Author Topic: Nuclear War, Germ War, Bio War, Chem War, WMD  (Read 259868 times)

Crafty_Dog

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« Reply #550 on: March 18, 2022, 07:36:24 PM »
With anyone else this would sound seriously tin foil , , ,

https://michaelyon.locals.com/upost/1868053/suspect-hint-of-us-creating-casus-belli

Crafty_Dog

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Russki chem arsenal and options
« Reply #551 on: March 19, 2022, 01:03:35 PM »
While hosting Xi for dinner at Mar a Lago, between the main course and desert President Trump sent 40 Tomahawks up the Russki ass in Syria for use of chem weapons.  What should President Biden do if Russia uses chem weapons in Ukraine?

================================

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2022/03/19/russia-chemical-weapons-ukraine/?utm_campaign=wp_post_most&utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&wpisrc=nl_most&carta-url=https%3A%2F%2Fs2.washingtonpost.com%2Fcar-ln-tr%2F365a289%2F6236068b3e6ed13ade2db8d4%2F61cdf026ae7e8a4ac205b2b3%2F9%2F70%2F6236068b3e6ed13ade2db8d4

A legacy of ‘secrecy and deception’: Why Russia clings to an outlawed chemical arsenal
By Joby Warrick



On July 12, 2018, British scientists gathered at a restricted military base for a first look at the weapon used in a bizarre murder attempt a few weeks before. The device was a perfume bottle, tossed away by the assailants as they fled the country, and containing less than a tablespoon of a liquid so deadly that it could only be handled with heavy rubber gloves and hazmat gear.

Investigators already suspected that the weapon was of Russian origin — the intended victim was a Russian ex-spy living in England, and the attackers were identified as military intelligence operatives from Moscow. The surprise, as the examination unfolded, was the sheer potency of the oily fluid inside the vial. It was enough poison, the scientists calculated, to wipe out a small town: the equivalent of thousands of lethal doses.

This was Novichok, a powerful nerve agent invented by Russia. Just a year earlier, in 2017, Russian President Vladimir Putin had declared to the world that his country no longer possessed such chemical weapons. U.S. and British intelligence officials believed at the time that Putin was lying, and here, in a laboratory in southern England, was tangible proof. Russia had secretly preserved at least some of its arsenal of poisons, and it clearly was willing to use them — including on foreign soil.


Four years later, insights from the probe into the attempted assassination of defector Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, England, are helping to fuel worries that Russian chemical weapons could soon turn up in yet another country, with far graver consequences. The Biden administration has repeatedly warned that Russia, frustrated with the faltering progress of its 3-week-old invasion of Ukraine, may be preparing to use chemical weapons against Ukrainian troops, political leaders or even ordinary civilians in an effort to regain momentum and seize control of key cities.

While the nature of those preparations is not publicly known, current and former U.S. and NATO officials say Russia has long possessed an array of chemical weapons, which it retains in defiance of international treaties and despite years of Russian promises and pronouncements. Moreover, senior Russian leaders appear to regard chemical weapons as a legitimate tool for achieving a variety of goals, from eliminating political foes to subduing armed opponents, officials and weapons experts say. Russia denies possessing chemical weapons, and the Kremlin has accused Kyiv and Washington of plotting to use chemical or biological weapons in Ukraine.

The Russian embassy in Washington did not respond to a request for comment.

Inside Russia’s propaganda bubble: Where a war isn’t a war

“The Skripal case was the smoking gun,” said Andrew C. Weber, a top nonproliferation official for the Pentagon during the Obama administration and an expert on Russia’s weapons of mass destruction programs. “Russia used chemical weapons, in peacetime, in a foreign country. The thought that they might now use chemical weapons in Ukraine is entirely rational.”


Russia had been laying the groundwork for such operations for decades, current and former U.S. officials said in interviews.

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Russia joined the United States and 191 other countries in signing the Chemical Weapon Convention, which outlaws the stockpiling and use of substances such as Novichok. Beginning in the early 2000s, Moscow destroyed 40,000 metric tons of chemical munitions — ostensibly its entire arsenal — in special incinerators built with help from U.S. taxpayers.

But not everything was destroyed, U.S. officials and analysts say. Military laboratories that produced nerve agents such Novichok and sarin continue to function, and Russian weapons scientists have been allowed to pursue new weapons research under a treaty loophole that permits the production of small amounts of chemical weapons for defensive purposes, such as calibrating detection equipment.


Russia continued to work on Novichok after the Cold War, an effort that accelerated in the 2010s and culminated with the use of an enhanced variant of the same nerve agent in assassination attempts against two Kremlin foes — Skripal, in 2018, and Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny in 2020 — and likely against at least three other opposition figures inside Russia, current and former intelligence officials say.

Meanwhile, Moscow also became heavily invested in protecting Syria, its closest Middle East ally, after the Syrian army used chemical weapons against opposition-held towns and villages in that country’s civil war. Despite initially supporting international efforts to eliminate Syria’s vast arsenal of nerve agents in 2013, Putin repeatedly blocked efforts to punish Syrian President Bashar al-Assad when he switched to using chlorine — the common industrial chemical used to clean drinking water — in deadly gas attacks against the rebels.

In Syria, chlorine gas became Assad’s go-to weapon for clearing rebels out of their urban strongholds. Because chlorine is widely available, Syria frequently blamed the rebels themselves, accusing them of gassing their own neighborhoods in “false-flag” attacks to win sympathy and support from the West. The claims were repeated and amplified by Russian officials in social media and before world bodies, including the United Nations.


The tactic was denounced at the time as cruel and cynical, but it at least partly succeeded. Syria has largely prevailed against the rebels, and Russia’s false-flags claims gained credence among Moscow’s allies and sowed confusion elsewhere.

Years later, Assad still has avoided any accountability for his actions, and Russia has absorbed a powerful lesson on how chemical weapons can be used to defeat even a highly motivated, heavily entrenched urban foe, said Hamish de Bretton-Gordon, a retired British military officer who commanded NATO’s rapid-reaction battalion for defense against chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.

“If you have no morals or scruples, you would use chemicals, because they can be a morbidly great weapon, as we saw in Syria,” de Bretton-Gordon said. “When you’re fighting amid rubble, bombs and bullets have a limited affect. But gas is a different story.”

A steward of Russia’s chemical weapons program

The center of Russia’s chemical-weapons universe — past and present — is an industrial complex in Shikhany, a small town on the west bank of the Volga River, just upstream from the city of Saratov. In Soviet times, Shikhany was a “closed” military city, sealed off from foreign visitors because of the highly secretive nature of the research that occurred there.


A network of labs and factories in Shikhany once produced much of the Soviet Union’s vast chemical-weapons arsenal, including sarin and VX, another nerve agent, as well as an experimental compound called Novichok, Russian for “new fellow.”

During the final years of communist rule, the complex was directed by Lt. Gen. Anatoly Kuntsevich, an owlish man who critics colorfully dubbed “General Gas.” In later years, Kuntsevich would work with Americans in dismantling parts of the Soviet Union’s chemical weapons complex, while also — according to Russian prosecutors — providing advice and equipment to Syrian officials who were secretly constructing chemical-weapons factories of their own.

Kuntsevich oversaw what was then the world’s largest stockpile of chemicals, building on a military program that dated back to the Czarist era and underwent a massive upgrade at the start of the Cold War. When Soviet occupying forces in Germany discovered that the Nazis had invented new types of chemical weapons called nerve agents, the Russians dismantled entire German chemical factories and reassembled them in places like Shikhany.


In the Cold War arms race, Moscow and Washington sought to out-compete one another in building the biggest and best arsenals of nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. But as the conflict ended, both countries agreed to limit their nuclear stockpiles and to begin the costly process of scrapping their biological and chemical weapons and production centers altogether. The CIA would later conclude that Russia’s self-reported inventory of chemical weapons was incomplete, with several known types of munitions omitted from the list.

The invention of sarin was an accident. A German scientist was trying to kill bugs.

The destruction of Russia’s declared chemical arsenal officially ended in 2017, with Putin himself presiding over the ceremonial destruction of the last chemical warhead by remote video link. Putin seized on the moment to chide the United States, where a decades-long, multibillion-dollar destruction program was slowed by regulatory delays. The last U.S. weapons are set to be destroyed next year.

“We expect that Russia’s efforts … will serve as an example for other countries,” Putin said in remarks at the ceremony. He accused Washington of “not carrying out its obligations when it comes to the time frame of destroying chemical weapons.”


Yet, even as he spoke, U.S. intelligence agencies assessed that Russian scientists were continuing research into new chemical weapons. In August 2020, the Trump administration imposed economic “blacklist” sanctions against three Russian research facilities because of what it said was ongoing work on chemical weapons. Among then was Russia’s 33rd Central Research and Testing Institute, the main military laboratory at Shikhany.

The Biden administration added new sanctions in 2021, and expanded the list to include additional facilities in Moscow and St. Petersburg. The White House also named individual Russians, including military and intelligence officials, as having connections to the assassination attempts against Skripal and Navalny.

“Russia has been in longtime noncompliance with the Chemical Weapons Convention,” a senior State Department official said, repeating the essential conclusion reached by multiple U.S. agencies with insight into ongoing work at Shikhany and other research facilities. “Russia’s noncompliance is manifest in far more than just Novichok use.”


The official, like other U.S. and NATO officials interviewed, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss U.S. assessments of Russia’s weapons programs. Other U.S. officials and diplomats described ongoing research, production and testing activities by Russia, including at Shikhany.

Whether Russia possesses a standing arsenal of battlefield-ready chemical munitions is not publicly known, but such stockpiles are no longer necessary, given Russia’s capacity to manufacture significant amounts of chemical weapons quickly, if they decide to, the officials said. Key weapons facilities have been reconfigured over the past decade for production-on-demand, they said.

“They can make hundreds of kilograms of nerve agent fairly quickly,” said John Gilbert, who oversaw U.S. inspection teams in Russia under a Defense Department program that helped Moscow dismantle its Cold War chemical arsenal. “It could happen in a matter of double-digit days.”

The facilities at Shikhany have traditionally lacked the technical sophistication and safety systems common to industrial chemical plants in the West. The Pentagon’s teams visited poorly guarded Russian storage buildings in which huge quantities of nerve agents were kept in rail cars with their wheels removed. The task of periodically checking the liquids was typically carried out by a young Russian who climbed on top of the tanks with a dipstick.

Yet, the Soviet Union’s chemical engineers knew their craft, and some clearly were unhappy to see the fruits of decades of labor reduced to incinerator soot, Gilbert said.

“There was a lot of hesitation, just as there was among Army chemical corps troops in this country,” Gilbert said. “To some, it was as if their whole life was being invalidated. And they didn’t like it.”

‘Gray warfare’

Ultimately, it was Novichok that served as a bridge between the old Soviet chemical weapon program and the Kremlin’s evolving, 21st century ambitions. Developed at Shikhany in the waning years of the Soviet empire, it was Russia’s deadliest nerve agent, and a carefully guarded state secret.

Novichok’s distinctive chemical formula differed from that of other known nerve agents, and because of this, Novichok was initially omitted from the Chemical Weapons Convention’s list of banned substances. Russia could thus continue to tinker with the new weapon without technically violating their treaty obligations, said Gregory Koblentz, a biological and chemical weapons expert and director of the Biodefense Graduate Program at George Mason University’s Schar School of Policy and Government.

Kremlin officials at that time also believed that Novichok could not be detected in standard forensics tests used by Western governments. That made Novichok a perfect murder weapon: an ideal choice for use in clandestine assassination attempts by Russia’s intelligence services.

“Russia didn't just inherit the Soviet chemical weapons arsenal; they also inherited the secrecy and deception that surrounded the program,” Koblentz said.

Inside the transfer of foreign military equipment to Ukrainian soldiers

After the decision to target Skripal — a turncoat spy who was particularly reviled by Putin — two military intelligence operatives were dispatched to the defector’s new home in Salisbury, England, with about a third of an ounce of Novichok concealed inside a modified perfume bottle. Skripal was severely stricken, along with his daughter, Yulia, and a local police officer, but all three recovered after aggressive treatment by British doctors using atropine, an nerve-agent antidote.

The would-be assassins carelessly discarded the perfume vial — an unthinkable blunder for professional hit men. The bottle was later found by a British man who was undergoing treatment for drug addiction. The man gave the bottle to his girlfriend, who died after dabbing a bit of the odorless liquid on her wrist.

Moscow denied any involvement in the attempted murder, and instead promoted false narratives claiming that others were behind the attack, including possibly Britain itself. But as the investigation was underway, Dutch police disrupted an alleged plot by a different set of Russian operatives to hack into computers of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, the Hague-based international watchdog that was in the process of examining samples of the poison used against Skripal.

Two years later, a reformulated Novichok weapon was used in another high-profile assassination attempt. This time the attack occurred inside Russia, and the target was Navalny, Putin’s most vociferous political foe. Navalny survived, but only after being allowed to fly to Berlin for medical treatment. Four different laboratories ultimately confirmed that Navalny had been poisoned with Novichok.

The Kremlin again denied any role in the attack, suggesting publicly that Germany or another Western country was responsible.

The question — still unsettled, and the subject of a furious debate inside the U.S. intelligence community — is whether the Kremlin believed that the use of its signature poison would be detected, or whether the two assassination attempts against prominent Putin foes were a deliberate effort to send a message.

In any case, the attacks revealed Putin’s willingness to engage in what Weber, the former Pentagon official, describes as a kind “gray warfare” using an unconventional and highly lethal weapon.

“We know about battlefield use of chemical weapons, and we know the stuff that terrorists do, and now there’s this: a state-sponsored, covert delivery of a weapon of mass destruction,” Weber said. “This is a new category, and we need to pay attention.”

Up to now, each of Russia’s known attempts to use chemicals weapons have been accompanied by a public-relations offensive, of a very particular sort. After the Skripal and Navlany attacks, Moscow dispatched top Russian officials to the United Nations and other prominent venues, armed with vigorous denials and concocted stories that sought to deflect blame. The false narratives were then repeated on state-run Russian media and recycled on social media platforms, including in the West.

Indeed, for Russia — just as with its similarly accused ally, Syria — the official denial campaigns are often as complex and elaborate as the attacks themselves. U.S. officials say a pretense of deniability appears to be important to Moscow, regardless of the strength of the evidence pointing to Russia’s guilt.


People stand in front of damaged buildings, in the town of Douma, the site of a suspected chemical weapons attack, near Damascus, Syria, on April 16, 2018. (Hassan Ammar/AP)

For that reason, many officials and experts believe that Russia may try to cloak its involvement in any future chemical weapons attack in Ukraine. Rather than using signature Russian nerve agents such as Novichok, it might resort to using anhydrous ammonia or chlorine — two substances that are readily available in an industrial country such as Ukraine.

Chlorine was used as chemical weapon in World War I. Although far less lethal than sarin or Novichok, chlorine can be effective in driving urban defenders from their barricades, as the Assad government discovered during Syria’s civil war. After giving up the bulk of its sarin stockpile in 2014, Assad used chlorine bombs dozens of times, as a siege weapon against entrenched fighters, or a psychological weapon against civilians in villages sympathetic to the rebels.

On Thursday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken suggested that such an attack by Russia may be coming, accusing Moscow of “setting the stage to use a chemical weapon, and then falsely blame Ukraine to justify escalating its attacks on the Ukrainian people.”

Any chemical attack could cause hundreds of casualties and possibly alter the course of the war. But achieving a true breakthrough would probably require large quantities of chemicals, making Ukraine the venue for the first large-scale use of such weapons since World War I, Maj. Gen. Mick Ryan, an Australian army officer and adjunct scholar at the Modern War Institute at the U.S. Military Academy, said in a Twitter post.

“If we think the war is already horrific, we haven’t seen the worst of it,” Ryan wrote. If it happens, he added, “the US President and NATO will have a very hard choice to make.”


Crafty_Dog

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Understanding Russian nuke theory
« Reply #553 on: March 23, 2022, 03:51:41 AM »
How Putin Exploits America’s Fear of Nuclear War
The U.S. has better global intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities than Russia.
By David C. Gompert
March 22, 2022 6:21 pm ET
WSJ

Americans shudder at the mention of nuclear war, especially by Vladimir Putin. This reaction is understandable—civilization is at stake—but it can obscure thinking about whether and how nuclear war between Russia and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization might begin and proceed. Absent an informed assessment of this grave matter, U.S. policy makers likely would be gripped by visceral fear and avoid any action that could heighten the risk of nuclear war. Mr. Putin is showing he can manipulate these fears and thus avoid strong Western responses to his war crimes.


Russian doctrine on nuclear war is clear: Moscow has said it would consider initiating nuclear hostilities if Russian soil is attacked by nonnuclear weapons or the existence of the Russian state is in danger. Mr. Putin’s public statements since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine confirm this. He hasn’t said Russia would resort to nuclear weapons if NATO were to intervene in defense of Ukraine. Rather, he has restated that the threshold for Russian use of nuclear weapons would be “threats to our country.” Mr. Putin says NATO intervention in Ukraine could escalate to nuclear war, but not that Russia would use nuclear weapons in reaction to such intervention.

A NATO attack on Russian territory in the course of intervention in Ukraine could trigger Russian use of nuclear weapons. But NATO has sufficient military superiority that it doesn’t need to attack Russian territory to help Ukraine defeat Russia. This isn’t to recommend such intervention; rather, it is to question the logic that such intervention would set off a nuclear conflict.

