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Tuesday, March 14, 2006

The Knowledge -- Part 2

Terrorists could buy reagents on the Web, build a DNA synthesizer, and create a deadly virus. But it would be no easy feat.

By Mark Williams

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This article -- the cover story in Technology Review's March/April 2006 print issue -- has been divided into three parts for presentation online. This is part 2; part 1 appeared on March 13, and part 3 will run on March 15.

In part 1, Russian-born scientist Serguie Popov, now a professor at the National Center for Biodefense and Infectious Diseases at George Mason University, spoke about his work developing bioweapons in the Soviet Union in the 1980s -- and correspondent Mark Williams explained why it matters to us today.

Basement Biotech
The age of bioweaponeering is just dawning: almost all of the field's potential development lies ahead.

The recent report by the National Academies described many unpleasant scenarios: in addition to psychotropic pathogens, the academicians imagine the misuse of "RNA interference" to perturb gene expression, of nanotechnology to deliver toxins, and of viruses to deliver antibodies that could target ethnic groups.

This last is by no means ridiculous. Microbiologist Mark Wheelis at the University of California, Davis, who works with the Washington-based Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, notes in an article for Arms Control Today, "Engineering an ethnic-specific weapon targeting humans is...difficult, as human genetic variability is very high both within and between ethnic groups...but there is no reason to believe that it will not eventually be possible."

But commentators have focused on speculative perils for decades. While the threats they describe are plausible, dire forecasts have become a ritual -- a way to avoid more immediate problems. Already, in 2006, much could be done.

Popov's myelin autoimmunity weapon could be replicated by bioterrorists. It would be no easy feat: while the technological requirements are relatively slight, the scientific knowledge required is considerable. At the very least, terrorists would have to employ a real scientist as well as lab technicians trained to manage DNA synthesizers and tend pathogens. They would also have to find some way to disperse their pathogens. The Soviet Union "weaponized" biological agents by transforming them into fine aerosols that could be sprayed over large areas. This presents engineering problems of an industrial kind, possibly beyond the ability of any substate actor. But bioterrorists might be willing to infect themselves and walk through crowded airports and train stations: their coughs and sniffles would be the bombs of their terror campaign.

Difficult as it may still be, garage-lab bioengineering is getting easier every year. In the vanguard of those who are calling attention to biotechnology's potential for abuse is George Church, Harvard Medical School Professor of Genetics. It was Church who announced in December 2004 that his research team had developed a new high-throughput synthesizer capable of constructing in one pass a DNA molecule 14,500 bases long.

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Comments

  • Clockwork Orange
    Guest (Sir Lanse) on 03/14/2006 at 12:00 AM
    Posts:
    1
    We found out how easy it is to alter and control people with brain washing.  We (the civilized people of the world) stopped doing research on it.  The potential was too terrible to explore.  We did not want to know what drugs worked best, or what color lights stimulated the brain the most.
      Bioweapons should be treated the same way.  There is not much good to be found there. 
      A prominent futurist said a couple years ago: I do not fear some small group building nuclear bombs.  Nukes require large facilities.  Bio/chem weapons can be made in a small cabin.  Those are a greater danger to the future of humanity.
    Imagine Osama with "Captain Trips".
    When the last of Al Queda is being rounded up, he is in his bunker.
    Would he release it, to kill all
    of humanity so god can start over?
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • The Knowledge
    Guest (Daniel C. Bly) on 03/14/2006 at 12:00 AM
    Posts:
    1
    Does no one consider the widespread distribution of the publication in which this and similar articles appear?

    We are all fully aware that the data contained in this article are retrievable by those dedicated to extracting it, and the references cited are all presumably unclassified.  Does it occur to so few besides myself that those dedicated to the eradication of the western way of life read English and follow publications like this one?

    Why don't we just assemble a potpourri of recipes for biotoxins and post them prominently on the web with a drop shipping registry of scientific equipment and laboratory supply distributors and offer to review and test the virulence of what gets built as a result.  We could have a regular biotoxin chili cook-off, huh.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • past tense reaction
      Guest (kitk) on 03/14/2006 at 12:00 AM
      Posts:
      1
      If you have a good memory, you may recall how not many years ago at least one student used the phone and library to design a nuclear bomb for a science project. Many of his resources have since been removed because of this incident. More recently, a kid decided to make a backyard atomic reactor out of junk and duct tape. The knowledge of HOW is too common to rescind; let us try to make ready, rather than ignore it.
      Rate this comment: 12345
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