Title: Weapons of Mass Destruction
1WeaponsofMass Destruction
2Outline
- The history and epidemiology of war
- Nuclear weapons
- Chemical weapons
- Biological weapons
3Outline
- Economic and environmental consequences of
militarism and war - Health consequences of militarism and war
- Contemporary issues
4History of war
- 10,000 yrs ago agriculture
- Stable populations, division of labor, warrior
class - 3500 yrs ago bronze weapons and armor
- 2200 yrs ago iron
- 1900 yrs ago - horses
5History of war
- Ninth Century China - bombs developed
- Thirteenth Century China rockets
- Forgotten until the 19th Century
- 1783 - Balloon
- 1903 - Airplane
- 20th Century - WMDs
6History of War
- Belief that each new invention would eliminate
warfare - Instead, increased casualties, killing at a
distance
7Epidemiology of Warfare
- Deaths in war
- 17th 19th Century 11-19/million population
- 20th Century 183/million population
- Increasing casualties to civilians
- 10 late 19th Century
- 85-90 in 20th Century
8Contemporary Wars
- 250 wars in the 20th Century
- Incidence of war rising since 1950
- Most conflicts within poor states
- 25 separate civil wars currently underway
9Consequences of War
- Deaths, injuries, psychological sequelae
- Collapse of health care system affecting those
with acute and chronic illnesses - Famine
10Consequences of War
- Refugees
- Environmental degradation
- Increasing poverty and debt
- All lead to recurrent cycles of violence
11Atomic Weapons - History
- Hiroshima, August 6, 1945
- The day that humanity started taking its final
exam Buckminster Fuller - 15 kiloton bomb, 140,000 deaths
- Nagasaki, August 9, 1945
- 22 kiloton bomb, 70,000 casualties
12Atomic Weapons Other Victims
- Hundreds of thousands of hibakusha atomic bomb
survivors - 80,000 cancers (15,000 fatal) in US citizens as a
result of fallout from atmospheric testing - NCI/CDC
13Atomic Weapons Today
- 20,000 nuclear weapons
- Several thousand megatons
- US and Russia have 13,000 actively deployed
warheads
14Atomic Weapons Today
- 2500 (US) and 2000 (Russia) on high alert
- Fired within 15 minutes, reach targets in 30
minutes - Vastly redundant arsenal
- 150-200 weapons adequate to destroy all major
urban centers in Russia
15Atomic Weapons Today
- Accidental intermediate-sized launch of weapons
from a single Russian submarine would immediately
kill 6.8 million Americans in 8 cities
16Nuclear Weapons Oops!
- Pentagon 32 nuclear weapons accidents since 1950
- GAO 233
- Since 1950, 10 nuclear weapons lost and never
recovered - All laying on seabed, potentially leaking
radioactivity
17Effects of a Nuclear Explosion
- Immediate
- Vaporized by thermal radiation
- Crushed by blast wave
- Burned and suffocated by firestorm
18Effects of a Nuclear Explosion
- Intermediate
- Suffering, painful deaths
- Health care personnel/resources overwhelmed
- Famine
- Refugees
- Devastated transportation infrastructure
19Effects of a Nuclear Explosion
- Late effects
- Cancer
- Psychological trauma
- Nuclear winter (mass starvation due to disruption
of agricultural, transportation, industrial and
health care systems)
20Effects of a 20 megaton nuclear explosion
- Ground zero ? 2 miles
- Fireball hotter than sun
- everything vaporized
- 2 - 4 miles
- Buildings ripped apart and leveled
21Effects of a 20 megaton nuclear explosion
- 4 - 10 miles
- Sheet metal melts concrete buildings heavily
damaged (all others leveled) - 16 miles
- 100 mph winds, firestorm, T 1400 C
- 100 mortality
22Effects of a 20 megaton nuclear explosion
- 21 miles
- Shattered glass, flying debri
- 29 miles
- 3 burns over all exposed skin
- 40 miles
- Retinal burns blind all who witness explosion
23Effects of a 20 megaton nuclear explosion over
Boston
- Death toll