Yet voices of authority have reinforced the perception that direct NATO-Russia hostilities would result in Russian use of nuclear weapons. The U.N. secretary-general has said as much. In recent congressional testimony, U.S. intelligence bosses said the danger of nuclear war would increase if NATO forces entered Ukraine yet failed to explain that Russian doctrine regarding attacks on Russia itself as the threshold to initiate nuclear war.


This doesn’t mean that Mr. Putin can’t use nuclear weapons in Ukraine. He has a numerical advantage over NATO in tactical nuclear weapons. Yet there are three powerful inhibitions against doing so. First, as we see daily, Russian forces are capable of leveling Ukrainian cities with nonnuclear weapons, though it would take longer. Second, Russia would become a permanent global outcast if it used nuclear weapons against Ukrainian cities. Third and most important, if Russia used nuclear weapons against NATO forces in Ukraine or against NATO members, it could face nuclear retaliation by the U.S. as well as the U.K. and France.

The point isn’t that the U.S. can ignore the danger of nuclear war, but rather that Russia has at least as much to fear as NATO does—a reality that is clouded by Mr. Putin’s brazen threats and Washington’s palpable fear. Russian military strategists believe the U.S. has exceptional, multilayered capabilities for such a contingency. U.S. global intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities are far better than Russia’s. These could be used to direct nonnuclear strikes with global reach and pinpoint accuracy against Russia’s retaliatory (“second strike”) nuclear forces. The U.S. also has more survivable, accurate and reliable offensive nuclear forces that could further decimate Russia’s strategic deterrent on the ground. Whatever Russian missiles survive such disarming strikes would be picked off by U.S. missile defense systems, or so the Russians believe.

Western hysteria about Mr. Putin’s willingness to use nuclear weapons has been compounded by the suspicion that he has a screw loose. Yet there has been no authoritative diagnosis that Mr. Putin’s psychiatric state would cause him to use nuclear weapons despite the danger of Russia’s annihilation in retaliation. When U.S. intelligence chiefs testify that Mr. Putin is mad, they mean angry, not insane. There is also an impression in the West that Mr. Putin has complete control over the release of nuclear weapons. He doesn’t. While his approval to launch is required, he has no way to act over the opposition of his top generals.

This isn’t to say that U.S. policy makers and intelligence chiefs should ignore the possibility that any direct hostilities between the U.S. and Russia could increase the risk of nuclear war. Rather, it is to say that Russia should be at least as fearful as America is. The more the U.S. falls for Mr. Putin’s nuclear messaging, and the more we signal that the U.S. dreads nuclear war more than Russia does, the less restrained Mr. Putin will be in Ukraine, and the more Ukrainian lives will be lost.

Mr. Gompert served as acting director of national intelligence, 2009-10.

G M

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Re: Understanding Russian nuke theory
« Reply #554 on: March 23, 2022, 07:15:52 AM »
No one with an IQ above room temperature trusts the geniuses behind the endless cascade of failures, foreign and domestic since the election was stolen. The crew that can’t distinguish between a man and a woman without the assistance of a biologist isn’t up to playing nuclear brinkmanship games with the future of humanity in the balance.



How Putin Exploits America’s Fear of Nuclear War
The U.S. has better global intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities than Russia.
By David C. Gompert
March 22, 2022 6:21 pm ET
WSJ

Americans shudder at the mention of nuclear war, especially by Vladimir Putin. This reaction is understandable—civilization is at stake—but it can obscure thinking about whether and how nuclear war between Russia and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization might begin and proceed. Absent an informed assessment of this grave matter, U.S. policy makers likely would be gripped by visceral fear and avoid any action that could heighten the risk of nuclear war. Mr. Putin is showing he can manipulate these fears and thus avoid strong Western responses to his war crimes.


Russian doctrine on nuclear war is clear: Moscow has said it would consider initiating nuclear hostilities if Russian soil is attacked by nonnuclear weapons or the existence of the Russian state is in danger. Mr. Putin’s public statements since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine confirm this. He hasn’t said Russia would resort to nuclear weapons if NATO were to intervene in defense of Ukraine. Rather, he has restated that the threshold for Russian use of nuclear weapons would be “threats to our country.” Mr. Putin says NATO intervention in Ukraine could escalate to nuclear war, but not that Russia would use nuclear weapons in reaction to such intervention.

A NATO attack on Russian territory in the course of intervention in Ukraine could trigger Russian use of nuclear weapons. But NATO has sufficient military superiority that it doesn’t need to attack Russian territory to help Ukraine defeat Russia. This isn’t to recommend such intervention; rather, it is to question the logic that such intervention would set off a nuclear conflict.

Yet voices of authority have reinforced the perception that direct NATO-Russia hostilities would result in Russian use of nuclear weapons. The U.N. secretary-general has said as much. In recent congressional testimony, U.S. intelligence bosses said the danger of nuclear war would increase if NATO forces entered Ukraine yet failed to explain that Russian doctrine regarding attacks on Russia itself as the threshold to initiate nuclear war.


This doesn’t mean that Mr. Putin can’t use nuclear weapons in Ukraine. He has a numerical advantage over NATO in tactical nuclear weapons. Yet there are three powerful inhibitions against doing so. First, as we see daily, Russian forces are capable of leveling Ukrainian cities with nonnuclear weapons, though it would take longer. Second, Russia would become a permanent global outcast if it used nuclear weapons against Ukrainian cities. Third and most important, if Russia used nuclear weapons against NATO forces in Ukraine or against NATO members, it could face nuclear retaliation by the U.S. as well as the U.K. and France.

The point isn’t that the U.S. can ignore the danger of nuclear war, but rather that Russia has at least as much to fear as NATO does—a reality that is clouded by Mr. Putin’s brazen threats and Washington’s palpable fear. Russian military strategists believe the U.S. has exceptional, multilayered capabilities for such a contingency. U.S. global intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities are far better than Russia’s. These could be used to direct nonnuclear strikes with global reach and pinpoint accuracy against Russia’s retaliatory (“second strike”) nuclear forces. The U.S. also has more survivable, accurate and reliable offensive nuclear forces that could further decimate Russia’s strategic deterrent on the ground. Whatever Russian missiles survive such disarming strikes would be picked off by U.S. missile defense systems, or so the Russians believe.

Western hysteria about Mr. Putin’s willingness to use nuclear weapons has been compounded by the suspicion that he has a screw loose. Yet there has been no authoritative diagnosis that Mr. Putin’s psychiatric state would cause him to use nuclear weapons despite the danger of Russia’s annihilation in retaliation. When U.S. intelligence chiefs testify that Mr. Putin is mad, they mean angry, not insane. There is also an impression in the West that Mr. Putin has complete control over the release of nuclear weapons. He doesn’t. While his approval to launch is required, he has no way to act over the opposition of his top generals.

This isn’t to say that U.S. policy makers and intelligence chiefs should ignore the possibility that any direct hostilities between the U.S. and Russia could increase the risk of nuclear war. Rather, it is to say that Russia should be at least as fearful as America is. The more the U.S. falls for Mr. Putin’s nuclear messaging, and the more we signal that the U.S. dreads nuclear war more than Russia does, the less restrained Mr. Putin will be in Ukraine, and the more Ukrainian lives will be lost.

Mr. Gompert served as acting director of national intelligence, 2009-10.

G M

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Re: Understanding Russian nuke theory
« Reply #555 on: March 23, 2022, 10:37:37 AM »
https://pjmedia.com/vodkapundit/2022/03/23/joe-biden-and-world-war-iii-for-dummies-n1583519



No one with an IQ above room temperature trusts the geniuses behind the endless cascade of failures, foreign and domestic since the election was stolen. The crew that can’t distinguish between a man and a woman without the assistance of a biologist isn’t up to playing nuclear brinkmanship games with the future of humanity in the balance.



How Putin Exploits America’s Fear of Nuclear War
The U.S. has better global intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities than Russia.
By David C. Gompert
March 22, 2022 6:21 pm ET
WSJ

Americans shudder at the mention of nuclear war, especially by Vladimir Putin. This reaction is understandable—civilization is at stake—but it can obscure thinking about whether and how nuclear war between Russia and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization might begin and proceed. Absent an informed assessment of this grave matter, U.S. policy makers likely would be gripped by visceral fear and avoid any action that could heighten the risk of nuclear war. Mr. Putin is showing he can manipulate these fears and thus avoid strong Western responses to his war crimes.


Russian doctrine on nuclear war is clear: Moscow has said it would consider initiating nuclear hostilities if Russian soil is attacked by nonnuclear weapons or the existence of the Russian state is in danger. Mr. Putin’s public statements since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine confirm this. He hasn’t said Russia would resort to nuclear weapons if NATO were to intervene in defense of Ukraine. Rather, he has restated that the threshold for Russian use of nuclear weapons would be “threats to our country.” Mr. Putin says NATO intervention in Ukraine could escalate to nuclear war, but not that Russia would use nuclear weapons in reaction to such intervention.

A NATO attack on Russian territory in the course of intervention in Ukraine could trigger Russian use of nuclear weapons. But NATO has sufficient military superiority that it doesn’t need to attack Russian territory to help Ukraine defeat Russia. This isn’t to recommend such intervention; rather, it is to question the logic that such intervention would set off a nuclear conflict.

Yet voices of authority have reinforced the perception that direct NATO-Russia hostilities would result in Russian use of nuclear weapons. The U.N. secretary-general has said as much. In recent congressional testimony, U.S. intelligence bosses said the danger of nuclear war would increase if NATO forces entered Ukraine yet failed to explain that Russian doctrine regarding attacks on Russia itself as the threshold to initiate nuclear war.


This doesn’t mean that Mr. Putin can’t use nuclear weapons in Ukraine. He has a numerical advantage over NATO in tactical nuclear weapons. Yet there are three powerful inhibitions against doing so. First, as we see daily, Russian forces are capable of leveling Ukrainian cities with nonnuclear weapons, though it would take longer. Second, Russia would become a permanent global outcast if it used nuclear weapons against Ukrainian cities. Third and most important, if Russia used nuclear weapons against NATO forces in Ukraine or against NATO members, it could face nuclear retaliation by the U.S. as well as the U.K. and France.

The point isn’t that the U.S. can ignore the danger of nuclear war, but rather that Russia has at least as much to fear as NATO does—a reality that is clouded by Mr. Putin’s brazen threats and Washington’s palpable fear. Russian military strategists believe the U.S. has exceptional, multilayered capabilities for such a contingency. U.S. global intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities are far better than Russia’s. These could be used to direct nonnuclear strikes with global reach and pinpoint accuracy against Russia’s retaliatory (“second strike”) nuclear forces. The U.S. also has more survivable, accurate and reliable offensive nuclear forces that could further decimate Russia’s strategic deterrent on the ground. Whatever Russian missiles survive such disarming strikes would be picked off by U.S. missile defense systems, or so the Russians believe.

Western hysteria about Mr. Putin’s willingness to use nuclear weapons has been compounded by the suspicion that he has a screw loose. Yet there has been no authoritative diagnosis that Mr. Putin’s psychiatric state would cause him to use nuclear weapons despite the danger of Russia’s annihilation in retaliation. When U.S. intelligence chiefs testify that Mr. Putin is mad, they mean angry, not insane. There is also an impression in the West that Mr. Putin has complete control over the release of nuclear weapons. He doesn’t. While his approval to launch is required, he has no way to act over the opposition of his top generals.

This isn’t to say that U.S. policy makers and intelligence chiefs should ignore the possibility that any direct hostilities between the U.S. and Russia could increase the risk of nuclear war. Rather, it is to say that Russia should be at least as fearful as America is. The more the U.S. falls for Mr. Putin’s nuclear messaging, and the more we signal that the U.S. dreads nuclear war more than Russia does, the less restrained Mr. Putin will be in Ukraine, and the more Ukrainian lives will be lost.

Mr. Gompert served as acting director of national intelligence, 2009-10.

ccp

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Re: Nuclear War, Germ War, Chem War, WMD
« Reply #556 on: March 23, 2022, 10:58:03 AM »
"https://pjmedia.com/vodkapundit/2022/03/23/joe-biden-and-world-war-iii-for-dummies-n1583519"

I can hear the name calling and insults being hurled now

over this

he is an apologist for Putin
he is weak
etc etc.........

G M

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Re: Understanding Russian nuke theory
« Reply #557 on: March 23, 2022, 11:18:57 PM »
https://www.zerohedge.com/military/here-are-all-latest-news-and-developments-ukraine-war-march-23

What could possibly go wrong?


https://pjmedia.com/vodkapundit/2022/03/23/joe-biden-and-world-war-iii-for-dummies-n1583519



No one with an IQ above room temperature trusts the geniuses behind the endless cascade of failures, foreign and domestic since the election was stolen. The crew that can’t distinguish between a man and a woman without the assistance of a biologist isn’t up to playing nuclear brinkmanship games with the future of humanity in the balance.



How Putin Exploits America’s Fear of Nuclear War
The U.S. has better global intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities than Russia.
By David C. Gompert
March 22, 2022 6:21 pm ET
WSJ

Americans shudder at the mention of nuclear war, especially by Vladimir Putin. This reaction is understandable—civilization is at stake—but it can obscure thinking about whether and how nuclear war between Russia and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization might begin and proceed. Absent an informed assessment of this grave matter, U.S. policy makers likely would be gripped by visceral fear and avoid any action that could heighten the risk of nuclear war. Mr. Putin is showing he can manipulate these fears and thus avoid strong Western responses to his war crimes.


Russian doctrine on nuclear war is clear: Moscow has said it would consider initiating nuclear hostilities if Russian soil is attacked by nonnuclear weapons or the existence of the Russian state is in danger. Mr. Putin’s public statements since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine confirm this. He hasn’t said Russia would resort to nuclear weapons if NATO were to intervene in defense of Ukraine. Rather, he has restated that the threshold for Russian use of nuclear weapons would be “threats to our country.” Mr. Putin says NATO intervention in Ukraine could escalate to nuclear war, but not that Russia would use nuclear weapons in reaction to such intervention.

A NATO attack on Russian territory in the course of intervention in Ukraine could trigger Russian use of nuclear weapons. But NATO has sufficient military superiority that it doesn’t need to attack Russian territory to help Ukraine defeat Russia. This isn’t to recommend such intervention; rather, it is to question the logic that such intervention would set off a nuclear conflict.

Yet voices of authority have reinforced the perception that direct NATO-Russia hostilities would result in Russian use of nuclear weapons. The U.N. secretary-general has said as much. In recent congressional testimony, U.S. intelligence bosses said the danger of nuclear war would increase if NATO forces entered Ukraine yet failed to explain that Russian doctrine regarding attacks on Russia itself as the threshold to initiate nuclear war.


This doesn’t mean that Mr. Putin can’t use nuclear weapons in Ukraine. He has a numerical advantage over NATO in tactical nuclear weapons. Yet there are three powerful inhibitions against doing so. First, as we see daily, Russian forces are capable of leveling Ukrainian cities with nonnuclear weapons, though it would take longer. Second, Russia would become a permanent global outcast if it used nuclear weapons against Ukrainian cities. Third and most important, if Russia used nuclear weapons against NATO forces in Ukraine or against NATO members, it could face nuclear retaliation by the U.S. as well as the U.K. and France.

The point isn’t that the U.S. can ignore the danger of nuclear war, but rather that Russia has at least as much to fear as NATO does—a reality that is clouded by Mr. Putin’s brazen threats and Washington’s palpable fear. Russian military strategists believe the U.S. has exceptional, multilayered capabilities for such a contingency. U.S. global intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities are far better than Russia’s. These could be used to direct nonnuclear strikes with global reach and pinpoint accuracy against Russia’s retaliatory (“second strike”) nuclear forces. The U.S. also has more survivable, accurate and reliable offensive nuclear forces that could further decimate Russia’s strategic deterrent on the ground. Whatever Russian missiles survive such disarming strikes would be picked off by U.S. missile defense systems, or so the Russians believe.

Western hysteria about Mr. Putin’s willingness to use nuclear weapons has been compounded by the suspicion that he has a screw loose. Yet there has been no authoritative diagnosis that Mr. Putin’s psychiatric state would cause him to use nuclear weapons despite the danger of Russia’s annihilation in retaliation. When U.S. intelligence chiefs testify that Mr. Putin is mad, they mean angry, not insane. There is also an impression in the West that Mr. Putin has complete control over the release of nuclear weapons. He doesn’t. While his approval to launch is required, he has no way to act over the opposition of his top generals.

This isn’t to say that U.S. policy makers and intelligence chiefs should ignore the possibility that any direct hostilities between the U.S. and Russia could increase the risk of nuclear war. Rather, it is to say that Russia should be at least as fearful as America is. The more the U.S. falls for Mr. Putin’s nuclear messaging, and the more we signal that the U.S. dreads nuclear war more than Russia does, the less restrained Mr. Putin will be in Ukraine, and the more Ukrainian lives will be lost.

Mr. Gompert served as acting director of national intelligence, 2009-10.

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ET
« Reply #562 on: April 04, 2022, 03:58:43 PM »
‘No Offensive Biologic Weapons’ in Ukrainian Biolabs: Pentagon
By Katabella Roberts April 4, 2022 Updated: April 4, 2022biggersmaller Print
There are “no offensive biologic weapons” in the Ukrainian laboratories that the United States has been funding, a Pentagon official told Congress on April 1.

Deborah Rosenbaum, assistant secretary of defense for nuclear, chemical, and biological defense programs, told the House Subcommittee on Intelligence and Special Operations on April 1 that there are “unequivocally … no offensive biologic weapons in the Ukraine laboratories that the United States has been involved with.”

