Title: History of biological warfare and terrorism
1Chemical or biological terrorism Is the threat
real?
Michael D. Mehta, Ph.D. Associate Professor
Department of Sociology Website
www.policynut.com
2History of biological/chemicalwarfare and
terrorism
- During the French and Indian Wars (1754-1767)
Jeffrey Amherst commander of the British forces
used smallpox-contaminated blankets to decimate
tribes along the Ohio River Valley. - In 1915, German troops at Ypres deployed chlorine
gas against the French. By 1918, more than
100,000 people died from exposure to chemical
weapons. - Between 1932-1945, Japan tested anthrax,
meningitis cholera and the plague in occupied
Manchuria killing at least 10,000 prisoners.
During this period, at least 11 Chinese cities
were attacked with biological weapons. - Tampering of Tylenol in 1982 (laced with cyanide)
- seven dead. A wave of copycat tamperings
occurred
afterwards Lipton Cup-A-Soup in 1986, Exedrin
in 1986,
Tylenol again in 1986, Sudafed in 1991.
3- Rajneeshee cult (1984) infected salad bars in
Oregon with salmonella infecting more than 700
people? scheme to incapacitate voters to win
local election - Japanese doomsday cult Aum Shinrikyo released
sarin gas in the Tokyo subway (1995) killing 20
people, and injuring thousands? seeking to
establish a theocratic state in Japan - Larry Wayne Harris (1998) threatened to use
plague and anthrax against U.S. government
officials? part of a Christian Identity group
interested in having several states in the
North-West designated as a white holy land.
4What do these groups have in common?
- They use violence, or the threat of violence,
instrumentally to advance a political,
ideological or religious goal. - The main motivations are
- To promote nationalist of separatist objectives
(e.g., Chechen rebels, Kurdistan Workers Party,
Tamil Tigers) - To retaliate or take revenge for a real or
perceived injury - To protest government policies
- To defend rights of animals or the unborn
- Two most common types of targets
- General civilian population
- Symbolic buildings or organizations
5Three types of responses to risk
- acceptance of the risk
- personal management of the risk
- dread risk response (risk aversion -- anxiety
responses) - Clearly there are areas where the risk is so high
as to be manifestly unacceptable and others where
it is so low as to be negligible. - Of course, most of the debate is in the gray area
in-between. - Social amplification of risk ? the fear that
people have towards a hazard exceeds health and
safety effects.
6Trust Benefits Memorable Morality Natural or
Technological
Dread Impacts Voluntariness Control Familiari
ty Catastrophic potential Uncertainty Attributabil
ity Reversibility Distribution
Gender Age Understanding Personality Media
7Voluntary exposure is a key indicator of social
acceptance
8Risk comparisons
- Annual risk of dying in a bathtub 1 in a million
- Risk of HIV from a unit of blood 1 in 913,000
- Annual risk of being electrocuted 1 in 350,000
- Annual risk of choking to death on food 1 in
160,000 - Annual risk of dying while riding your bicycle 1
in 130,000 - Annual risk of dying in a car accident 1 in
10,000 - Annual risk of dying from smoking 1 in 10
- Risk of dying eventually 1 in 1
9500 life-saving interventions cost per life year
saved (US)
- arsenic emission control in glass plants?51M
- trichloroethylene control in water?34M
- ban chlorobenzilate from citrus farming?1.2M
- warning letters of problem drivers?720,000
- neonate care for low birth infants?270,000
- mandatory smoke detectors in homes?210,000
- child resistant cigarette lighters?42,000
- flashing lights at railway crossings?42,000
- home dialysis for renal disease?20,000
- nicotine gum for smoking cessation?8,000
10- air bags plus seatbelts in automobiles?6,700
- chlorination of drinking water?3,100
- mandatory motorcycle helmet law?2,000
- breast cancer screening in women lt50?810
- influenza vaccine for all?140
- mandatory seat belt use?69
- measles, mumps and rubella vaccine?0
- smoking cessation advice for pregnant women?0
Reference Tengs et al. (1995) Risk Analysis,
15(3)
11The nature of risk
- All risks are interpreted through filters of
values because risk is perceived. - It is a normative position to assume that some
risks are real while others only exist in the
mind of the perceiver. - Hazards are generally thought of as actual,
physical events or phenomena. - Risk is viewed by many as the scientific
characterization of a hazard. - By contrast, safety is a social and political
construct.
12Characteristics of risk assessments
- Scope of assessments are usually narrow.
- Certain scientific issues are excluded because
they are complex or contentious. - Regulatory authority often defines the scope of
an assessment. - Alternative technologies are often not considered
as part of the process (ban or not ban, locate
here or somewhere else). - Time constraints.
- The human element.
13Reasons why actual risk cannot be distinguished
from perceived risk
- Risk probabilities often do not reflect risk
frequencies there are reliable frequencies only
for events that have a long recorded history. - Actual risk estimates are usually imprecise off
by many orders of magnitude (safety factors). - Many important features of hazards are not
amenable to quantification risk being imposed
without consent, threat to civil liberties, due
process
14- 4. Self-fulfilling prophecy perception often
influences reality. - 5. Expert estimates of probability are not
necessarily better than those of laypeople.
Experts do not have some magic window on reality. - 6. There is considerable disagreement among
experts about the model to use, time frame, level
of significance - 7. There is no distinction between perceived and
actual risks because there are no risks except
perceived risks.
15Proportionality
- Measures must not be disproportionate
- to the desired level of protection and
- must not aim at zero risk.
- Least restrictive alternatives
- equivalent level of protection
16Comparable situations or technologies should
not be treated differently.
Non-discrimination
17Measures should be consistent with
measures already adopted in similar circumstances.
Consistency
18A comparison must be made between the most likely
positive or negative consequences of the
envisaged action and those of inaction in terms
of overall cost, both in the long- and short term.
Benefits and costs of action or lack of action
19What should be done?
- Reconcile and coordinate tasks, responsibilities,
powers and jurisdiction of players. - Improve training of medical personnel to
recognize these diseases. - Fund surveillance and monitoring programs and
increase the coordination of information about
population health. - Find ways to communicate the risks honestly to
the public without contributing to panic. - Recognize that scientific developments are
double-edged (they bring risks and benefits).