- 1,000,000 within minutes
- 1,800,000 survivors
- 1,100,000 fatally injured
- 500,000 with major injuries
- 200,000 without injuries
24Types of Injuries
- Burns
- Blindings
- Deafenings
- Collapsed lungs
- Fractures
- Shrapnel wounds
25Radiation Sickness
- Medium to high doses death within 1-7 days
- Low doses BM failure, infections, bleeding,
sores, death
26Effects on health professionals
- 70 killed or fatally wounded
- 15 injured
- lt 1000 survive
27Effects on health care system
- Most major hospitals destroyed
- EMS system debilitated
- No X-ray machines, electricity, water,
antibiotics or other meds, blood/plasma, bandages
28Effects on health care system
- 2000 burn unit beds in US (100 per major city)
essentially destroyed - No bone marrow transplant capability
29Effects on Health Care System
- 1500 patients/doctor
- 10 min/pt
- 4 hours sleep/noc
- 2 weeks to see all injured
30Nuclear Terrorism
- Attack on nuclear power plant or other nuclear
installation - Dirty bomb
- Potential tens to hundreds of thousands of
deaths, billions of dollars of damage, chaos - Numerous radiation sources left over from Cold
War in post-Soviet countries
31Nuclear Terrorism
- Reports of weapons/numerous radiation sources
missing from Soviet arsenal - The Nth Country experiment (1964) 3 science
post-docs with no nuclear know-how designed a
working atom bomb
32Chemical Weapons
- 428 BC Athenians and Spartans burned wax, pitch
and sulfur - Davinci arsenic and sulfur shells
- WW I
- Italians vs. Ethiopians
- Japanese vs. Chinese
- Germans vs. Allies
- chlorine gas
- 91,000 deaths and 1.3 million injuries
33Chemical Weapons
- Egypt vs. South Yemen (1963-7)
- Iran/Iraq War (1980s)
- Gulf War (versus Kurds, ? Others)
- 1995 Tokyo subway attack by Aum Shrinko cult
using sarin - 12 dead, 5000 injured or incapacitated
34Types of Chemical Weapons
- Nerve gasses / paralytics
- E.g., sarin, VX
- S/S paralysis (incl. resp. muscles), headache,
dizziness, N/V - Rx gas masks, pretreatment with
pyridostigmine, decontamination, antidotes
(atropine, pralidoxime, diazepam, tropicamide)
35Types of Chemical Weapons
- Blistering agents
- E.g., sulphur mustard
- S/S burns, blindness, pulmonary toxicity, BM
suppression, N/V/D - Rx decontamination, analgesia, pulmonary and eye
care
36Types of Chemical Weapons
- Pulmonary toxicants
- E.g., chlorine, phosgene
- S/S pneumonitis, laryngeal spasm, pulmonary
edema, ARDS - Rx O2, bronchodilators, corticosteroids,
?ibuprofen, ?acetylcysteine
37Chemical Weapons
- 1972 Biological and Toxic Weapons Convention
prohibits development, production, and
stockpiling - 1989 stockpiles
- US 36,000 tons
- Russia 270,000 tons (1/2 nerve gas)
- Current amounts unclear
38Other Chemical Weapons
- Tear gas, pepper spray
- Calmatives mind-altering or sleep-inducing
weapons (benzo-, SSRI-, and anesthetic
derivatives) - Cramp-inducing agents
39Other Chemical Weapons
- Stink bombs (?Race specific?)
- Colored smoke as an obscurant
- Crowd control vs use in warfare
- US pilot amphetamine use
40Biological Weapons - History
- Ancient Greeks, Romans and Persians
- US Civil War (General Johnson at Vicksburg)
- 14th Century Tatars catapulting plague-infested
corpses
41Biological Weapons - History
- Sir Jeffrey Amherst (French and Indian Wars -
smallpox) You would do well to try to inoculate
the Indians, by means of blankets, to extirpate
this execrable race - WW I Cholera, plague, glanders, anthrax
42Biological Weapons WW II
- Unit 731, Manchuria, Shiro Ishii
- British Operation Vegetarian (anthrax cakes /
Germany) - US military personnel received typhoid, smallpox,
yellow fever and tetanus vaccines
43Biological Weapons Post WWII
- Swerdlosk - anthrax
- Zimbabwe - anthrax
44Biological Weapons Today
- 17 countries possess ( Al Qaeda?)
