Chemical Weapons Test Done On American Sailors
On May 24th, 2002 the New York Times ran a story about chemical
and biological weapons test done on American sailors during
the 1960's. The following is a copy of that article.
"Sailors Sprayed With Nerve Gas in Cold War Test, Pentagon
Says
May 24, 2002
By THOM SHANKER with WILLIAM J. BROAD
WASHINGTON, May 23 - The Defense Department sprayed live nerve
and biological agents on ships and sailors in cold war-era experiments
to test the Navy's vulnerability to toxic warfare, the Pentagon
revealed today.
The Pentagon documents made public today showed that six tests
were carried out in the Pacific Ocean from 1964 to 1968. In
the experiments, nerve or chemical agents were sprayed on a
variety of ships and their crews to gauge how quickly the poisons
could be detected and how rapidly they would disperse, as well
as to test the effectiveness of protective gear and decontamination
procedures in use at the time.
Hundreds of sailors exposed to the poisons in tests conducted
in the 1960's could be eligible for health care benefits, and
the Department of Veterans Affairs has
already begun contacting those who participated in some of the
experiments, known as Project Shipboard Hazard and Defense,
or SHAD.
"We are committed to helping every veteran who took part
in these tests," said Anthony J. Principi, the secretary
of veterans affairs. "If we find any medical problems or
disabilities we can attribute to Project SHAD, we'll ensure
these veterans receive the benefits they deserve."
Of the six tests, three used sarin, a nerve agent, or VX, a
nerve gas; one used staphylococcal enterotoxin B, known as SEB,
a biological toxin; one used a simulant believed to be harmless
but subsequently found to be dangerous; and one used a nonpoisonous
simulant.
Michael Kilpatrick, a medical official in the office of the
assistant secretary of defense for health affairs, said it was
unclear whether sailors had been intentionally exposed to the
germ and chemical agents without the benefit of protective masks
and gear. Also uncertain, he said, was whether any had given
their permission to become human guinea pigs in medical experiments
with the deadly substances.
"When you read the overarching plans for the testing,
people were to be protected," he said in an interview.
"But when we get to individual reports, we do not see things
like informed consent or individual protection. We don't have
the records for what, if any, protection was given to people."
The implication, he said, is that in some cases sailors may
have been exposed to the chemical and germ dangers.
"To me," Dr. Kilpatrick added, "the important
thing now is that the Defense Department and veterans affairs
are cooperating for the benefit of the veteran."
The Department of Veterans Affairs has notified 622 of about
4,300 military personnel, mostly from the Navy, identified as
participants in Project SHAD. The process of identifying the
veterans who participated in the program began in September
2000 under pressure from Representative Mike Thompson, Democrat
of California, who was responding to claims by veterans that
they had suffered health damage from the tests.
"This information is significant since we now know that
our military personnel were exposed to sarin gas and VX nerve
agent, which are both highly lethal, and other agents that are
known carcinogens," Mr. Thompson said.
While noting that the documents made public today by the Pentagon
were the third installment of fact sheets on Project SHAD, bringing
to 12 the number of tests that had been declassified, he demanded
that the Defense Department release additional information on
the 113 secret SHAD tests believed to have been planned.
"It is only fair to inform service members, some of whom
may not even know of their exposure, of the specific harmful
agents used in SHAD tests," Mr. Thompson said.
Leonard A. Cole, an expert on biological weapons at Rutgers
University who wrote "Clouds of Secrecy," a book on
the government's germ testing program, said the new disclosures
were troubling but grimly logical.
"They're important because they add to a whole pool of
knowledge about what the military was doing," he said.
"But they don't shock me. We've known that the Army had
exposed human subjects to biological agents," though always
with permission.
"If there was no informed consent," Dr. Cole added,
"that would be a big deal. I know of no large-scale testing
on human subjects with chemical or biological weapons that was
performed without some level of informed consent."
A number of the SHAD tests used harmless simulants that were
meant to mimic and trace the dissemination of real agents. But
others used deadly chemicals and germs.
One test, named "Fearless Johnny," was carried out
southwest of Honolulu during August and September of 1965. The
George Eastman, a Navy cargo ship, was sprayed with VX nerve
agent and a simulant to "evaluate the magnitude of exterior
and interior contamination levels" under various conditions
of readiness, as well as study "the shipboard wash-down
system," according to the new documents.
VX gas, like all nerve agents, penetrates the skin or lungs
to disrupt the body's nervous system and stop breathing. In
small quantities, exposure causes death.
A 1964 test named Flower Drum Phase I, conducted off the coast
of Hawaii, sprayed sarin and a chemical simulant onto the same
ship and into its ventilation system while the crew wore various
levels of protective gear. In phase 2 of the test, VX gas was
sprayed onto a barge to examine the ship's water wash-down system
and other decontamination measures, according to the documents.
Another experiment, Deseret Test Center Test 68-50, was intended
to determine the casualty levels from an F-4 Phantom jet spraying
SEB, a crippling germ toxin. The test was done in the Marshall
Islands in September and October of 1968. The jet sprayed the
deadly mist over part of Eniwetok Atoll and five Army light
tugs, the documents said.
SEB, a report added, "is not generally thought of as a
lethal agent" but instead as an incapacitating agent that
can knock out people for one or two weeks with fever, chills,
headache and coughing. The SEB came from a bacteria that causes
a common type of food poisoning.
Deseret Test Center Test 69-32, done southwest of Hawaii from
April to June 1969, used two germs that were thought to be harmless,
Serratia marcescens and Escherichia coli, the germ of the human
gut. But Serratia marcescens in time turned out to be dangerous.
"It is an opportunistic pathogen," the report said
today, "causing infections of the endocardium, blood, wounds,
and urinary and respiratory tracts."
The documents said the Pacific test of the two germs, which
were meant to simulate dangerous biological agents, was meant
to see how sunlight influenced their survival. A military aircraft
sprayed the germs on five tugs, "each converted to serve
as an oceangoing sampling platform and laboratory," the
documents said."(15)