The Pentagon funds labs in Ukraine through its Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA), a support agency within the Department of Defense for countering weapons of mass destruction, and U.S. and Ukrainian officials both say the labs seek to prevent bioweapons and pathogens.

According to a Pentagon fact sheet released in March (pdf), since 2005, the United States has “invested approximately $200 million in Ukraine … supporting 46 Ukrainian laboratories, health facilities, and diagnostic sites.”

The Biological Threat Reduction Program has “improved Ukraine’s biological safety, security, and surveillance for both human and animal health,” according to the fact sheet.

However, Russia has, in recent months, accused the U.S.-funded laboratories in Ukraine of developing biological warfare weapons. Such allegations were being aired on Russian state-run media even before Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24.

The Russian Ministry of Defense issued a March 6 statement on Telegram accusing Ukraine of having destroyed disease-causing pathogens being studied at a lab in Ukraine that the ministry said is funded by the U.S. Department of Defense.

Russia’s allegations regarding the biological laboratories appeared to be repeated by the Chinese regime on March 7.

The World Health Organization stated in March that it advised the Ministry of Health in Ukraine to destroy “high-threat pathogens to prevent any potential spills.”

But analysts believe that the narrative being pushed by the Kremlin is part of its plan to create a false-flag operation in an attempt to justify using chemical weapons operations in Ukraine itself.

Rosenbaum told officials on April 1 that “the department remains very concerned about the ability to get accurate and transparent information out to the U.S. public, as well as certainly our allies and the rest of the world.”


“So one of the things that the department has been doing—and this is particularly related to the public health laboratories in Ukraine that is being tragically used by the Russians as a potential for a false flag operation—from the White House on down to the Defense Department, as well as Department of State, as well as all of the vehicles that we have to be able to communicate accurate information out about this and the work that has been underway,” she said.

Robert Pope, director of the DTRA’s Cooperative Threat Reduction Program, told the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists in February that the labs might contain Soviet-era bioweapons and warned that the conflict in Ukraine could accidentally lead to the release of dangerous disease-causing pathogens.

“I think the Russians know enough about the kinds of pathogens that are stored in biological research laboratories that I don’t think they would deliberately target a laboratory,” Pope said. “But what I do have concerns about is that they would … be accidentally damaged during this Russian invasion.”

Rosenbaum made her comments shortly after White House press secretary Jen Psaki cautioned officials to be on the lookout “for Russia to possibly use chemical or biological weapons in Ukraine or to create a false flag operation using them.”

The White House’s concerns also have been repeated by NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg and the UK’s Ministry of Defense, which said last month that it had “seen no evidence to support” the accusations made by Russia.

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Re: ET
« Reply #563 on: April 04, 2022, 04:02:18 PM »
So, just "defensive biologic weapons' then?

 :roll:

‘No Offensive Biologic Weapons’ in Ukrainian Biolabs: Pentagon
By Katabella Roberts April 4, 2022 Updated: April 4, 2022biggersmaller Print
There are “no offensive biologic weapons” in the Ukrainian laboratories that the United States has been funding, a Pentagon official told Congress on April 1.

Deborah Rosenbaum, assistant secretary of defense for nuclear, chemical, and biological defense programs, told the House Subcommittee on Intelligence and Special Operations on April 1 that there are “unequivocally … no offensive biologic weapons in the Ukraine laboratories that the United States has been involved with.”

The Pentagon funds labs in Ukraine through its Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA), a support agency within the Department of Defense for countering weapons of mass destruction, and U.S. and Ukrainian officials both say the labs seek to prevent bioweapons and pathogens.

According to a Pentagon fact sheet released in March (pdf), since 2005, the United States has “invested approximately $200 million in Ukraine … supporting 46 Ukrainian laboratories, health facilities, and diagnostic sites.”

The Biological Threat Reduction Program has “improved Ukraine’s biological safety, security, and surveillance for both human and animal health,” according to the fact sheet.

However, Russia has, in recent months, accused the U.S.-funded laboratories in Ukraine of developing biological warfare weapons. Such allegations were being aired on Russian state-run media even before Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24.

The Russian Ministry of Defense issued a March 6 statement on Telegram accusing Ukraine of having destroyed disease-causing pathogens being studied at a lab in Ukraine that the ministry said is funded by the U.S. Department of Defense.

Russia’s allegations regarding the biological laboratories appeared to be repeated by the Chinese regime on March 7.

The World Health Organization stated in March that it advised the Ministry of Health in Ukraine to destroy “high-threat pathogens to prevent any potential spills.”

But analysts believe that the narrative being pushed by the Kremlin is part of its plan to create a false-flag operation in an attempt to justify using chemical weapons operations in Ukraine itself.

Rosenbaum told officials on April 1 that “the department remains very concerned about the ability to get accurate and transparent information out to the U.S. public, as well as certainly our allies and the rest of the world.”


“So one of the things that the department has been doing—and this is particularly related to the public health laboratories in Ukraine that is being tragically used by the Russians as a potential for a false flag operation—from the White House on down to the Defense Department, as well as Department of State, as well as all of the vehicles that we have to be able to communicate accurate information out about this and the work that has been underway,” she said.

Robert Pope, director of the DTRA’s Cooperative Threat Reduction Program, told the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists in February that the labs might contain Soviet-era bioweapons and warned that the conflict in Ukraine could accidentally lead to the release of dangerous disease-causing pathogens.

“I think the Russians know enough about the kinds of pathogens that are stored in biological research laboratories that I don’t think they would deliberately target a laboratory,” Pope said. “But what I do have concerns about is that they would … be accidentally damaged during this Russian invasion.”

Rosenbaum made her comments shortly after White House press secretary Jen Psaki cautioned officials to be on the lookout “for Russia to possibly use chemical or biological weapons in Ukraine or to create a false flag operation using them.”

The White House’s concerns also have been repeated by NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg and the UK’s Ministry of Defense, which said last month that it had “seen no evidence to support” the accusations made by Russia.

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Re: ET
« Reply #564 on: April 04, 2022, 04:04:31 PM »
https://media.gab.com/system/media_attachments/files/101/128/041/original/0b67177410e4ca6c.jpg



So, just "defensive biologic weapons' then?

 :roll:

‘No Offensive Biologic Weapons’ in Ukrainian Biolabs: Pentagon
By Katabella Roberts April 4, 2022 Updated: April 4, 2022biggersmaller Print
There are “no offensive biologic weapons” in the Ukrainian laboratories that the United States has been funding, a Pentagon official told Congress on April 1.

Deborah Rosenbaum, assistant secretary of defense for nuclear, chemical, and biological defense programs, told the House Subcommittee on Intelligence and Special Operations on April 1 that there are “unequivocally … no offensive biologic weapons in the Ukraine laboratories that the United States has been involved with.”

The Pentagon funds labs in Ukraine through its Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA), a support agency within the Department of Defense for countering weapons of mass destruction, and U.S. and Ukrainian officials both say the labs seek to prevent bioweapons and pathogens.

According to a Pentagon fact sheet released in March (pdf), since 2005, the United States has “invested approximately $200 million in Ukraine … supporting 46 Ukrainian laboratories, health facilities, and diagnostic sites.”

The Biological Threat Reduction Program has “improved Ukraine’s biological safety, security, and surveillance for both human and animal health,” according to the fact sheet.

However, Russia has, in recent months, accused the U.S.-funded laboratories in Ukraine of developing biological warfare weapons. Such allegations were being aired on Russian state-run media even before Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24.

The Russian Ministry of Defense issued a March 6 statement on Telegram accusing Ukraine of having destroyed disease-causing pathogens being studied at a lab in Ukraine that the ministry said is funded by the U.S. Department of Defense.

Russia’s allegations regarding the biological laboratories appeared to be repeated by the Chinese regime on March 7.

The World Health Organization stated in March that it advised the Ministry of Health in Ukraine to destroy “high-threat pathogens to prevent any potential spills.”

But analysts believe that the narrative being pushed by the Kremlin is part of its plan to create a false-flag operation in an attempt to justify using chemical weapons operations in Ukraine itself.

Rosenbaum told officials on April 1 that “the department remains very concerned about the ability to get accurate and transparent information out to the U.S. public, as well as certainly our allies and the rest of the world.”


“So one of the things that the department has been doing—and this is particularly related to the public health laboratories in Ukraine that is being tragically used by the Russians as a potential for a false flag operation—from the White House on down to the Defense Department, as well as Department of State, as well as all of the vehicles that we have to be able to communicate accurate information out about this and the work that has been underway,” she said.

Robert Pope, director of the DTRA’s Cooperative Threat Reduction Program, told the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists in February that the labs might contain Soviet-era bioweapons and warned that the conflict in Ukraine could accidentally lead to the release of dangerous disease-causing pathogens.

“I think the Russians know enough about the kinds of pathogens that are stored in biological research laboratories that I don’t think they would deliberately target a laboratory,” Pope said. “But what I do have concerns about is that they would … be accidentally damaged during this Russian invasion.”

Rosenbaum made her comments shortly after White House press secretary Jen Psaki cautioned officials to be on the lookout “for Russia to possibly use chemical or biological weapons in Ukraine or to create a false flag operation using them.”

The White House’s concerns also have been repeated by NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg and the UK’s Ministry of Defense, which said last month that it had “seen no evidence to support” the accusations made by Russia.

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This sounds spectacularly stupid
« Reply #565 on: April 05, 2022, 02:50:32 AM »
MILITARY

Pentagon axing its only nuclear gravity bomb

Retirement motivated by review of strategic weapons policy

BY BILL GERTZ THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The Pentagon will eliminate the sole nuclear gravity bomb in the U.S. strategic weapons arsenal capable of blasting deeply buried underground structures as part of the Biden administration’s review of strategic weapons policy, according to U.S. officials.

The retirement of the B83 bomb, a megaton-class weapon delivered by B-2 stealth bombers, was disclosed to Congress last month as part of the Biden administration’s classified nuclear posture review, a major reassessment of strategic forces and their employment. The bomb is “costly to maintain and of increasingly limited value,” a senior defense official told The Washington Times.

The decision to cancel the weapon carries what defense officials say is the increasing challenge for U.S. planners to deter nuclear adversaries such as China, North Korea and Russia. All three states are expanding their nuclear forces with the addition of new strategic weapons and warheads.

“The Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) considered the need to hold at risk adversary hard and deeply buried targets,” the defense official said. “In reviewing the diminishing role of the B83-1

in accomplishing this task, the NPR concluded that this weapon should be retired.”

Supporters of the B83 say it is still needed for deterring China, which has built a vast network of underground tunnels estimated to be 3,000 milessnaking throughout the country. The tunnel system, dubbed the “Underground Great Wall,” is used for producing and storing China’s growing nuclear arsenal.

In addition to the B83, the administration’s proposed budget cancels plans for a nuclear sea-launched cruise missile, known as SLCM-N. Defense sources said both the retirement of the B83 and canceling the SLCM-N were opposed by U.S. Strategic Commander Adm. Charles Richard.

Adm. Richard, the senior military leader in charge of nuclear forces, listed the B83 bomb as one of several weapons needed to be kept in the arsenal to maintain nuclear deterrence until a replacement weapon is identified.

Rep. Doug Lamborn, the top Republican on the House Armed Services strategic forces subcommittee, said the Pentagon decision to scrap the bomb was as a “needless, self-inflicted wound” for U.S. strategic deterrence.

“This is a bad decision because it takes away one option we have in our tool kit that keeps potential adversaries guessing,” Mr. Lamborn said in an interview.

The B83 is the sole weapon capable of addressing certain threats and targets “that can’t be dealt with any other way,” the Colorado Republican added.

Mr. Lamborn said Republicans will seek to reverse the B83 retirement by inserting language in this year’s national defense authorization bill that requires the military to maintain the bomb, noting there is bipartisan support for the initiative.

Deterring nuclear threats is increasingly difficult.

“We keep reducing the number and type of our nuclear weapons, while China and Russia are increasing and modernizing the number and type of their weapons,” Mr. Lamborn said. “At the end of the day we need a stronger nuclear defense posture, and we need to reject this particular NPR.”

A congressional defense aide said the administration “does not have a plan to replace” the B83. Instead, a study will be conducted in the future to determine how best to get at deeply buried targets, the main mission of the B83, the aide said.

“They have no plan to replace it with either a nuclear or conventional weapon and readily admit that they are assuming risk in this space,” the aide said.

Compounding the problem, Chinese, North Korean, Russian and potentially Iranian military forces are moving more of their nuclear forces and warheads into hardened underground structures that the B83 is designed to counter.

Retiring the bomb will not save large amounts of money. The cost of refurbishing and extending the life of the weapon is estimated to be between $100 million and $200 million. That amount is relatively small considering the administration is engaged in a major modernization of U.S. nuclear forces costing about $1.2 trillion over the next 30 years.

Last year’s budget sought $50 million for B83 life extension.

Initially, the Pentagon considered replacing the B83 with another nuclear gravity bomb known as the B61-12. That bomb has some of the ground-penetrating capabilities of the B83. But the B61-12 is unable to match its explosive power.

The B83 has an estimated yield of 1.2 megatons, or the equivalent of 1.2 million tons of TNT.

NATO Supreme Allied Commander Gen. Tod D. Wolters told a House hearing last week he agreed with Adm. Richard on the need to keep both the B83 and the SLCM-N, since the “multiple options exacerbate the challenge for potential enemies against us.” Gen. Wolters said he was not consulted by the Pentagon planners on the decision to eliminate the B83, despite being in charge of NATO’s nuclear forces deterring Russian nuclear threats.

The nuclear posture review was sent to Congress late last month in classifi ed form. A senior defense official told reporters that the still-secret review includes a direction from policymakers to diminish the role of nuclear weapons in American defense strategy.

The review “underscores our commitment to reducing the role of nuclear weapons and reestablishing our leadership in arms control,” a Pentagon fact sheet states. “We will continue to emphasize strategic stability, seek to avoid costly arms races, and facilitate risk reduction and arms control arrangements where possible.”

But the shift come as a time when U.S. analysts believe China is engaged in what Adm. Richard, the Stratcom commander, has called “strategic breakout” with a major expansion of its nuclear forces, which have long been overshadowed by those held by the U.S. and Russia. In addition to its large underground nuclear complex, Beijing recently began building three large missile fields in western China for the new, 10-warhead DF-41 long-range missile, in addition to adding scores of new road- and rail-mobile ICBMs to its arsenal.

The DF-41s will boost China’s strategic warhead arsenal from about 200 to as many as 1,500 warheads.

North Korea has built several longrange missiles capable of hitting the U.S. and is estimated to have nuclear warheads small enough to be carried by the missiles.

Russia is building several new strategic weapons, including a nuclearpowered cruise missile, nuclear-tipped hypersonic glide vehicles and a megaton- warhead underwater drone. Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly hinted at being ready to use the Kremlin’s nuclear might if NATO allies try to intervene in the fighting in Ukraine. In 2016, U.S. intelligence agencies reported that Russia was building dozens of deep underground nuclear facilities. The construction suggested Moscow is preparing for a future nuclear conflict. Russia also built a large underground strategic command post at Kosvinsky Mountain, located in the Ural Mountains about 850 miles east of Moscow. Underground Russian leadership compounds have been identified at Voronovo, about 46 miles south of Moscow and Sharapova, 34 miles from the capital.

The administration has linked both the nuclear posture review and a missile defense review to a new national defense strategy. However, sources acknowledge that the defense strategy has had to be revised in the aftermath of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

A fact sheet on the national defense strategy identifies “integrated deterrence” as the Pentagon’s main strategy, combining military power with other elements of national power and networks of alliances to protect the homeland. But the still-vague integrated deterrence failed to prevent the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

“They’ve put their pens down on the national security strategy given that integrated deterrence didn’t work in Ukraine,” a defense source said.

Rep. Mike Gallagher, Wisconsin Republican and member of the Armed Services Committee, said the Pentagon’s plan for integrated deterrence “failed in Ukraine,” even though the NATO alliance has been unified by the attack on Kyiv.

“The fact remains … that we attempted to deter an invasion of Ukraine, largely using non-military instruments of national power, and that attempt failed,” he said.

Mr. Putin may not have been deterred by any means, Mr. Gallagher acknowledged, “but integrated deterrence as conceptualized by the Pentagon and as implemented in the specific case of Ukraine, as a matter of fact, failed.”

Patty-Jane Geller, a policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation’s Center for National Defense, said the administration’s new nuclear policies have weakened deterrence by reverting to policies of the Obama administration.

“Mr. Biden’s decision to announce the reduced role of U.S. nuclear weapons as war wages along NATO’s borders could also cause allies to question the administration’s assurance that it will live up to its extended deterrence commitments,” she stated in a Washington Times oped. “In the face of some of the greatest threats to national security, the U.S. must show strength.

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Re: This sounds spectacularly stupid
« Reply #566 on: April 05, 2022, 02:54:06 AM »
We still dominate in transgender awareness training and surgery!


MILITARY

Pentagon axing its only nuclear gravity bomb

Retirement motivated by review of strategic weapons policy

BY BILL GERTZ THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The Pentagon will eliminate the sole nuclear gravity bomb in the U.S. strategic weapons arsenal capable of blasting deeply buried underground structures as part of the Biden administration’s review of strategic weapons policy, according to U.S. officials.

The retirement of the B83 bomb, a megaton-class weapon delivered by B-2 stealth bombers, was disclosed to Congress last month as part of the Biden administration’s classified nuclear posture review, a major reassessment of strategic forces and their employment. The bomb is “costly to maintain and of increasingly limited value,” a senior defense official told The Washington Times.

The decision to cancel the weapon carries what defense officials say is the increasing challenge for U.S. planners to deter nuclear adversaries such as China, North Korea and Russia. All three states are expanding their nuclear forces with the addition of new strategic weapons and warheads.