- US role in supplying other nations
- e.g., 1985-1989 US companies sold to Iraq
- Bacillus anthracis, Clostridium botulinum,
Histoplasma capsulatum, Brucella melitensis,
Clostsridium perfringens, Clostridium tetani, and
E. coli - Despite evidence of use of chemical weapons
against Kurds
45Biological Weapons Today
- 1972 Biological Weapons Protocol signed by 158
nations - Lacks adequate enforcement mechanisms
- US has rejected enforcement (wary of foreign
inspectors discovering military secrets and/or
trade secrets of biotechnology and pharmaceutical
companies)
46Biological Weapons - Agents
- Anthrax Brucellosis Cholera
- Glanders Pneumonic plague
- Tularemia Q Fever Smallpox
- Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis
- Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers (e.g., Ebola)
- Botulism Staph enterotoxin B
- Ricin Mycxotoxins
47Biological Weapons of the Future
- Genetic weapons targeted at specific ethnic
groups
48Smallpox
- DNA virus decimated native American populations
eradicated by WHO vaccination campaign in 1972 - ?Only remaining viral stocks at CDCP and in
Siberia?
49Smallpox
- Incubation period 7-17 days (avg. 12)
- Spread by droplet infection highly contagious
- Symptoms abrupt onset of F/HA/myalgias ? rash ?
MSOF ? death
50Smallpox
- Rx isolation, post-exposure vaccination,
supportive care, ?antivirals - 30 fatality rate
51Anthrax
- Cutaneous, GI and Pulmonary forms
- Est. 50kg release over urban center of 5 million
people would sicken 250K and kill 100K - 100 kg release would have the same of
casualties as a hydrogen bomb explosion
52Inhalational Anthrax
- Case fatality rate approx. 50
- Rx
- Post-exposure antibiotics (doxycycline,
ciprofloxacin, penicillin) - Supportive care
- Vaccine
53Health Care System Preparadness for Weapons of
Mass Destruction
- ¾ of US ERs not fully prepared for treating mass
casualties - Only 12 of US hospitals have bioterrorism
response measures developed and in place
54Health Care System Preparedness for Weapons of
Mass Destruction
- US public health / emergency care system already
in disarray - 80 of states facing budget cuts or holdbacks
- Medicaid over budget in 23 states
- Anti-immigrant laws dangerous
55Priorities and Mass Destructions
- Warning
- Progressive Rhetoric Ahead.
56Military Spending
- US ½ of discretionary tax dollars spent on the
military - US military budget represents 34 of total world
military budget (1.035 trillion in 2004) - 400 billion defense budget for 2003 (excluding
costs of war in Iraq)
57Military Spending
- 4.6 increase in spending on nuclear weapons
- 11.5 decrease in spending to prevent the spread
of chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons
(773 million)
58Missile Defense ShieldThe Militarization of Space
- Star Wars program proceeding, despite
- Astronomical cost est. 100 billion
- Strong opposition by scientific community
- Spectacular failures in 2/4 tests, despite highly
structured conditions - Abandonment of ABM Treaty by Bush administration
59Missile Defense ShieldThe Militarization of Space
- Shield or very porous umbrella
- Easily overwhelmed and fooled by inexpensive
decoys - No protection against internal accidents or
terrorists bringing weapon onto US soil or dirty
bomb - Proposed use of moon for spy observatories and
weapons
60Dwight Eisenhower
- The problem in defense spending is to figure out
how far you should go without destroying from
within that which you are trying to protect from
without
61Social Injustices Abound
- 46 million Americans lack health insurance ?
