalism, Judith Miller, Stephen Engelberg, and William Broad of "The New York Times" uncover the truth about biological weapons and show why bio-warfare and bio-terrorism are fast becoming our worst national nightmare.

Among the startling revelations in "Germs: "

How the CIA secretly built and tested a model of a Soviet-designed germ bomb, alarming some officials who felt the work pushed to the limits of what is permitted by the global treaty banning germ arms. How the Pentagon embarked on a secret effort to make a superbug. Details about the Soviet Union's massive hidden program to produce biological weapons, including new charges that germs were tested on humans. How Moscow's scientists made an untraceable germ that instructs the body to destroy itself. The Pentagon's chaotic efforts to improvise defenses against Iraq's biological weapons during the 1991 Persian Gulf War. How a religious cult in Oregon in the 1980s sickened hundreds of Americans in a bio-terrorism attack that the government played down to avoid panic and copycat strikes. Plans by the U.S. military in the 1960s to attack Cuba with germ weapons.

"Germs" also shows how a small group of scientists and senior officials persuaded President Bill Clinton to launch a controversial multibillion-dollar program to detect a germ attack on U.S. soil and to aid its victims -- a program that, so far, isstruggling to provide real protection.

Based on hundreds of interviews with scientists and senior officials, including President Clinton, as well as on recently declassified documents and on-site reporting from the former Soviet Union's sinister bio-weapons labs, "Germs" shows us bio-warriors past and present at work at their trade. There is the American scientist who devoted his professional life to perfecting biological weapons, and the Nobel laureate who helped pioneer the new biology of genetically modified germs and is now trying to stop its misuse. We meet former Soviet scientists who made enough plague, smallpox, and anthrax to kill everyone on Earth and whose expertise is now in great demand by terrorists, rogue states, and legitimate research labs alike.

A frightening and unforgettable narrative of cutting-edge science and spycraft, "Germs" shows us why advances in biology and the spread of germ weapons expertise to such countries as Iran, Iraq, and North Korea could make germs the weapon of the twenty-first century.


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IT was noon on Sunday, September 9, 1984. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Donald Mitchell HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
After anthrax-laced letters began showing up in the offices of prominent news people and political figures in the United States (in 2001), I wondered what else could happen. Germs tells the story of the full threat from bioweapons, produced and delivered from major countries . . . rogue nations . . . and terrorist cells. The threat is greater than most of us have been led to believe exists.

Although bioweapons have been banned by treaty since 1975, several countries have been busy as bees working covertly on this area. The former Soviet Union seems to have been in the lead, producing huge volumes of new microbes whose infectious efficacy was improved by bioengineering, processing to make the germs easier to disseminate, and experiments to create delivery systems of great efficiency. The book also details efforts by the United States, Iraq, and South Africa over these years. A major potential problem has been that there are a lot of unemployed scientists in this field from the former Soviet Union who are being recruited to start new bioweapons programs for other countries. Iran has been trying to do this. The book also describes attempts by terrorist groups to get involved. The infamous Osama bin Laden is described in the book as one terrorist leader who has been training his followers in chemical and bioweapons.

After having fallen asleep in this area since the treaty was put in place, the United States began to scramble to catch-up in the 1990s, and left itself just about as vulnerable as when the decade started despite spending serious money. Identified weaknesses in the book included a poor ability to diagnose diseases caused by bioweapons, limited vaccines and medicines to counteract the diseases, a weak structure for coordinating the response, and limited tools to fight a contagious bioweapon (which conventional anthrax is not).

On the other hand, bioweapons are attractive for terrorists. It doesn't take much money to build them. Off the shelf equipment can be used. They are easy to transport. Few people are needed to deliver them and start a contagion. All that is needed is the knowledge of what needs to be done. The book describes the efforts by terrorists in the past to use bioweapons. The most significant domestic event occurred in 1984 when followers of the Bhagwan Shree in Oregon deliberately spread salmonella in restaurant salad bars as part of an attempt to gain political control.

In some ways the most chilling part of the book is the evaluation of how close Coalition Forces came to facing bioweapons in the Gulf War. Iraq had the bioweapons and the delivery systems to have created a major loss of life. Nuclear saber-rattling seemed to have been effective in deterring Saddam Hussein not to use his bioweapons. There may have been deals through back channels that we don't know about. Perhaps the decision not to oust him from power was part of some bioweapon blackmail. Who knows? It is well worth considering the implications of the fact that Iraq was willing to forego many billions of dollars in oil revenue since the Gulf War in order to protect its ability to develop and produce bioweapons.

The book ends with many suggestions for how to limit our exposure to the full threat of bioweapons. If you add to these observations the experiences we have been having with anthrax-laced letters, you will see that an ounce of prevention is worth vastly more than a pound of cure after the fact. However, even the prevention is very expensive. But I don't think we can afford the alternative. After you read this book, I'm sure you will agree with me.

I graded the book down one star for being overly bulky in telling its story, and mischaracterizing some details with which I am familiar.

Will we use advanced science to unleash horrible epidemics on each other? What internal and external forces will be sufficient to avoid such a catastrophe?

Use science to serve humanity . . . and to become more humane!

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
An interesting read 4 Jan 2002
By A Customer
I found the title of this book eye-catching, hence why I picked it up, however the overall content I felt was a little disappointing. It provides some good general information on the topic, and presents it in a reasonably clear manner - easy reading in otherwords. An interesting read, though I would still like to cross reference some of the material presented as it seems the authors were privy to a number of highly confidential meetings... Nonetheless a good book for an introduction to the topic of biological weapons and the recent historical events that have shaped our current approach to them. Not a very good book if you're looking for a piece of substantial academic literature though.
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By Mr. R. G. A. Thomas VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
From the cover you hope that at long last this will answer the huge questions about Iraq and the WMDs (those that we DID find, but then denied existed) ... Did our allies sell them to Hussein but we dare not admit it ? Was it Russia, North Korea, Iran - and we dare not confront them ? ... Or was it all a huge showbiz bravado act built around a few skilled lab technicians. This book gets a little nearer to confronting the elephant in the room - but we are still awaiting the truth.
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