“The Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) considered the need to hold at risk adversary hard and deeply buried targets,” the defense official said. “In reviewing the diminishing role of the B83-1

in accomplishing this task, the NPR concluded that this weapon should be retired.”

Supporters of the B83 say it is still needed for deterring China, which has built a vast network of underground tunnels estimated to be 3,000 milessnaking throughout the country. The tunnel system, dubbed the “Underground Great Wall,” is used for producing and storing China’s growing nuclear arsenal.

In addition to the B83, the administration’s proposed budget cancels plans for a nuclear sea-launched cruise missile, known as SLCM-N. Defense sources said both the retirement of the B83 and canceling the SLCM-N were opposed by U.S. Strategic Commander Adm. Charles Richard.

Adm. Richard, the senior military leader in charge of nuclear forces, listed the B83 bomb as one of several weapons needed to be kept in the arsenal to maintain nuclear deterrence until a replacement weapon is identified.

Rep. Doug Lamborn, the top Republican on the House Armed Services strategic forces subcommittee, said the Pentagon decision to scrap the bomb was as a “needless, self-inflicted wound” for U.S. strategic deterrence.

“This is a bad decision because it takes away one option we have in our tool kit that keeps potential adversaries guessing,” Mr. Lamborn said in an interview.

The B83 is the sole weapon capable of addressing certain threats and targets “that can’t be dealt with any other way,” the Colorado Republican added.

Mr. Lamborn said Republicans will seek to reverse the B83 retirement by inserting language in this year’s national defense authorization bill that requires the military to maintain the bomb, noting there is bipartisan support for the initiative.

Deterring nuclear threats is increasingly difficult.

“We keep reducing the number and type of our nuclear weapons, while China and Russia are increasing and modernizing the number and type of their weapons,” Mr. Lamborn said. “At the end of the day we need a stronger nuclear defense posture, and we need to reject this particular NPR.”

A congressional defense aide said the administration “does not have a plan to replace” the B83. Instead, a study will be conducted in the future to determine how best to get at deeply buried targets, the main mission of the B83, the aide said.

“They have no plan to replace it with either a nuclear or conventional weapon and readily admit that they are assuming risk in this space,” the aide said.

Compounding the problem, Chinese, North Korean, Russian and potentially Iranian military forces are moving more of their nuclear forces and warheads into hardened underground structures that the B83 is designed to counter.

Retiring the bomb will not save large amounts of money. The cost of refurbishing and extending the life of the weapon is estimated to be between $100 million and $200 million. That amount is relatively small considering the administration is engaged in a major modernization of U.S. nuclear forces costing about $1.2 trillion over the next 30 years.

Last year’s budget sought $50 million for B83 life extension.

Initially, the Pentagon considered replacing the B83 with another nuclear gravity bomb known as the B61-12. That bomb has some of the ground-penetrating capabilities of the B83. But the B61-12 is unable to match its explosive power.

The B83 has an estimated yield of 1.2 megatons, or the equivalent of 1.2 million tons of TNT.

NATO Supreme Allied Commander Gen. Tod D. Wolters told a House hearing last week he agreed with Adm. Richard on the need to keep both the B83 and the SLCM-N, since the “multiple options exacerbate the challenge for potential enemies against us.” Gen. Wolters said he was not consulted by the Pentagon planners on the decision to eliminate the B83, despite being in charge of NATO’s nuclear forces deterring Russian nuclear threats.

The nuclear posture review was sent to Congress late last month in classifi ed form. A senior defense official told reporters that the still-secret review includes a direction from policymakers to diminish the role of nuclear weapons in American defense strategy.

The review “underscores our commitment to reducing the role of nuclear weapons and reestablishing our leadership in arms control,” a Pentagon fact sheet states. “We will continue to emphasize strategic stability, seek to avoid costly arms races, and facilitate risk reduction and arms control arrangements where possible.”

But the shift come as a time when U.S. analysts believe China is engaged in what Adm. Richard, the Stratcom commander, has called “strategic breakout” with a major expansion of its nuclear forces, which have long been overshadowed by those held by the U.S. and Russia. In addition to its large underground nuclear complex, Beijing recently began building three large missile fields in western China for the new, 10-warhead DF-41 long-range missile, in addition to adding scores of new road- and rail-mobile ICBMs to its arsenal.

The DF-41s will boost China’s strategic warhead arsenal from about 200 to as many as 1,500 warheads.

North Korea has built several longrange missiles capable of hitting the U.S. and is estimated to have nuclear warheads small enough to be carried by the missiles.

Russia is building several new strategic weapons, including a nuclearpowered cruise missile, nuclear-tipped hypersonic glide vehicles and a megaton- warhead underwater drone. Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly hinted at being ready to use the Kremlin’s nuclear might if NATO allies try to intervene in the fighting in Ukraine. In 2016, U.S. intelligence agencies reported that Russia was building dozens of deep underground nuclear facilities. The construction suggested Moscow is preparing for a future nuclear conflict. Russia also built a large underground strategic command post at Kosvinsky Mountain, located in the Ural Mountains about 850 miles east of Moscow. Underground Russian leadership compounds have been identified at Voronovo, about 46 miles south of Moscow and Sharapova, 34 miles from the capital.

The administration has linked both the nuclear posture review and a missile defense review to a new national defense strategy. However, sources acknowledge that the defense strategy has had to be revised in the aftermath of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

A fact sheet on the national defense strategy identifies “integrated deterrence” as the Pentagon’s main strategy, combining military power with other elements of national power and networks of alliances to protect the homeland. But the still-vague integrated deterrence failed to prevent the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

“They’ve put their pens down on the national security strategy given that integrated deterrence didn’t work in Ukraine,” a defense source said.

Rep. Mike Gallagher, Wisconsin Republican and member of the Armed Services Committee, said the Pentagon’s plan for integrated deterrence “failed in Ukraine,” even though the NATO alliance has been unified by the attack on Kyiv.

“The fact remains … that we attempted to deter an invasion of Ukraine, largely using non-military instruments of national power, and that attempt failed,” he said.

Mr. Putin may not have been deterred by any means, Mr. Gallagher acknowledged, “but integrated deterrence as conceptualized by the Pentagon and as implemented in the specific case of Ukraine, as a matter of fact, failed.”

Patty-Jane Geller, a policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation’s Center for National Defense, said the administration’s new nuclear policies have weakened deterrence by reverting to policies of the Obama administration.

“Mr. Biden’s decision to announce the reduced role of U.S. nuclear weapons as war wages along NATO’s borders could also cause allies to question the administration’s assurance that it will live up to its extended deterrence commitments,” she stated in a Washington Times oped. “In the face of some of the greatest threats to national security, the U.S. must show strength.


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WSJ: Outdated nuke treaties heighten risk of nuke war
« Reply #568 on: April 22, 2022, 09:19:50 PM »
Outdated Nuclear Treaties Heighten the Risk of Nuclear War
U.S. policy makers have lost sight of the crucial link between arms control and deterrence.
By Franklin C. Miller
April 21, 2022 6:19 pm ET


U.S. nuclear deterrence policy and U.S. nuclear arms-control policy have become dangerously disconnected.

Longstanding deterrence policy requires that the U.S. have sufficient capacity to target what potential enemy leaders value most. Arms control is supposed to augment deterrence by limiting, and if possible reducing, the threats while allowing the U.S. to deploy a force that deters an attack on America or our allies. The policies were tightly linked throughout the closing decades of the Cold War, providing the U.S. and its allies with a credible deterrent and producing the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaties, known as Start 1 and Start 2, which were signed in 1991 and 1993 respectively and reduced the levels of U.S. and Soviet strategic nuclear weapons.


Today the U.S. is bound by the “New Start Treaty,” an accord signed in 2010, a time when Russia was seen as a competitor rather than a threat, and China was hardly a factor. The world is different now: darker, more dangerous and getting worse.

The Biden administration’s 2021 Interim National Security Strategic Guidance notes starkly that “both Beijing and Moscow have invested heavily in efforts meant to check U.S. strengths and prevent us from defending our interests and allies around the world” and describes China as “increasingly assertive” and Russia as “destabilizing.” That was before the invasion of Ukraine and Vladimir Putin’s nuclear saber-rattling.

New Start limits the U.S. and Russia to 1,550 accountable traditional strategic nuclear weapons each. Since the treaty’s signing Russia has deployed between 2,000 and 2,500 modern shorter-range nuclear systems—the weapons Mr. Putin would use for a nuclear escalation in Ukraine. New Start doesn’t constrain these, nor does it cover “nontraditional” strategic nuclear weapons, such as the Poseidon transoceanic nuclear torpedo, which Russia also has.

Meantime, China’s nuclear arsenal has grown significantly, and is projected to grow much larger. In 2011 Beijing was estimated to have about 20 single-warhead intercontinental ballistic missiles, another 100 or so shorter-range nuclear missiles, and no operational ballistic-missile submarines. Today Beijing has nearly 100 ICBMs, many carrying multiple warheads and some that are road-mobile, and is building silos for several hundred more. The Chinese navy has six ballistic-missile subs, and the Chinese air force is equipping long-range bombers with an innovative air-to-surface ballistic missile. A large and growing force of nuclear-capable short- and medium-range missiles supports China’s strategic nuclear forces.

Simple logic and arithmetic make clear that the 1,550 accountable warhead cap agreed on in 2010 is inadequate to deal with the growth in Russia’s strategic and nonstrategic nuclear forces, let alone the vast increase in China’s nuclear arsenal. Since effective deterrence requires targeting what potential enemy leaders value, we must be able to threaten, separately and in combination, both Russia’s and China’s key assets—including their leaders’ ability to command and control the state, their military forces, and the industrial potential to sustain war. New Start constrains U.S. forces below the levels needed in the near future to accomplish this. Arms control, rather than augmenting our ability to deter, is undercutting it.

Fortunately, with the U.S. strategic-forces modernization finally about to begin fielding new forces, Washington is in a position to reset the table, as it was in the 1980s when the Reagan administration began its nuclear-triad modernization effort.

To do so, however, the Biden administration needs to recognize some new realities. The numerical cap of New Start won’t serve U.S. national-security interests in a world with two nuclear peer states as potential enemies—a first in the nuclear age. Because of the growth of Russian shorter-range nuclear forces in the past 10 years, New Start no longer serves U.S. security interests even in a bilateral U.S.-Russian context.

The administration should provide a year’s notice of U.S. intent to exit the treaty to preserve American national interests. That in turn presents two alternatives:

If the U.S.-Russian arms-control dialogue survives Mr. Putin’s invasion of Ukraine—a big if—and assuming Mr. Putin doesn’t detonate a nuclear weapon, the administration could propose a new U.S.-Russian treaty with a ceiling of 3,000 to 3,500 total nuclear weapons for each side. This would limit the threats to our allies and homeland and also permit a U.S. strategic nuclear capability that would deter both Russia and China. (Including China in a trilateral nuclear arms-control accord is unrealistic. China has rejected participation in such talks as well as the transparency and verification vital to a successful treaty.)

If a new arms-control dialogue is politically unacceptable, the Biden administration should exit New Start after a year and begin building toward the 3,000 to 3,500 force levels to maintain a credible deterrent against Moscow and Beijing. Many members of the Western arms-control community would complain of a “new arms race.”


But as former Defense Secretary Ash Carter has observed, that race is already under way; the U.S. simply isn’t running. Russia and China have been increasing their new nuclear systems for a decade while the first products of the U.S. triad-modernization program won’t be deployed until the mid-2020s. Critics will claim raising the 1,550 limit will send the wrong signal—but continuing to turn a blind eye to the nontraditional and shorter-range Russian systems sends a much worse signal.

Finally, the critics will assert that these steps will hurt arms control. But arms control isn’t an end in itself; it is a means to enhance stability. The major reductions in U.S. and Russian strategic arms in 1989-1992 and again in 2002 weren’t designed to create arms reductions for reductions’ sake but were justified by what the U.S. believed we needed to deter the threats of those times. Times and threats have changed, and our first responsibility must be to ensure we can deter both today’s threats and those of tomorrow.

Mr. Miller served for three decades as a senior nuclear policy and arms control official in the Pentagon and on the National Security Council staff.



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GPF: Indian Missile Test
« Reply #573 on: June 08, 2022, 04:44:29 PM »
India's expanding capabilities. India’s Strategic Forces Command announced that it successfully tested a nuclear-capable medium-range ballistic missile on Monday. The Agni-IV ballistic missile has multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles, meaning one missile can carry multiple warheads, each capable of hitting a different target. It can strike up to 4,000 kilometers (2,500 miles) away, enabling it to reach targets in China and Pakistan.

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FA: Thinking about the Unthinkable in Ukraine
« Reply #574 on: July 04, 2022, 05:21:50 AM »
Thinking About the Unthinkable in Ukraine
What Happens if Putin Goes Nuclear?
By Richard K. Betts
July 4, 2022

https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/russian-federation/2022-07-04/thinking-about-unthinkable-ukraine


As the war in Ukraine rages on, Russian President Vladimir Putin has engaged in nuclear saber rattling. “Whoever tries to impede us, let alone create threats for our country and its people, must know that the Russian response will be immediate and lead to the consequences you have never seen in history,” Putin declared in February in the first of many statements warning of a potential nuclear strike. For the most part, Western observers have dismissed this talk as idle chest-thumping. After all, whichever side fired nuclear weapons first would be taking a very risky gamble: betting that its opponent would not retaliate in an equal or more damaging way. That is why the odds are very low that sane leaders would actually start a process of trading blows that could end in the destruction of their own countries. When it comes to nuclear weapons, however, very low odds are not good enough.

Planning for the potential that Russia would use nuclear weapons is imperative; the danger would be greatest if the war were to turn decisively in Ukraine’s favor. That is the only situation in which the Russians’ incentive to take that awesome risk would be plausible, in an attempt to prevent defeat by shocking Ukraine and its NATO supporters into standing down. The Russians might do this by setting off one or a few tactical nuclear weapons against Ukrainian forces or by triggering a symbolic explosion over an empty area.

There are three general options within which U.S. policymakers would find a variation to respond to a Russian nuclear attack against Ukraine. The United States could opt to rhetorically decry a nuclear detonation but do nothing militarily. It could unleash nuclear weapons of its own. Or it could refrain from a nuclear counterattack but enter the war directly with large-scale conventional airstrikes and the mobilization of ground forces. All those alternatives are bad because no low-risk options exist for coping with the end of the nuclear taboo. A conventional war response is the least bad of the three because it avoids the higher risks of either the weaker or the stronger options.

COMPETITION IN RISK

For the past three decades, U.S. policymakers have paid scant attention to the potential dynamics of nuclear escalation. During the Cold War, in contrast, the question was at the center of strategic debate. Back then, it was NATO that relied in principle on the option of deliberate escalation—beginning with the limited use of tactical nuclear weapons—as a way to halt a Soviet invasion. This strategy was controversial, but it was adopted because the West believed its conventional forces to be inferior to the Warsaw Pact’s. Today, with the balance of forces reversed since the Cold War, the current Russian doctrine of “escalate to deescalate” mimics NATO’s Cold War “flexible response” concept.

NATO promoted the policy of flexible response rhetorically, but the idea was always shaky strategically. The actual contingency plans it generated never commanded consensus simply because initiating the use of nuclear weapons risked tit-for-tat exchanges that could culminate in an apocalyptic unlimited war. As J. Michael Legge, a former participant in NATO’s Nuclear Planning Group, noted in a 1983 study for the RAND Corporation, the group could not reach agreement on specific follow-on options beyond an initial symbolic “demonstration shot” for psychological effect, for fear that Moscow could always match them or up the ante. Today, it is hoped that this old dilemma will deter Moscow from unleashing the nuclear genie in the first place.

But NATO policymakers should not bank on Moscow’s restraint. Putin has more at stake in the war than Ukraine’s nuclear-armed supporters outside the country do, and he could bet that in a pinch, Washington would be less willing to play Russian roulette than he is. He could play the madman and apply nuclear shock as an acceptable risk for ending the war on Russian terms.

LEVELS OF ESCALATION

As NATO confronts the possibility of Russia using nuclear weapons, the first question it needs to answer is whether that eventuality should constitute a real redline for the West. In other words, would a Russian nuclear attack trigger NATO’s shift from merely supplying Ukraine to engaging directly in combat itself? A Russian rationale for tactical nuclear weapons use would be as much to frighten NATO away from crossing that line as to coerce Ukraine into surrender. If a few Russian nuclear weapons do not provoke the United States into direct combat, Moscow will have a green light to use even more such weapons and crush Ukraine quickly.

If the challenge that is now only hypothetical actually arrives, entering a nuclearized war could easily strike Americans as an experiment they do not want to run. For that reason, there is a very real possibility that policymakers would wind up with the weakest option: rant about the unthinkable barbarity of the Russian action and implement whatever unused economic sanctions are still available but do nothing militarily. This would signal that Moscow has complete freedom of action militarily, including the further use of nuclear weapons to wipe out Ukrainian defenses, essentially conceding a Russian victory. As dishonorable as submission sounds to hawks in advance, if the time actually comes, it will have the strong appeal to Americans, because it would avoid the ultimate risk of national suicide.

A nuclearized war could easily strike Americans as an experiment they do not want to run.
That immediate appeal has to be balanced by the longer-term risks that would balloon from setting the epochal precedent that initiating a nuclear attack pays off. If the West is not to back away—or, more important, if it wants to deter Putin from the nuclear gambit in the first place—governments need to indicate as credibly as possible that Russian nuclear use would provoke NATO, not cow it.