18,000 deaths per year - 20-25 of US children live in poverty
- Worsening homelessness, public educational
system, other social indicators - 1.2 billion people have no access to clean
drinking water-2 million child deaths/year
62Social Injustices
- Worldwide
- poverty increasing
- maldistribution of wealth
- corporatization
- global debt crisis
63Social Injustices
- Worldwide
- environmental destruction and global warming
- Air pollution kills 70,000/yr in US, gt500K/yr
worldwide - AIDS epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa
- 70,000 die of hunger every 2 days (i.e., one
Hiroshima every 2 days)
64Health Costs of Militarization
- 3 hours of world arms spending annual WHO
budget - ½ day of world arms spending immunization for
all the worlds children
65Health Costs of Militarization
- 3 weeks of world arms spending primary health
care for all in poor countries, including safe
drinking water and full immunizations - Brain drain 1/2 of US research scientists work
entirely on military R and D
66Dwight Eisenhower
- Every gun that is made, every rocket fired,
signifies in the final sense a theft from those
who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold
and not clothed
67Dwight Eisenhower
- This world is not spending money alone. It is
spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of
its scientists, the hopes of its children. This
is not a way of life at all, in any true sense.
Under the cloud of threatening war, it is
humanity hanging from a cross of iron.
68Martin Luther King
- A nation that continues year after year to
spend more money on military defense than on
programs of social uplift is approaching
spiritual death.
69US Foreign Aid
- US ranks 21st in the world in foreign aid as a
percentage of GDP (0.7, versus UN recommended
0.15) - Foreign Aid
- 1/3 military
- 1/3 economic
- 1/3 food and development
- US worlds largest arms exporter many weapons
later used against us
70Current Problems
- Budget surplus ? budget deficit
- Iraq
- Afghanistan
- Others?
- War on Terror
71New US Nuclear Weapons PoliciesUnder GW Bush
- Nuclear Posture Review expands scope of use of
nuclear weapons, including first-strike against
non-nuclear states - Withdrawal from ABM Treaty
- Boycotted Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty
Conference - Budgeted money to resume nuclear testing and
development
72The US Rogue Nation
- History Native Americans, slavery, current
disparities and injustices - 5 of the worlds population responsible for 25
of its energy consumption, 33 of its paper use,
and 72 of its hazardous waste production - Co-opting Nazi and Japanese WWII scientists
73The US Rogue Nation
- Minimum 277 troop deployments by the US in its
225 year history - Since the end of WWII, the US has bombed
- China, Korea, Indonesia, Cuba, Guatemala, Congo,
Peru, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Nicaragua, El
Salvador, Grenada, Libya, Panama, Afghanistan,
Sudan, Yugoslavia, and Iraq - Conservative estimate 8 million killed
74The US Rogue Nation
- In 2002, the US spent about 1,211 per US citizen
on defense - vs. 2.27 per citizen on international
peacekeeping efforts - The US maintains military bases in 69 sovereign
nations around the world
75The US Rogue Nation
- Continued funding of the Western Hemisphere
Institute for Security Cooperation - Formerly the School of the Americas
- Over 60,000 graduates, including many of the
worst human rights abusers in Latin America
(e.g., Manuel Noriega, Omar Torrijos, and the
assassins of Archbishop Oscar Romero)
76International Non-Cooperation/Isolationism
- Failure to sign or approve
- Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change
- Convention on the Prohibition of Anti-Personnel
Land Mines - Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty
- Convention on the Rights of the Child
77International Non-Cooperation/Isolationism
- Failure to sign or approve
- Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination
Against Women - Convention on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights - Convention for the Suppression of Traffic in
Persons
78The US Rogue Nation
- Death Penalty
- US executes more of its citizens than any other
country - US is the only country to execute both juveniles
and the mentally ill - Failure to follow World Court Decisions
- Oppose International Criminal Court
- Largest debtor to the UN (only 40 of dues paid)
79The role of the doctor in society
- World Health Organization
- The role of the physician in the preservation
and promotion of peace is the most significant
factor for the attainment of health for all. - Physicians for Social Responsibility
80Contact Information
- Public Health and Social Justice Website
- http//www.phsj.org
- martindonohoe_at_phsj.org