If NATO decides it would strike back on Ukraine’s behalf, then more questions arise: whether to also fire nuclear weapons and, if so, how. The most prevalent notion is an eye-for-an-eye nuclear counterattack destroying Russian targets comparable to the ones the original Russian attack had hit. This is the option that occurs intuitively, but it is unattractive because it invites slow-motion exchanges in which neither side gives up and both ultimately end up devastated.

Alternatively, Washington could respond with nuclear strikes on a larger scale than the Russian first use, threatening disproportionate losses to Moscow if it tries further limited nuclear attacks. There are several problems with this heftier option. For one, if used against Russian forces inside Ukraine, U.S. nuclear weapons would inflict collateral damage on its own clients. This is not a new problem. During the Cold War, strategists critical of relying on tactical nuclear weapons to counter invading Soviet forces quipped, “In Germany, the towns are only two kilotons apart.” Using nuclear weapons instead against targets inside Russia would intensify the danger of triggering unlimited war.

A second problem with back-and-forth tactical nuclear shots is that Russia would be at an advantage because it possesses more tactical nuclear weapons than the United States does. That asymmetry would require U.S. policymakers to resort sooner to so-called strategic forces (intercontinental missiles or bombers) to keep the upper hand. That, in turn, would risk unleashing the all-out mutual destruction of the major powers’ homelands. Thus, both the tit-for-tat and the disproportionate retaliatory options pose dauntingly high risks.

A less dangerous option would be to respond to a nuclear attack by launching an air campaign with conventional munitions alone against Russian military targets and mobilizing ground forces for potential deployment into the battle in Ukraine. This would be coupled with two strong public declarations. First, to dampen views of this low-level option as weak, NATO policymakers would emphasize that modern precision technology makes tactical nuclear weapons unnecessary for effectively striking targets that used to be considered vulnerable only to undiscriminating weapons of mass destruction. That would frame Russia’s resort to nuclear strikes as further evidence not only of its barbarism but of its military backwardness. Direct entry into the war at the conventional level would not neutralize panic in the West. But it would mean that Russia would be faced with the prospect of combat against a NATO that was substantially superior in nonnuclear forces, backed by a nuclear retaliatory capability, and less likely to remain restrained if Russia turned its nuclear strikes against U.S. rather than Ukrainian forces. The second important message to emphasize would be that any subsequent Russian nuclear use would trigger American nuclear retaliation.

This conventional option is hardly attractive. Direct war between the major powers that starts at any level risks escalation to mass destruction. Such a strategy would appear weaker than retaliation in kind and would worsen the Russians’ desperation about losing rather than relieve it, thus leaving their original motive for escalation in place along with the possibility that they would double down and use even more nuclear weapons. That would make it imperative to couple the NATO military response with an offer of settlement terms that includes as many cosmetic concessions as possible to give Russia some pretense of peace with honor. The main virtue of the conventional option is simply that it would not be as risky as either the weaker do-nothing or the stronger nuclear options.

THE WEST'S DILEMMA

In the event of a Russian nuclear detonation, NATO will have two conflicting aims. On the one hand, the alliance will want to negate any strategic benefit Moscow could gain from the detonation; on the other, it will want to avoid further escalation. This dilemma underlines the obvious imperative of maximizing Moscow’s disincentives to go nuclear in the first place.

To that end, NATO should not only pose credible threats of retaliation but also cultivate support from third parties that Putin wants to keep from joining the Western opposition. So far, Moscow has been buoyed by the refusal of China, India, and other countries to fully join the economic sanctions campaign imposed by the West. These fence sitters, however, have a stake in maintaining the nuclear taboo. They might be persuaded to declare that their continued economic collaboration with Russia is contingent on it refraining from the use of nuclear weapons. As a declaration about a still hypothetical eventuality, the neutral countries could see this as a low-cost gesture, a way to keep the West off their backs by addressing a situation they don’t expect to occur.   

Washington will always keep declared threats and strategy vague enough to provide flexibility and escape hatches. Still, any further nuclear saber rattling by Putin should prompt simple but forceful reminders from Washington of what Putin knows but might otherwise convince himself the West has forgotten: Russia is utterly vulnerable to nuclear retaliation, and as generations of thinkers and practitioners on both sides have reiterated, a nuclear war has no winner.



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China advances its biowar through infiltration of US labs
« Reply #577 on: July 17, 2022, 09:05:13 AM »
China Advances Its Biowarfare Program Through Infiltration of US Virus Labs: Retired US Army Colonel
By Ella Kietlinska and Joshua Philipp July 15, 2022 Updated: July 15, 2022biggersmaller Print
ET

Chinese scientists, with military links, infiltrate American virology research institutions and feed the research results to the Chinese military to benefit China’s development of biological weapons, said retired U.S. Army Reserve colonel Lawrence Sellin, Ph.D.

In China, there is no difference between military and civilian research, and in 2016 the Chinese regime even mandated the fusion of both types of research even if they are carried out by different institutions, Sellin said in a recent interview on EpochTV’s “Crossroads” program.

Play Video
“China’s biological warfare program exists at three levels.”

“The first level is the secret military level and this is composed of military research centers and military hospitals.”

“The second layer, which is fused to the first layer, are China’s universities, their so-called civilian research centers like the Wuhan Institute of Virology, and also some of the biotech companies in China.”

The third level is comprised of international universities and research labs, he said.

The second level, civilian research, accesses this third level and then feeds the results from the collaboration on international programs between Chinese scientists residing abroad and local scientists, back into the first level—the military level, Sellin explained.

The collaboration on research between American institutions and Chinese institutions started in 1979 with the agreement signed by then-President Jimmy Carter and the Chinese regime leader Deng Xiaoping, which allowed Chinese scientists to come to the United States to study and work, Sellin said.

Many in the first wave of Chinese scientists who came to the United States to get trained were from the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), the Chinese military, he said. Some of them stayed in the United States, even becoming permanent residents or citizens, he added.

“During this time, they maintain collaboration with scientists in mainland China, including scientists from the People’s Liberation Army, so I call it scientific chain migration. Those in the initial wave, who established themselves in laboratories in the United States began inviting other scientists from China, again, from the People’s Liberation Army and also other research centers in China, to the United States.”

“Over the last 30 years, they’ve created a critical mass of scientists who continue to work with scientists back in mainland China.”

Some research of certain scientists with the dual U.S.–China affiliation has been funded by The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), headed by Dr. Anthony Fauci, said Sellin, who previously worked at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases.

This dual affiliation is often stated in their publications in scientific journals, he said.

For example, Shibo Jiang conducted a study with another Chinese scientist, which was directly funded by the Chinese government and a private Chinese biotech company, while Shibo Jiang was also funded by NIAID to conduct U.S. biodefense research, Sellin said in his newsletter.

In 2014, Shibo Jiang co-authored a scientific paper as an affiliate of both the Key Lab of Molecular Virology of the Shanghai Medical College and the Kimball Research Institute of the New York Blood Center.

“One of the hotbeds of China’s infiltration of U.S. universities is the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston, which also has a U.S. defense research center there and a level four biosecurity lab as well.”

“There have been many Chinese scientists, some of whom came from the People’s Liberation Army, who have worked there.”

The Galveston National Laboratory was conceived and funded in 2003 by Fauci’s NIAID in response to biothreats that emerged in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. It began collaborating with the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) in 2013 on training WIV scientists and conducting joint research programs.

There are also Chinese scientists with ties to the Chinese military working in the U.S. military scientific institutions doing research in various fields, and holding very sensitive positions, Sellin said. “It’s been going on for years.” He questioned two people in authority about this situation but had not received any response.

Those scientists maintain contact with scientific institutions in China, visit China, and give presentations at universities there, Sellin said.


A worker inside the P4 laboratory in Wuhan, capital of Hubei Province, China, on Feb. 23, 2017. (Johannes Eisele/AFP via Getty Images)
“There’s a spectrum of biological weapons,” some of which are very lethal while others less so, Sellin explained. According to Chinese military doctrine, biological weapons, which are highly infectious but with low lethality, can be used in pre-war conditions “to debilitate a society or to debilitate another military.”

The COVID-19 virus is a prototypical biological weapon that China has been trying to develop since 2004, Sellin said.

COVID-19 is a disease caused by the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, commonly known as the novel coronavirus.

Chinese military documents also state “that these weapons should be designed, such that you have plausible deniability, that the presence of these viruses can be blamed on nature,” he said. “That’s the whole story of the COVID-19 virus. … The research that China’s doing, even the publicly available research, points back to a biological warfare program.”

 “China is waging a war against the United States, and COVID-19 was a type of biological weapon that was designed for pre-war conditions.”

Regardless of whether its release was accidental or intentional, it debilitated the United States economy for two years, and caused enormous disruption and social discord in the country, Sellin said. The country is weakened, which “allows China to take advantage of the situation in a war-like state,” he added.

 “I think China’s military learned a great deal about our response to [the COVID-19 pandemic] or our lack of response to it, and the effect it had on our society.” 23:06

Since the Chinese regime plans “to take over the world,” it also works on much more lethal viruses as well, which can cause death rates of up to 70 or 80 percent of the population, Sellin said. “They are developing a wide variety of biological weapons to be used under certain circumstances.”

 “The American taxpayers are actually funding China’s research programs” to the point that one can think of America’s virus research programs today as merely an extension of Chinese programs, in particular, their biological warfare program,” Sellin said.

In 2018, Peter Daszak of the EcoHealth Alliance and Zheng-Li Shi of the Wuhan Institute of Virology, dubbed the “bat woman,” submitted, along with two other scientists, an application for a research grant to the U.S. Department of Defense’s Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Sellin said.

He said that the description of proposed research in that application “reads like a recipe for creating COVID-19.”

The application was rejected by DARPA because it involved dangerous “gain of function” experiments that would create new human-infecting viruses, and the research had the clear potential for dual use within a bioweapons development,” Sellin wrote. “DARPA, however, left the door open for partial funding.”

“Gain of function research is defined as when a naturally-occurring virus is genetically or otherwise manipulated to make it either more contagious, more lethal, or both.”

The National Institutes of Health (NIH), admitted in a letter that it funded gain-of-function experiments at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, according to Jeff Carlson and Hans Mahncke, hosts of “Truth Over News” on EpochTV.

Sellin said that he considers the 2018 research application the “smoking gun” of the laboratory origin of the COVID-19 virus because the experiments described in the application include the insertion of a furin protease cleavage site into new viruses that would be created in these experiments.

This furin protease cleavage site does not exist in any virus from which the COVID-19 virus could have evolved, Sellin said. “It is unnatural insertion into COVID-19.”

The furin protease cleavage site is a very small structure in the virus that facilitates its infectivity and lethality, Sellin explained.

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WT: Chinese nukes arms expanding at breathtaking pace
« Reply #578 on: July 29, 2022, 04:50:49 AM »
Expanding at ‘breathtaking pace’

Admiral: China’s nuclear arms push a rising challenge

BY BILL GERTZ THE WASHINGTON TIMES

China is expanding its nuclear forces at a “breathtaking” pace, the commander of the U.S. Strategic Command warned in urging for strengthened U.S. nuclear deterrence against the danger.

Adm. Charles Richard, meeting with reporters at the command’s annual conference on deterrence Thursday, said it was still unclear how far and how fast China is preparing to go with its nuclear arsenal, but that the challenge posed by Beijing was real and growing.

“The threat posed to this nation, our allies from China is expanding at a breathtaking pace,” the admiral said. “We don’t know where that’s going to wind up.” In May, Adm. Richard told the Senate Armed Services Committee that two years ago, “a great debate” was held on whether China would double its nuclear warheads by 2029. That doubling already has taken place, he told lawmakers, and further expansion is continuing.

In response to a question from The Washington Times on the shifting balance of nuclear forces, Adm. Richard said the new three-way standoff between the United States, China and Russia highlights the need to develop a new integrated deterrence policy.

“No one knows with certainty where this is going, and this is why I’m calling for a more frequent examination of our capability, capacity and posture, so that we can execute our strategy as the threat evolves,” he said.

Asked what needs to be done, the commander said he has great confidence in the current nuclear deterrent strategy and is “very comfortable” with the current U.S. nuclear posture.

The addition of 360 ICBM silos in western China is the “biggest and most visible” element of the buildup, along with the doubling of the number of road-mobile DF-31 missiles, he said. The People’s Liberation Army also has deployed a “true air leg” of its strategic forces with H-6N nuclear bombers armed with air-launched ballistic missiles.

Also, the Jin-class nuclear missile submarine force can launch attacks from protected “bastions” in the South China Sea and more missile submarines are being built.

As the PLA builds a nuclear warning system, Chinese strategy is shifting from retaliatory strikes to “launch-on-warning,” Adm. Richard said. The readiness of Chinese nuclear forces also has been increased, and shorter-range nuclear missiles also have been deployed. Those missiles would not be needed “in a true minimum-deterrent, no-first-use policy” that China claims it has been pursuing, he said.

The test last year of a new polar-orbiting hypersonic missile provides Chinese nuclear forces with an unlimited range strike weapon that can launch nuclear attacks “from any azimuth … with great performance,” he said. “No nation in history has ever demonstrated that capability.”

Russia also is “in a similar category” as a nuclear threat to the U.S., “and then there’s North Korea, potentially others,” the four-star admiral said.

The shift from the decades- long U.S.-Russia bilateral standoff to a three- or four-way confrontation with nuclear powers is driving the U.S. modernization of nuclear forces.

U.S. defense officials say the likely weapon system for the new missile silos Beijing is building is the new DF-41 intercontinental ballistic missile, which can carry up to 10 multiple nuclear warheads. Intelligence estimates say China’s nuclear warhead stockpile, estimated to be around 250 warheads, will increase to as many as 1,000 warheads in the next eight years.

Adm. Richard has said the Biden administration’s highly anticipated policy review on nuclear forces, the Nuclear Posture Review, will be released by the Pentagon shortly. Defense sources said the unclassified posture review outlining the administration’s approach to nuclear weapons was to be released earlier this year, but was pulled back following the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February and the threats of nuclear attack made by President Vladimir Putin.

Adm. Richard said the Russian leader’s “thinly veiled nuclear saber-rattling” was unprecedented.

“I’m not sure we have ever had rhetoric like that in history,” he said. “I can’t remember an event in the Cold War even where you had that level of rhetoric, and I think it points to the reality of the threat that we face and the necessity for us in our allies, to not only take concrete steps with our deterrence forces, but to think through the theories on how we’re going to accomplish it.”

The U.S. government is also engaged in a major buildup of nuclear forces which have grown obsolete and in need of repair through years of neglect. Between 2021 and 2030, the Pentagon is expected to spend $634 billion on new weapons, missiles, submarines and bombers to modernize deterrent forces.

But the Biden administration has also announced publicly that it wants to reduce the role of nuclear weapons in U.S. security policy, taking up a policy set in motion during the Obama administration. That policy has been criticized by Republicans in Congress who say more needs to be done to strengthen deterrence when nuclear threats from China, Russia and North Korea are on the rise.

Adm. Richard said he “applauds and encourages” administration efforts to pursue arms control talks.

“All parties have got to comply, it has to be verifiable, but anything that limits the threat to us and our allies is a good thing,” Adm. Richard said. “And if done correctly it lowers the threat to everybody, it’s good for everyone that’s involved. That’s the advantage or benefit of joining into that.”

The State Department is leading efforts to hold arms talks, but negotiations with Moscow were cut off after the Ukraine invasion and China has refused to engage in strategic arms talks, despite its signing of the Non-Proliferation Treaty that calls on all signatories to reduce their arsenals through negotiations.

Adm. Richard said the military needs to regularly review the nuclear weapons and capabilities that will be needed for executing the strategy outlined in the nuclear posture review.

“I’m pretty confident that we’re going to go down that path inside the Department of Defense,” he said.

The four-star admiral said reports that Chinese telecommunications gear located near U.S. nuclear bases highlight the threat to command and control systems used for waging nuclear war, but added, “Our nation’s nuclear command and control has never been in a more resilient, reliable [or] robust alignment than it is today,” he said


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ET: Wuhan Virus was Germ Warfare
« Reply #580 on: August 06, 2022, 12:20:33 PM »
This tracks closely what we have been saying here:
=====================================

COVID-19 Was CCP ‘Biological Warfare,’ New Research Group Says
By Jackson Elliott August 5, 2022 Updated: August 6, 2022biggersmaller Print


The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) used COVID-19 for biological warfare, according to a new report by nine experts with the Center for Security Policy (CSP).

Generals, medical experts, and foreign policy experts including former House Intelligence Committee Chairman Pete Hoekstra and former Deputy Under Secretary of Defense Lieutenant General William “Jerry” Boykin contributed to the report, which is available in book form on Amazon.

The report, titled “The CCP is at War with America,” stated that there is no evidence COVID-19 was a natural virus, arguing that there is significant evidence it came from a CCP lab. It also stated that the CCP deliberately allowed the virus to spread worldwide by allowing international flights while locking down movement within China.

The CSP describes the report as an “exercise in competitive analysis that strongly challenges the Director of National Intelligence’s September 2021 conclusion.”

The Plague War

U.S. intelligence experts in 2021 concluded that they might never know for certain where COVID-19 came from. But the CSP put the blame squarely on the Chinese communist regime.

“The preponderance of evidence indicates that SARS-CoV-2 was lab-manufactured,” the report stated. “In any event, Beijing acted with murderous intent in spreading the disease beyond China’s borders.”

As proof of these claims, the report pointed to genetic features of COVID-19 not found in natural viruses. It noted that China’s military has a biological warfare program.

Finally, it highlighted that the Chinese regime restricted internal travel to stop the spread of COVID-19 but kept its international borders open. At the same time, it bought up global supplies of personal protective gear.

Even if the original release of the virus was an accident, its worldwide spread was intentional, the report stated. The likely motive was to ensure that the rest of the world would be set back economically by the virus to the same degree China would be.

“Xi’s regime clearly saw the imperative need to ensure that it would not suffer economic privation alone, to the advantage of its enemies, especially the United States,” the report read. “Actively spreading the virus was, thus, a means of waging economic warfare, and the Chinese Communists applied themselves to doing so with a vengeance.”

According to the report, the CCP worked to spread its COVID-19 quarantine policies around the world so it could weather the pandemic at an advantage. The damage COVID-19 measures did to America’s economy put the CCP ahead.

“A principal beneficiary of such economic trauma would be the Chinese Communist Party,” the report read.

Weapons of Choice

The report also stated that the Chinese regime has a history of biological warfare. In the early 1990s, Chinese general Chi Haotian told China’s biological weapons program that it should depopulate America so China could take it over, according to the report. But China kept these plans secret.

“Right now, it is not the time to openly break with [America],” the general said. “Our reform and opening to the outside world still rely on their capital and technology.”

Biological weapons could be China’s road to world domination, the report stated. Chinese military journals have openly published articles about genetically-targeted biological warfare. China has collected genetic profiles of foreigners while keeping a close guard on the genetic profiles of Chinese people, it added.

“If Chinese scientists succeed in designing pathogens targeting only foreigners, the next germ, virus, or microbe from China could end non-Chinese societies,” the report stated.

“Xi will be the first supremo to possess a weapon making worldwide Chinese rule possible,” it read.

The report suggested that COVID-19 fatalities outside China should be considered “murder victims.”

The paper offered several conclusions. These include that the CCP and any who colluded with it must be held accountable for the pandemic’s results; the government shouldn’t impose vaccine mandates on the vulnerable; the United States should develop deterrents against Chinese bioweapons; and future medical health measures shouldn’t follow Chinese totalitarian lockdown advice.

“We must never again allow our constitutional freedoms to be denied on the pretext of a public health emergency, especially at the insistence of foreign powers, let alone our mortal enemy,” the report stated.

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Chinese Germ Warfare
« Reply #581 on: August 10, 2022, 05:30:12 AM »
CHINA

Wuhan lab worked on much deadlier virus deemed ‘bioterrorism agent’

BY BILL GERTZ THE WASHINGTON TIMES

China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology, where the COVID-19 pandemic may have started, conducted work on a deadlier virus with a 60% lethality rate, according to recent Senate testimony.

Steven Quay, a medical doctor, told the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs subcommittee on emerging threats that the Wuhan institute carried out synthetic biology research on the Nipah virus genome in December 2019, around the time the first COVID-19 cases surfaced in Wuhan. Scientists are divided over whether the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 emerged naturally through animals or can be traced to a leak or accident at the Wuhan facility.

“The Nipah virus was in an infectious clone format,” Dr. Quay testified. “Nipah is a BSL-4 level pathogen and a CDCdesignated bioterrorism agent. This is the most dangerous gain-of-function research I have ever encountered. We should assume this research continues to this day at the WIV.”

If confirmed, China’s research on Nipah could violate the Biological Weapons Convention, which Beijing has signed, that prohibits work on agents that can be used as bioweapons.

Nipah is smaller than the virus behind COVID-19, known as SARS-CoV-2, and is less transmissible.

“But it is one of the deadliest viruses, with a 60% lethality,” said Dr. Quay, chief executive officer of Atossa Therapeutics, a Seattle-based pharmaceutical company.

“This is 60 times deadlier than SARS2,” he said, using the shortened term for the virus behind COVID-19. “The lab where the human specimens were processed is not the highest-level biosafety lab, BSL-4, but was in the BSL-2 or -3 facility.”

Dr. Quay said he did not know why Chinese researchers were working on the Nipah virus, “but a laboratory-acquired infection with a modified Nipah virus would make the COVID-19 pandemic look like a walk in the park.”

Unlike SARS-CoV-2, Nipah is unable to spread in the air. Still, if the research produced an aerosolized version of the virus, it could cause a deadlier pandemic, Dr. Quay testified.

In an interview, Dr. Quay said he discovered the Wuhan study on Nipah in Chinese research data mistakenly posted on GenBank, a U.S.-based repository for DNA sequencing information. Mr. Quay said the danger in China’s work on Nipah is that it could become aerosolized and cause mass death.

“The Black Plague in Europe was a 20% lethal event, and it set society back 250 years,” he said. A Nipah pandemic would “set us back over a millennium, in my estimate.”

Spokespeople for the State Department, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health and the Chinese Embassy did not respond to requests for comment.

According to the CDC website, Nipah was discovered in 1999 during a natural outbreak in Malaysia and Singapore. The virus spreads through bodily fluids. Symptoms of infection include fever, headache, nausea and vomiting, and shortness of breath. Severe symptoms can leave the victim confused or in a coma. “Death can occur in as many as 80% of cases,” the center said on its website.

The CDC lists Nipah as an emerging pathogen and “bioterrorism agent” that “could be engineered for mass dissemination in the future,” based on availability, ease of production and dissemination, and high mortality rate.

The State Department’s latest annual report on arms compliance states that China “continued to engage in activities with dual-use applications, which raise concerns regarding its compliance with Article I of the [Biological Weapons Convention].” That article deals with work on bioweapons. For the past two years, China’s government has canceled meetings with U.S. officials to discuss American concerns about compliance with the biological weapons treaty.

The State Department said in a fact sheet released during the Trump administration’s last days that U.S. intelligence concluded that the Wuhan Institute of Virology had engaged in secret military work.

“Despite the WIV presenting itself as a civilian institution, the United States has determined that the WIV has collaborated on publications and secret projects with China’s military,” the report said. It noted classified research and laboratory animal experiments for the People’s Liberation Army since at least 2017.

The Chinese research on Nipah was disclosed Aug. 3 during a Senate hearing on gain-of-function research, including China’s work at the Wuhan institute in making bat viruses more transmissible to humans to study their properties.

Dr. Quay and two other experts, Richard H. Ebright, director of the Rutgers University Waksman Institute of Microbiology, and Kevin M. Esvelt, a biochemist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, warned that unregulated gain-of-function research poses pandemic threats.

Dr. Ebright said all research that involves making viruses more infectious should be halted.

“Gain-of-function research of concern can advance scientific understanding, but gain-of-function research of concern has no civilian practical applications,” he said. “In particular, gainof- function research of concern is not needed for and does not contribute to the development of vaccines and drugs.”

Dr. Esvelt said the U.S. Agency for International Development and NIH have funded research to find or create novel pandemic-capable viruses in laboratories around the world. Both agencies hope to prevent natural pandemics but “seek to identify viruses that could kill as many people as a nuclear weapon,” he said.

Well-meaning health experts “never considered that these advances in technology, which are continuing, plus a list of pandemic-capable viruses, would allow a single skilled terrorist to unleash more pandemics at once than would naturally occur in a century,” Dr. Esvelt said.

Sen. Rand Paul, the Kentucky Republican who co-chaired the hearing, said the subcommittee was seeking answers to the origin of the outbreak of COVID-19 in Wuhan in December 2019.

“I maintain that the techniques that the [National Institutes of Health] funded in Wuhan to create enhanced pathogens may have or could have been used to create COVID-19,” Mr. Paul said. It was the first hearing in Congress on gain-of-function research, a possible source of the pandemic, Mr. Paul said. A second theory is that the virus jumped from a wild animal to a human at a Wuhan market. U.S. intelligence agencies say they cannot conclusively prove either theory.

Dr. Quay said there is no dispositive evidence that the pandemic began as a spillover of a natural virus in a market.

“All evidence is consistent with a laboratory-acquired infection,” he said.

Two scientific studies published last month said the virus began as a “spillover” event from Wuhan’s Huanan seafood market, where wild animals were sold as food.

The COVID-19 virus “has features consistent with synthetic biology gainof- function research,” Dr. Quay said. He specifically cited two features of the virus that affect its ability to bind to human cells. Proponents of the lab leak theory also argue that, in the early months of the pandemic, no animal was found to be infected with SARS-CoV-2 anywhere, including the Wuhan market.

Features of the evolving virus place “the first human infection in the fall of 2019, long before the December market cases,” he said. “The American people deserve to know how this pandemic started and to know if the NIH funded research that may have caused this pandemic.”

The Chinese government has refused to cooperate in investigating the origin of the pandemic.

During the hearing, it was disclosed that in September 2019, three months before the COVID-19 outbreak was declared, the Wuhan Institute of Virology removed a website that listed 21,000 viruses

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Chinese Bio War?
« Reply #582 on: August 22, 2022, 09:56:06 AM »
HEALTH VIEWPOINTS
New Virus Breakout Raises Question of Bioterrorism
BY XIAOXU SEAN LIN AND HEALTH 1+1 TIMEAUGUST 21, 2022 PRINT



Recently, the discovery of “Langya virus” in Shandong and Henan provinces of China has quickly attracted the attention of medical experts around the world. The virus is a type of zoonotic henipavirus and 35 people have been identified to be infected with this Langya virus since 2019 in these two provinces in China.

Notably, this virus is related to the Mojiang virus—found in the infamous Mojian Caves where the bat-borne coronavirus most similar to the SARS-CoV-2 was discovered.

The Wuhan Institute of Virology has become very interested in henipaviruses as of late, taking great pains to obtain and reconstruct the Nipah virus, which is not even a threat in China.

What does this all mean, and what is going on inside of China’s military labs?

What Is the ‘Langya Virus’? What Are Its Symptoms?

Langya virus is part of the henipavirus family. Other henipaviruses include the Nipah virus, which has received extensive attention and is known for its high mortality rate, and the Hendra virus and Mojiang virus.

Henipavirus is a genus of negative-stranded RNA viruses with a lipid membrane on their surface. This membrane is easily damaged in a dry environment, so henipaviruses are not primarily transmitted through the respiratory tract, but through direct contact with infected people or animals or contact with their feces.


According to an article published on August 4, 2022 in The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), the Langya virus has caused at least 35 infections in Henan and Shandong, China, and the report did not mention any related death case. Among all the patients, 26 people were infected with the Langya virus only, and nine others were infected with other pathogens at the same time.

All 26 patients with the Langya virus infection have experienced fever. Their probability of suffering from anorexia, coughing, weakness, muscle pain and leukopenia are as large as 50 percent. In addition, liver function impairment, thrombocytopenia, and headaches are also common symptoms of the Langya viral infection.

This report also mentioned that live Lanya virus was isolated from a patient’s sample and full genome sequence was characterized.  The phylogenetic analysis based on the L gene homology indicated that the Langya virus was the closest to Mojiang virus, but not Nipah or Hendra virus, the two more commonly known henipaviruses.

Mojiang Virus: Henipavirus From a Mysterious Mine in Yunnan, China

The  Mojiang virus was found in an infamous abandoned mine in Mojiang County, Yunnan province, China.

This mine in Yunnan first attracted attention in 2012, when six  miners working inside it contracted severe pneumonia of unknown origin, and three of them died.

Furthermore, researchers discovered the Mojiang virus from rats in the mine.

In 2013, virologist Shi Zhengli of the Wuhan Institute of Virology discovered the coronavirus RaTG13 from bats in the Mojiang mine–the closest known relative to the new coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, with a 96 percent similarity between the two, and the Mojiang mine gained quite a bit of fame as a result.

This mine resembles a “cave of viruses,” harboring these two dangerous viruses in different hosts: coronaviruses in bats, and Mojiang virus in rodents. There are still many questions remain unanswered about this mysterious cave: what happened to the other three miners who had unknown pneumonia but did not die? Did they have any other coinfections with other viruses? After Mojiang virus was identified, did those miners’ samples get retested for any potential zoonotic infection from Mojiang virus? What is unique in this cave that makes it like a hub of emerging pathogens?

However, for scientists and journalists, the mine in Yunnan has become a “black hole of no information.” Due to so-called political sensitivity, the Chinese communist regime has prevented any scientist or journalist from going there to investigate. For instance, a group of reporters from the Associated Press were followed by several plainclothes police vehicles while trying to enter the mine for investigation, and they were blocked from entering it. Another group of researchers who managed to take samples from the mine had them all confiscated.

In addition to the discovery of the coronavirus and Mojiang virus, the Chinese military and the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) seem to be very interested in another henipavirus–the Nipah virus. Is WIV working on Nipah virus as a biological weapon candidate?

Recently, a renowned scientist pointed out that WIV might still be conducting genetic research on the Nipah virus.

Dr. Steven Quay, CEO of Atossa Therapeutics, Inc. (a clinical-stage pharmaceutical company), is a highly experienced physician and scientist who has published more than 300 articles and holds over 80 patents. Dr. Quay is particularly concerned about the origin of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and has published articles suggesting that all indirect evidence so far suggests that this new coronavirus is very likely to have come from a laboratory.

On August 3, 2022, Dr. Quay testified before the U.S. Senate that his analysis of the original genetic sequencing raw data published by the WIV for the SARS-CoV-2 virus contained contaminated sequences. If the laboratory’s genetic sequencing equipment was not cleaned sufficiently between sequencing runs, trace amounts of its components would be left on the equipment from previous runs, and the next sample might then become contaminated by the previous sample.

Dr. Quay had discovered that the original raw data of the SARS-CoV-2 virus study contained part of the genome  sequences of the Nipah virus, and somegene sequences were relatively complete. In addition, it also contains part of the vector sequences that are used for synthetic biology.  Therefore, Dr. Quay suspected that WIV might be working on the restructuring or engineering of an infectious clone of  Nipah virus strain, which is a highly lethal and very dangerous virus.

This was not just a speculation as WIV’s strong interest in Nipah virus was found in another very unusual incident:

In 2019, a very accomplished microbial virologist at the Canadian National Microbiology Laboratory, Dr. Xiangguo Qiu, secretly sent samples of the Ebola virus and Nipah virus to WIV after stealing them from her workplace. After her crime was exposed, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) conducted an investigation, and Dr. Qiu was fired from her job.

The Nipah virus, which was obtained at great cost by the Wuhan Institute of Virology, is a very dangerous virus that has caused multiple outbreaks mainly in South Asia and Southeast Asia, and it can kill up to 90 percent of the infected population in certain outbreaks.

Bats are very active in tropical and subtropical regions, and the main natural host of the Nipah virus are fruit bats. Bats can also transmit the virus to other large animals, such as horses and pigs.

China does not currently face the threat of the Nipah virus, and there is no urgent need to develop a vaccine for it. So why is WIV so interested in the Nipah virus? This is an alarming question.

The CDC has placed the Nipah virus on the list of “Bioterrorism Agents” and classified it as a Category C pathogen—a virus with the potential to be engineered into a biological weapon.

Before the outbreak of COVID-19, the website of WIV even listed a “military management division.”  This suggested that WIV is not just merely a collaborator for the People’s Liberation Army.  Military operation was part of the whole WIV operation even before Xi Jinping launched nation-wide Military-Civil fusion transformation for many institutes.

Although China joined the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) in 1984, it is suspected that it might not have stopped its research on biological and chemical weapons.

A Military Field-Testing of Dangerous Pathogens?

Indeed, the discovery of the Langya virus also showed elements of military involvement.

The key authors to that report are Drs. Li-Qun Fang and Wei Liu, whose institutional affiliation was shown to be “Beijing Institute of Microbiology and Epidemiology (BIME)”.  However, BIME is actually the same entity as “Institute of Microbiology and Epidemiology, Academy of Military Medical Sciences, under People’s Liberation Army.”  In addition, in the supplementary materials of this report, it was clearly indicated that the PLA’s 990 Military Hospital in Henan province was involved in this study.  And the report indicated that 34 out of the 35 patients were local farmers. Why were the farmers’ samples analyzed in a military hospital as part of a sentinel surveillance program?

Moreover, although the report indicated that those 35 patients infected with Langya virus were identified during “sentinel febrile illness surveillance.” It is very unusual to report the discovery and isolation of a live henipavirus with significant delay of two years.  The discovery of henipavirus should be very alarming news in the public health aspect, and should have been reported in 2019.  Meanwhile, among the 35 patients, six patients were found to be co-infected with severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus (SFTSV) , and two patients were found to be co-infected with Hantaan virus.

The SFTSV and Hantaan virus are highly infectious viruses that could lead to severe viral hemorrhage and their outbreaks in China are very rare events. So, in this so-called “sentinel febrile illness surveillance,” this group of military scientists identified three dangerous pathogens at one time, and several of them were co-infected with two rare pathogens?  How likely would this happen in a natural situation?  And in regular sentinel febrile illness surveillance, these viruses would not be listed in the regular screening procedure.

Notably, all three viruses, Langya, SFTSV, and Hantaan viruses, can all infect rodents. So, this study appears to be a targeted surveillance project to look for zoonotic infections transmitted by rodents. Would it be possible that this study was a test of these dangerous pathogens and see which one was more prone to cause human infection? With the involvement of a military hospital and scientists from PLA, would it be possible that this was a field release of multiple dangerous pathogens followed by field screening of rodents and potential human infections caused by infected rodents? Was this part of a bioweapon program?

Of course, we don’t have any direct evidence. And of course, this speculation could be wrong if SFTSV and Hantaan virus infections have become endemic in Shandong or Henan province in recent years. But if not, this could serve as an alarm for national security experts, beyond being a reasonable speculation.

Such Virus Research Endangers the Health of Mankind and Needs to Be Called Off

Following the COVID-19 outbreak, there has been a growing concern about the risks associated with research into viruses.

As aforementioned, the scientists and journalists attempting to enter the Mojiang mine to investigate are now being blocked on the grounds of “political sensitivity.” However, if this series of events directly endangers the health of all humans, then this should not be considered a mere political issue.

At this stage, various viruses, bacteria, and other public health crises are already posing a great threat to people. On this basis, some organizations are still conducting daring research, such as modifying human genes and/or viral genes, and using various synthetic biology means to assemble new viruses and bacteria.

These dangerous studies have been glorified as a way to better understand pathogens and develop vaccines and drugs.

However, during the process, people may have created more dangerous pathogens that further threaten the health of the human race. An outbreak of a dangerous pathogen, whether from natural zoonotic infection, or laboratory leak incident, or a release of biological weapon, can become a major global disaster, as the COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated.

Therefore, we need to be more stringent in monitoring, controlling, or prohibiting such dangerous research.

In the process of promoting the development of biotechnology, we must first guard the most basic medical ethics and the ethics of researchers.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. Epoch Health welcomes professional discussion and friendly debate. To submit an opinion piece, please follow these guidelines and submit through our form here.

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Re: Chinese Bio War?
« Reply #583 on: August 22, 2022, 11:06:04 AM »
I wonder how many American tax payer dollars helped create this.

HEALTH VIEWPOINTS
New Virus Breakout Raises Question of Bioterrorism
BY XIAOXU SEAN LIN AND HEALTH 1+1 TIMEAUGUST 21, 2022 PRINT



Recently, the discovery of “Langya virus” in Shandong and Henan provinces of China has quickly attracted the attention of medical experts around the world. The virus is a type of zoonotic henipavirus and 35 people have been identified to be infected with this Langya virus since 2019 in these two provinces in China.

Notably, this virus is related to the Mojiang virus—found in the infamous Mojian Caves where the bat-borne coronavirus most similar to the SARS-CoV-2 was discovered.

The Wuhan Institute of Virology has become very interested in henipaviruses as of late, taking great pains to obtain and reconstruct the Nipah virus, which is not even a threat in China.

What does this all mean, and what is going on inside of China’s military labs?

What Is the ‘Langya Virus’? What Are Its Symptoms?

Langya virus is part of the henipavirus family. Other henipaviruses include the Nipah virus, which has received extensive attention and is known for its high mortality rate, and the Hendra virus and Mojiang virus.

Henipavirus is a genus of negative-stranded RNA viruses with a lipid membrane on their surface. This membrane is easily damaged in a dry environment, so henipaviruses are not primarily transmitted through the respiratory tract, but through direct contact with infected people or animals or contact with their feces.


According to an article published on August 4, 2022 in The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), the Langya virus has caused at least 35 infections in Henan and Shandong, China, and the report did not mention any related death case. Among all the patients, 26 people were infected with the Langya virus only, and nine others were infected with other pathogens at the same time.

All 26 patients with the Langya virus infection have experienced fever. Their probability of suffering from anorexia, coughing, weakness, muscle pain and leukopenia are as large as 50 percent. In addition, liver function impairment, thrombocytopenia, and headaches are also common symptoms of the Langya viral infection.

This report also mentioned that live Lanya virus was isolated from a patient’s sample and full genome sequence was characterized.  The phylogenetic analysis based on the L gene homology indicated that the Langya virus was the closest to Mojiang virus, but not Nipah or Hendra virus, the two more commonly known henipaviruses.

Mojiang Virus: Henipavirus From a Mysterious Mine in Yunnan, China

The  Mojiang virus was found in an infamous abandoned mine in Mojiang County, Yunnan province, China.

This mine in Yunnan first attracted attention in 2012, when six  miners working inside it contracted severe pneumonia of unknown origin, and three of them died.

Furthermore, researchers discovered the Mojiang virus from rats in the mine.

In 2013, virologist Shi Zhengli of the Wuhan Institute of Virology discovered the coronavirus RaTG13 from bats in the Mojiang mine–the closest known relative to the new coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, with a 96 percent similarity between the two, and the Mojiang mine gained quite a bit of fame as a result.

This mine resembles a “cave of viruses,” harboring these two dangerous viruses in different hosts: coronaviruses in bats, and Mojiang virus in rodents. There are still many questions remain unanswered about this mysterious cave: what happened to the other three miners who had unknown pneumonia but did not die? Did they have any other coinfections with other viruses? After Mojiang virus was identified, did those miners’ samples get retested for any potential zoonotic infection from Mojiang virus? What is unique in this cave that makes it like a hub of emerging pathogens?

However, for scientists and journalists, the mine in Yunnan has become a “black hole of no information.” Due to so-called political sensitivity, the Chinese communist regime has prevented any scientist or journalist from going there to investigate. For instance, a group of reporters from the Associated Press were followed by several plainclothes police vehicles while trying to enter the mine for investigation, and they were blocked from entering it. Another group of researchers who managed to take samples from the mine had them all confiscated.

In addition to the discovery of the coronavirus and Mojiang virus, the Chinese military and the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) seem to be very interested in another henipavirus–the Nipah virus. Is WIV working on Nipah virus as a biological weapon candidate?

Recently, a renowned scientist pointed out that WIV might still be conducting genetic research on the Nipah virus.

Dr. Steven Quay, CEO of Atossa Therapeutics, Inc. (a clinical-stage pharmaceutical company), is a highly experienced physician and scientist who has published more than 300 articles and holds over 80 patents. Dr. Quay is particularly concerned about the origin of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and has published articles suggesting that all indirect evidence so far suggests that this new coronavirus is very likely to have come from a laboratory.

On August 3, 2022, Dr. Quay testified before the U.S. Senate that his analysis of the original genetic sequencing raw data published by the WIV for the SARS-CoV-2 virus contained contaminated sequences. If the laboratory’s genetic sequencing equipment was not cleaned sufficiently between sequencing runs, trace amounts of its components would be left on the equipment from previous runs, and the next sample might then become contaminated by the previous sample.

Dr. Quay had discovered that the original raw data of the SARS-CoV-2 virus study contained part of the genome  sequences of the Nipah virus, and somegene sequences were relatively complete. In addition, it also contains part of the vector sequences that are used for synthetic biology.  Therefore, Dr. Quay suspected that WIV might be working on the restructuring or engineering of an infectious clone of  Nipah virus strain, which is a highly lethal and very dangerous virus.

This was not just a speculation as WIV’s strong interest in Nipah virus was found in another very unusual incident:

In 2019, a very accomplished microbial virologist at the Canadian National Microbiology Laboratory, Dr. Xiangguo Qiu, secretly sent samples of the Ebola virus and Nipah virus to WIV after stealing them from her workplace. After her crime was exposed, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) conducted an investigation, and Dr. Qiu was fired from her job.

The Nipah virus, which was obtained at great cost by the Wuhan Institute of Virology, is a very dangerous virus that has caused multiple outbreaks mainly in South Asia and Southeast Asia, and it can kill up to 90 percent of the infected population in certain outbreaks.

Bats are very active in tropical and subtropical regions, and the main natural host of the Nipah virus are fruit bats. Bats can also transmit the virus to other large animals, such as horses and pigs.

China does not currently face the threat of the Nipah virus, and there is no urgent need to develop a vaccine for it. So why is WIV so interested in the Nipah virus? This is an alarming question.

The CDC has placed the Nipah virus on the list of “Bioterrorism Agents” and classified it as a Category C pathogen—a virus with the potential to be engineered into a biological weapon.

Before the outbreak of COVID-19, the website of WIV even listed a “military management division.”  This suggested that WIV is not just merely a collaborator for the People’s Liberation Army.  Military operation was part of the whole WIV operation even before Xi Jinping launched nation-wide Military-Civil fusion transformation for many institutes.

Although China joined the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) in 1984, it is suspected that it might not have stopped its research on biological and chemical weapons.

A Military Field-Testing of Dangerous Pathogens?

Indeed, the discovery of the Langya virus also showed elements of military involvement.

The key authors to that report are Drs. Li-Qun Fang and Wei Liu, whose institutional affiliation was shown to be “Beijing Institute of Microbiology and Epidemiology (BIME)”.  However, BIME is actually the same entity as “Institute of Microbiology and Epidemiology, Academy of Military Medical Sciences, under People’s Liberation Army.”  In addition, in the supplementary materials of this report, it was clearly indicated that the PLA’s 990 Military Hospital in Henan province was involved in this study.  And the report indicated that 34 out of the 35 patients were local farmers. Why were the farmers’ samples analyzed in a military hospital as part of a sentinel surveillance program?

Moreover, although the report indicated that those 35 patients infected with Langya virus were identified during “sentinel febrile illness surveillance.” It is very unusual to report the discovery and isolation of a live henipavirus with significant delay of two years.  The discovery of henipavirus should be very alarming news in the public health aspect, and should have been reported in 2019.  Meanwhile, among the 35 patients, six patients were found to be co-infected with severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus (SFTSV) , and two patients were found to be co-infected with Hantaan virus.

The SFTSV and Hantaan virus are highly infectious viruses that could lead to severe viral hemorrhage and their outbreaks in China are very rare events. So, in this so-called “sentinel febrile illness surveillance,” this group of military scientists identified three dangerous pathogens at one time, and several of them were co-infected with two rare pathogens?  How likely would this happen in a natural situation?  And in regular sentinel febrile illness surveillance, these viruses would not be listed in the regular screening procedure.

Notably, all three viruses, Langya, SFTSV, and Hantaan viruses, can all infect rodents. So, this study appears to be a targeted surveillance project to look for zoonotic infections transmitted by rodents. Would it be possible that this study was a test of these dangerous pathogens and see which one was more prone to cause human infection? With the involvement of a military hospital and scientists from PLA, would it be possible that this was a field release of multiple dangerous pathogens followed by field screening of rodents and potential human infections caused by infected rodents? Was this part of a bioweapon program?

Of course, we don’t have any direct evidence. And of course, this speculation could be wrong if SFTSV and Hantaan virus infections have become endemic in Shandong or Henan province in recent years. But if not, this could serve as an alarm for national security experts, beyond being a reasonable speculation.

Such Virus Research Endangers the Health of Mankind and Needs to Be Called Off

Following the COVID-19 outbreak, there has been a growing concern about the risks associated with research into viruses.

As aforementioned, the scientists and journalists attempting to enter the Mojiang mine to investigate are now being blocked on the grounds of “political sensitivity.” However, if this series of events directly endangers the health of all humans, then this should not be considered a mere political issue.

At this stage, various viruses, bacteria, and other public health crises are already posing a great threat to people. On this basis, some organizations are still conducting daring research, such as modifying human genes and/or viral genes, and using various synthetic biology means to assemble new viruses and bacteria.

These dangerous studies have been glorified as a way to better understand pathogens and develop vaccines and drugs.

However, during the process, people may have created more dangerous pathogens that further threaten the health of the human race. An outbreak of a dangerous pathogen, whether from natural zoonotic infection, or laboratory leak incident, or a release of biological weapon, can become a major global disaster, as the COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated.

Therefore, we need to be more stringent in monitoring, controlling, or prohibiting such dangerous research.

In the process of promoting the development of biotechnology, we must first guard the most basic medical ethics and the ethics of researchers.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. Epoch Health welcomes professional discussion and friendly debate. To submit an opinion piece, please follow these guidelines and submit through our form here.

Crafty_Dog

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GPF: In Ukraine, buying time with Nuclear Concerns
« Reply #584 on: August 22, 2022, 12:09:54 PM »
August 22, 2022
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Open as PDF

    
In Ukraine, Buying Time With Nuclear Concerns
Everyone understands how dangerous it is to fight near nuclear power plants, but that won’t stop Moscow or Kyiv from using it to their advantage.
By: Antonia Colibasanu
Fighting has escalated over the past few weeks near Zaporizhzhia, home to a Ukrainian nuclear power plant that has effectively been converted into a Russian military base. It’s the largest nuclear plant on the Continent, and though only two of the six reactors are functioning, the International Atomic Energy Agency appealed for maximum military restraint in the area and has requested the safe passage of IAEA technicians to conduct safety, security and safeguards operations at the site.

On Aug. 19, French President Emmanuel Macron spoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin on the phone to discuss the situation, after which Putin reportedly agreed to send IAEA experts, albeit through Ukrainian territory, not Russian. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, having already spoke to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, pledged to discuss Zaporizhzhia with Putin as well. It seems everyone is rightly worried about the chance of a nuclear accident.

Ukraine and Russia have accused each other of compromising the nuclear power plant. In a press release, Putin accused the Ukrainian military of "systematic shelling" of the facility and said the attacks created the “danger of a large-scale catastrophe that could lead to radiation contamination of vast territories.” Ukraine blames Moscow for deploying heavy weaponry on site.

Regardless of who is responsible, there is a broad understanding that the situation should not be taken lightly. On Aug. 19, Russia reportedly told workers at the plant not to show up to work – without specifying when they can return. Earlier in the week, Romania sent more than a million potassium iodide pills to Moldova to pre-empt possible radiation poisoning. In addition to Moldova, reports suggest Romania, Poland, Bulgaria and Hungary could all be in the path of radioactive fallout.

Areas Effected by Possible Nuclear Explosion
(click to enlarge)

Indeed, the consequences of an accident could be severe. Though Zaporizhzhia’s two functioning reactors are well protected and, as such, are unlikely to be bombed directly, attacks on fuel storage sites or other infrastructure could release radioactive material which, according to expert reports, could travel several hundred miles, depending on the material's quality and density and on the vagaries of the wind. In other words, the fallout could stretch well beyond Ukraine.

Wind Direction, Friday August 19, 2022
(click to enlarge)

The concern is real, but the timing is odd. Reports about intensified fighting in the area near Zaporizhzhia came after reports of mysterious explosions Aug. 9 at the Saki air base in Crimea, which could mark a major shift in the war. Satellite imagery shows that at least nine planes were destroyed in the explosions, and though Russia claimed it to be accidental, many believe it was an attack by Ukrainian forces. (The government in Kyiv has yet to confirm as much.) If Kyiv was indeed responsible, that means it is able to strike targets some 200 kilometers (125 miles) behind the front line – something Moscow had not expected. Material damage aside, the attacks – if it was an attack – would devastate Russian morale and contravene Russian propaganda. Notably, the explosions came one day after the United States promised to supply Ukraine with $1 billion worth of weapons.

As interesting, the reporting around Saki and Zaporizhzhia came as the war was more or less at a standstill. After capturing Luhansk, the Russian army hasn’t gained more than 7 miles of ground along the 620-mile front between Kharkiv and Kherson in nearly a month and a half. The Ukrainian counteroffensive to retake Kherson, meanwhile, has been going on for two months but has yet to retake the city.

U.S. weaponry, particularly the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS), seems to have played a role in halting Russian operations. Moscow has had to totally restructure its logistics to supply the men in the field, which has slowed its advances. But Moscow had plenty of logistical problems before the HIMARS appeared, so it’s unclear whether its army will be able to resume its advance after it rebuilds its lines – or how effective it will be if it does – especially with even more U.S. weapons flooding into Ukraine.

Still, U.S. hardware can take Ukraine only so fair. Kyiv doesn’t quite have enough weaponry to retake areas such as Kherson, and even if it did, it doesn’t have the training or expertise to optimize the weapons it receives. For example, Kyiv may have received long-range, high-precision missile systems from the U.S. and Great Britain in recent weeks, but it could manage only to incapacitate the major bridges over the Dnipro River near Kherson, forcing Russia to resort to ferries to transport its equipment. For Ukraine, this is better than nothing, but it’s a far cry from being able to assault, subdue and control a city like Kherson.

All this means that, though both have been constrained in how much they can do for now, they are less limited in the long term – Ukraine with its new weapons and Russia with its reformed logistics and supply lines. With no sign of a peace agreement in the works, both sides are unhappy with the status quo, and both would thus welcome disrupting the current stalemate in their favor. This will result in one of two possibilities: a frozen conflict, which is bad for both sides, or an escalation, which neither wants right now, preferring instead to regroup and reorganize.

A nuclear accident – or the sheer prospect of one – would certainly give them the pause they are looking for. Allowing nuclear experts to inspect the facilities at Zaporizhzhia wouldn’t advance the cause of long-term peace – if anything, it would only help Russia and Ukraine take a beat before gearing up for a subsequent round of fighting. Of course, there’s no guarantee that the presence of third-party inspectors – if they manage to get in at all – will halt hostilities entirely. But both Russia and Ukraine have an interest in buying time, and both understand how catastrophic a nuclear accident could be. But that’s no comfort to them or to nearby residents who realize the obvious: that armed conflict around a nuclear power plant necessarily increases the chances that an accident will occur, no matter how sincere the belligerents are in avoiding one.


Crafty_Dog

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Chinese prepping Germ War
« Reply #586 on: September 07, 2022, 04:42:18 PM »
https://www.theepochtimes.com/china-creates-digital-twin-of-americans-cybersecurity-expert_4713756.html?utm_source=China&utm_campaign=uschina-2022-09-07&utm_medium=email&est=UD3HmbDhVOGgYT%2BcNR95lM9DCXxJHHfqH0czuTklvKVQp6ohrj7xuuNT%2BWx4ddPhvrsp

China Creates ‘Digital Twin’ of Americans: Cybersecurity Expert
By Hannah Ng and Tiffany Meier September 6, 2022 Updated: September 6, 2022biggersmaller Print

As reports have emerged that Chinese military-linked firms gather American DNA, these firms are now capable of creating digital replicas of Americans, according to John Mills, former director of cybersecurity policy, strategy, and international affairs at the Department of Defense.

“They have the capacity to create these complex models of each of us. They’re making digital twins of us,” Mills told the “China in Focus” program on NTD News, sister media outlet of The Epoch Times.

Digital Twins
He pointed to BGI Group, formerly Beijing Genomics Institute, which is the leader of the CCP’s genome project, as well as a leading producer of COVID-19 tests.

In 2017, the company’s leader boasted that it had reached an industrial level of success in progressing through genetic reform and gene editing, to gene synthesizing, and mass-producing multiple viruses, bacteria, and large yeasts.

“They can do all kinds of nefarious things with no constraint or loss. They have our data.” That data could be used to tailor a follow-up virus to target certain non-Han ethnicities, Mills warned.

Mills referred to Beijing’s military-civil fusion policy, calling Chinese companies “extensions of state security, state intelligence.”

That includes every Chinese company and every company that is incorporated in China, even if it is American in origin, he stressed. “They are the eyes and the ears and the collectors.”

That means when Americans give information to these companies, their data is essentially going to Chinese intelligence, Mills said.

“So they know about every one of us … I would presume that I have a file in China,” he added.

BGI Targets American Researchers
Mills raised further concerns about BGI’s group’s record of targeting distinguished American researchers.

“They have a long history of targeting some of our best researchers … there is a proven track record that almost immediately veers into national security concerns with China,” he noted.

The cybersecurity expert pointed to Chinese recruitment programs such as the “thousand talents plan,” allegedly to lure foreign academics to work in China, a process that facilitates the transfer of technology and know-how to the regime.

“China was just using money to essentially buy off professors and academics. So they have a very active program to go after our intellectual property, and essentially, to co-opt some of our leading researchers,” he said.

Mills referred to the Biden administration’s canceling of the “China Initiative” launched by the Trump administration in 2018 to combat the Chinese regime’s state-sponsored espionage and theft of trade secrets, calling the move “ridiculous and silly.”

“It’s going to [take] many years for … the CCP to demonstrate they can be trusted in these circles because right now, all the evidence is leaning against them,” he said.

Americans, Safeguard Your Medical Records
In his opinion, Americans, especially those related to the government sector, should not do DNA tests. Furthermore, he suggested that Americans closely safeguard their medical records.

“Be aware that anything you do digitally … is being vacuumed up,” he warned.

Mills urged the U.S. government to blacklist Chinese entities like BGI Group and ban them from operating in America, citing the national security risk.

“I think it’s very unwise to let them in because it is just like biological warfare,” he said.

“We need to be extremely, extremely concerned,” because data collected by DNA tests is key information for biological warfare, Mills added.”We have to look at that as a threat.”

“This is feeding them. They look at that as the strategic, commanding heights of the showdown with the West, mainly America,” he said.

Antonio Graceffo and Jennifer Bateman contributed to this report.


Crafty_Dog

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SADM bomb vs. the Soviet Union
« Reply #588 on: September 30, 2022, 03:13:16 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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China indirectly warns Russia against nukes in Ukraine
« Reply #589 on: November 04, 2022, 12:13:41 PM »
New: China's leader indirectly warned Russia against using nuclear weapons, according to a readout from Chinese state-run media, Xinhua, following a visit by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Friday. Without mentioning Putin or Russia, Xinhua said the two leaders "jointly oppose the use of, or threats to use, nuclear weapons"; and world leaders should "advocate that nuclear weapons cannot be used, a nuclear war cannot be waged, in order to prevent a nuclear crisis...on the Eurasian continent," according to translations provided by Politico, Bloomberg, and Reuters.


Crafty_Dog

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« Last Edit: November 13, 2022, 09:01:13 AM by Crafty_Dog »


Crafty_Dog

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Almost a Japanese WW2 bio attack
« Reply #593 on: December 17, 2022, 01:46:06 PM »
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_731

HT to CCP

============
Japanese war crimes on Chinese and Russians

The US apparently allowed them to cover it up.

I never heard of this:

"During the final months of World War II, codenamed Cherry Blossoms at Night, the plan of Unit 731 was to use kamikaze pilots to infest San Diego, California, with the plague.[39] The plan was scheduled to launch on 22 September 1945, but Japan surrendered five weeks earlier.[40][41][42][43]"

Doesn't mean the government would have approved this though.

Crafty_Dog

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ET: Chinese Bio War
« Reply #594 on: December 27, 2022, 08:35:21 AM »
China Had Biological Weapons Ambitions Long Before Pandemic: House Intelligence Committee Member
By Hannah Ng and Steve Lance December 26, 2022 Updated: December 26, 2022biggersmaller Print

0:00
6:30



1

China had made clear its biological weapons ambitions long before the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to Rep. Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio), a member of the House Intelligence Committee.

Wenstrup together with Republicans on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) released a report (pdf) on the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic on Dec. 14.

“Our State Department has put things out over the past, even going back to 2005, that China is interested in offensive bioweapons,” Wenstrup told the “Capitol Report” program on NTD, the sister media outlet of the Epoch Times, on Dec. 16.

The lawmaker singled out the work of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA)’s Fifth Institute of the Academy of Military Medical Sciences (AMMS), the military’s top medical research body.

“In 2005, the U.S. State Department publicly stated the U.S. assessment that China also operates an offensive biological weapons program, specifically identifying two Chinese entities as likely involved, one of which is the Fifth Institute. In a 2006 declaration of compliance with the Biological and Toxic Weapons Convention, China acknowledged that the Fifth Institute specifically conducts research on SARS coronaviruses,” the report reads.

Epoch Times Photo
Doctor and Congressman Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio) interview with NTD Capitol Report April 2, 2022.
Wenstrup also took note of the book titled “The Unnatural Origin of SARS and New Species of Artificial Humanized Viruses as Genetic Weapons,” released by AMMS in 2015.

“The book described how to create weaponized chimeric SARS coronaviruses, the potentially broader scope for their use compared to traditional bioweapons, and the benefits of being able to plausibly deny that such chimeric coronaviruses were artificially created rather than naturally occurring,” the report states.

The congressman, who is also a medical doctor, said that the military research institute had also collaborated with the Wuhan Institute of Virology, the body at the center of the lab leak theory of the pandemic origins.

Wenstrup said there were “published articles with scientists from the Fifth Institute, as well as the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) … combining their military with their other areas of research.”

He further pointed to a scientist with the PLA’s Fifth Institute, General Zhou Yusen, who had reportedly worked with the WIV for years prior to the pandemic.

According to Wenstrup, Zhou was “heavy into the gain of function type research or chimeric research.”

“Notably, in the spring of 2020, as global COVID-19 cases surpassed 7 million and COVID-19 deaths surpassed 400,000, General Zhou reportedly died under mysterious circumstances,” according to the GOP report.

Challenging the Intelligence Community
The lawmaker noted that an update to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI)’s declassified assessment (pdf) of the origins of COVID-19 released in October 2021 did not address important information that indicates the Chinese regime’s interest in offensive bioweapons.

“The declassified updated assessment also failed to address the AMMS’ publicly stated interest in the development of engineered coronaviruses for biological weapons purposes,” the GOP report states.

“The IC [intelligence community] should be transparent regarding what it does or does not know regarding the relationship between the PLA’s Fifth Institute of the Academy of Military Medical Sciences (AMMS), which China has publicly admitted conducts bioweapons research and coronavirus experiments, and the WI,” the report continues.

Wenstrup specifically pointed to Zhou’s death under questionable circumstances, saying “We want to know what the intelligence community knows about his work, and also about his untimely death and the circumstances around that.”

Lack of Cooperation
The lawmaker highlighted that China has consistently failed to cooperate with investigations into the origins of COVID-19.

“When they finally did let people come to China, they really didn’t let them into the lab and to see everything. As a matter of fact, they [investigation group] had to be held in quarantine for one or two weeks before they even got to have a conversation,” he said, referring to a team of World Health Organization-recruited scientists who visited China in early 2021 to probe the pandemic origins.

“And interestingly, the only person they would allow from America was a gentleman named Peter Daszak, who was with EcoHealth Alliance, who was getting NIH [National Institutes of Health] funding, and then working with the Chinese on coronavirus type of research,” he added.

Daszak is the president of EcoHealth Alliance, a New York-based nonprofit that has drawn considerable scrutiny over funneling federal funding to the WIV for research on coronaviruses, which some experts say amounted to gain-of-function research.

Given the history of collaboration between Daszak and WIV, Wenstrup said there was potential for bias.

Further Investigation
Wenstrup said that the committee would continue to probe the pandemic origins, especially after the Republicans take the gavel in the new year.

“We hope to move forward from here and bring people forward that have been involved with [the Wuhan] Institute of Virology, and any other people that have done this type of science and get their opinions and get knowledge,” he said.

“These are always the concerns when it comes to weapons. So we need to continue to delve in that direction. And as the Intelligence Committee, we have the responsibility of oversight and to be aware of the national security threats that may be out there,” he added.

It’s important to get to the bottom of this question so as to prevent future pandemics from emerging, the congressman said.

“As a physician, I can tell you this is important because we have to know about lab security around the world and for our own sake; we also have to do more to make sure that we are prepared if something like this should ever happen again,” he said.

The Epoch Times has reached out to Eco Health Alliance and and ODNI for comments.


ccp

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Re: Nuclear War, Germ War, Bio War, Chem War, WMD
« Reply #596 on: January 04, 2023, 07:17:48 AM »
"Beijing’s rapid buildup of nuclear forces has been assisted by American nuclear and missile technology obtained by Chinese spies and through U.S. space and nuclear cooperation in the 1990s, according to a review of Chinese technology records and internal U.S. government documents."

 :x

DougMacG

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Re: Nuclear War, Germ War, Bio War, Chem War, WMD
« Reply #597 on: January 04, 2023, 08:03:59 AM »
"Beijing’s rapid buildup of nuclear forces has been assisted by American nuclear and missile technology obtained by Chinese spies and through U.S. space and nuclear cooperation in the 1990s, according to a review of Chinese technology records and internal U.S. government documents."

 :x

Begs the question, if we were trying to destroy our country and its place in the world, isn't this the exact course we would take?


Crafty_Dog

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ET: Is China spreading disease again?
« Reply #599 on: January 07, 2023, 07:08:28 PM »
CCP Wants to Infect the World as It Rejects International Travel Curbs, Conceals COVID Data: Gordon Chang
By Dorothy Li and Jan Jekielek January 6, 2023 Updated: January 7, 2023biggersmaller Print
As a deadly new virus first emerged in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019, the regime downplayed the severity of the virus and concealed the true scale of the outbreak.

It wasn’t until late January 2020 that Chinese officials disclosed that the mysterious virus was caple of transmitting between humans. The delay in public warning allowed the disease to develop into a global pandemic: By the time Wuhan was locked down, cases had already been reported in the United States, Thailand, and several other countries.

Related Coverage
CCP Wants to Infect the World as It Rejects International Travel Curbs, Conceals COVID Data: Gordon ChangTimeline of Chinese Regime’s Coverup of COVID-19 Outbreak
To contain the virus’ advance, dozens of nations imposed travel restrictions on Chinese visitors around February 2020. The regime, in response, lashed out at countries taking precautionary measures, with the foreign ministry accusing these nations were “sowing panic,” even though a swath of China had shut down.

“You put those two things together, and it means they deliberately spread this disease beyond its borders,” said Gordon Chang, author and a senior fellow of Gatestone Institute.

“The reason why we need that context is because we’re seeing something similar today. As this disease … is ripping through China, they are now opening up the doors to Chinese leaving [the] country for tourism. And they are not sharing sequencing. They’re not telling the world what’s actually going on in China right now,” the China expert said in a recent interview with EpochTV’s “American Thought Leaders” program, due to premiere on Jan. 7 at 7:30 p.m. ET.

Epoch Times Photo
Gordon Chang, China analyst and author of “The Coming Collapse of China,” in New York City on Jan. 3, 2023. (Samira Bouaou/The Epoch Times)
His comment came as the regime becomes increasingly angry at countries requiring travelers from China to take COVID tests, measures taken before the regime reopened the country’s border on Jan. 6.

“We will take corresponding measures based on the principle of reciprocity according to different situations,” China’s foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said Tuesday.

China is battling with a massive outbreak that has yet to peak. The World Health Organization is appealing for transparency, saying China’s official tallies are underreporting the actual scale of the outbreak.

China’s top health body stopped publishing daily infections and has acknowledged only a handful of deaths during the current outbreak. But as many as 248 million people, or 18 percent of the country’s population, were estimated to have caught the virus between Dec. 1 to 20, according to a memo from the health regulator’s internal meeting leaked online and confirmed by news outlets. Local officials and domestic health experts estimated the infection rate likely exceeded 50 percent in multiple provinces and reached 80 percent in Beijing.

Amid the explosive outbreak, the lack of reliable data has stoked global concerns, particularly regarding the possibility of a new, more dangerous variant circulating in the country.

Epoch Times Photo
Travelers of a flight from China enter the COVID-19 testing center of the Paris-Charles-de-Gaulle airport in Roissy, outside Paris, on January 1, 2023. (Julien De Rosa/AFP via Getty Images)
The United States and over a dozen nations now require a negative COVID test result for visitors from China. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the measure is to impede the spread of COVID on American soil, given “the lack of adequate and transparent epidemiological and viral genomic sequence data.” The agency is now considering measures like sampling wastewater from flights from China to track potential new variants.

Such responses, according to Chang, were not enough if the regime was once again seeking to “deliberately” infect the world.

“That’s entirely wrong. I mean, if China is doing this again, and it’s clear that they are, then we should not be allowing arrivals in from China until we know what the devil is going on,” he said.

Reasons for Abandonment of Zero-COVID
Since the initial lockdown of Wuhan, the regime had vowed to eliminate every infection among communities through repeated testings, swift lockdowns, prolonged quarantine, and digital surveillance. By mid-Octorber, when Chinese leader Xi Jinping claimed an unprecedented third term in office during the 20th Party congress, he doubled down on the communist-style campaign, known as zero-COVID, despite growing the economic and human toll.

Then, following historic nationwide protests in late November, the regime abruptly reversed the course and scrapped most of the zero-COVID policy.

In reality, the long-held strategy was already under strain ahead of the reversal, Chang noted.

“The World Health Organization actually said that the virus was surging through China before the lockdowns were lifted on Dec. 7, so that they were saying the lifting of the lockdowns didn’t cause the surge because it was already there,” the analyst said.

“When you start looking at the data … we’re seeing that there really were infections, and now it is just completely out of control,” he said. The COVID crisis set off even before the protests. Official daily infections was surging from 3,837 new cases on Nov. 5, to nearly 40,000 on Nov. 27, a record high of cases prompting more local controls. Though the official figures are still likely a vast undercount given the communist regime’s practice of covering up data that may tarnish its image.

Epoch Times Photo
Protesters shout slogans during a protest against the Chinese Communist Party’s strict zero COVID measures in Beijing, China, on Nov. 28, 2022. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
From Nov. 26, rare protests against the draconian curbs erupted in major cities and prominent university campuses across the nation. Some young demonstrators in Shanghai went even further, calling Xi and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to step down.

That bold voice “frightened the Communist Party,” said Chang. “That means that the mood was revolutionary.”

Beyond the widespread anger, the fight against COVID has taken a heavy toll on the economy. The daily testings and constant tracing of close contacts over the prior three years have drained local finances and hammered the country’s shaky economy, Chang said.

As COVID outbreaks kept repeating, the implementation of the costly approach was “just not possible anymore for the party,” he said. “They just didn’t have the resources to do it.”

Mounting economic costs, a slowing economy, a rapid COVID surge despite tightened lockdowns, combined with the biggest display of public discontent in decades, finally pushed the regime to relinquish the zero-COVID policy long championed by the CCP, according to Chang.

“Those four reasons are essentially why the Communist Party didn’t change its policies on Dec. 7, it just capitulated to the disease. This is the collapse of Communist Party policy.”

COVID ‘Conquered Communism’
Outbreaks are now spreading unabated through the nation’s 1.4 billion population with low natural immunity after three years of strict lockdowns, leaving ill-prepared hospitals inundated with patients and crematoriums overloaded with bodies, essentially a reprise of what happened in Wuhan and other Chineses cities in early 2020.

The chaotic scenes reveal the “communist party policy was a failure,” Chang said.

Related Coverage
CCP Wants to Infect the World as It Rejects International Travel Curbs, Conceals COVID Data: Gordon Chang‘Whether You Live or Die, No One Cares’: Chinese Left Helpless Amid COVID Crisis
The anti-COVID campaign originated from a Chinese communist ideology that humans are over heaven. “Battling with heaven is endless joy, fighting with the earth is endless joy, and struggling with humanity is endless joy,” Mao Zedong, the first leader of the CCP, claimed.

“Mao talked about conquering nature, well Xi Jinping obviously thought he could conquer the disease,” Chang said.

“We saw the Communist Party, despite its great efforts, was not able to stop this. And that’s why we’re having just unfolding tragedy in China right now.

“And eventually the disease conquered communism.”
===========

Also see

https://www.theepochtimes.com/mkt_app/china-deliberately-pushing-citizens-to-get-covid-19-to-reach-herd-immunity-microbiologist_4964539.html?utm_source=China&src_src=China&utm_campaign=uschina-2023-01-06&src_cmp=uschina-2023-01-06&utm_medium=email&est=MUWv7w%2BbKUCMUR%2BF6xGIaMqRwk8EtAh1w8JCO7ap9GTctjk7wgx8wqeTVjHWOFP%2BCm6i
« Last Edit: January 07, 2023, 08:09:01 PM by Crafty_Dog »