Pandemic chaos proves the world isn't prepared for biological warfare, experts say - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 03:31 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Pandemic chaos proves the world isn't prepared for biological warfare, experts say

With the globe now in its third pandemic year, biosecurity and public health experts say thatCOVID-19and its variants have demonstrated how vulnerable nations are tobiological warfare.

New technology has made it easier than ever before to custom-design pathogens for maximum spread

German emergency workers guard a tent for decontamination during a joint anti-terror exercise testing protocols for biological or chemical weapons attacks in Berlin on Oct. 11, 2017. (Markus Schreiber/The Associated Press)

With the globe now in its third pandemic year, biosecurity and public health experts say thatCOVID-19and its variants have demonstrated how vulnerable nations are tobiological warfare.

"COVID was a wake-up call,"saidJames Giordano, executive director of the Institute for Biodefense Research and a professor of neurology at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. He studies how bioscience technologies can be weaponized.

"What COVID really brought into the light is the lack of preparedness for a biological threat, whether it's naturally occurring or man-made, or some combination of both."

In the United States, the patchwork response to COVID-19 causedthe pandemic to spin out of control in every single wave. More than 980,000 Americans have been killedbythe virus a death rate far higher than those experienced byother wealthy countries.

China, meanwhile an economic rival of the U.S.with close ties to Russia has followeda zero-tolerance strategy. Any small cluster of COVID cases prompts the government to swiftly impose strict lockdowns.

A community volunteer wearing personal protective equipment disinfects an area before conducting a test for the COVID-19 coronavirus during a lockdown in Pudong district, Shanghai on April 17, 2022. (Liu Jin/AFP/Getty Images)

While this approach is viewed by many as draconian, China argues it works. Out of 1.4 billion residents, China reports fewer than 14,000 deaths (there is widespreadskepticism about the accuracy of that figure). Canada, with a population of 38 million, has lost more than 38,000 lives to COVID.

The U.S. and Canada also imposed lockdowns, but mistrust in government and science and rampant misinformation led small pocketsof the population to loudly resist the measures. And jurisdictional division of powers meant each province and statedecided on their own courses of action, withsome opting for fewer restrictions than others.

People gather for a protest in Calgary against COVID-19 vaccinations and vaccine passports on Sept. 13, 2021. (Nancy Walters/CBC)

Then there's the political turmoil. COVID-19 policy became a political wedge issue, dividing the population and fuelling partisan rhetoric in the middle of a public health emergency.

"Our near-peer competitors and potential adversaries are watching,"Giordanosaid.

"COVID demonstrated a mass disruptive effect. Over and above the destruction it had for human life with regard to mortality, the disruptive effect on infrastructure, economies, stabilities, even the political span with regard to social integrity, was overwhelming."

Protesters against restrictions implemented in response to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak gather near Massachusetts Governor Charlie Bakers house in Swampscott, Massachusetts on May 16, 2020. (Brian Snyder/Reuters)

Mixed opinions on risk of biological attack

Giordanosaid he believes there is an "almost 100 per cent risk" of bioweapons"of some new or novel sort" beingdeployed somewhere in the world "within the next five years."

Dan Kaszeta is less pessimistic. He's a specialist in biological weapons who worked with the U.S. Army, the White House Military Officeand the U.S. Secret Service.

Kaszeta describes the threat as "low but not negligible." He saidthere's no real incentivefor a nation state to trigger a pandemic becausethere's a high risk of the virus spreading back to the country that released it making COVID-19 and other fast-spreading pathogens unpredictable and unappealing bioweapons.

"Achieving a raging global pandemic that nobody can control that's nihilism," Kaszeta said. "The whole arc of military technology is towards precision lethality, not indiscriminate lethality."

Andconventional weapons like guns and bombs have become much cheaper for armies to acquire in recent decades, he added.

ButKaszeta and Giordano agree that the technology needed to weaponizepathogensno longer requiresmassive lab facilitiesand hundreds of scientists. It's available to anyone including rogue actors.

New technology elevates the threat

The big concern is gene-editing technology.Giordano saidit's"available literally over the counter" and can give any university-educated person the means to modify existing organisms or make new organisms that are highly infectious.

He points toCRISPR, gene-editing tech available online for less than $300. The American Security Project has warned that thistechnology"could be a danger to humanity."

Used in cancer research, CRISPR allows researchersto alter organisms at a genetic levelby taking DNA from one andmovingitto another.

Petri dishes with citrus seedlings are prepared for gene editing research at the University of Florida on Sept. 27, 2018. (Federica Narancio/The Associated Press)

David Gisselsson isa pathologist and geneticist with Lund University in Sweden who has worked with the Swedish government on pandemic preparedness. He said the alarming thing about this technology is that it can be used by virtually anyone, anywhere and the results don't have to be sophisticated to serve as a terror weapon.

"If you have someone who wants to use this for maleficent purposes, then it's quite easy to do. And you don't even have to be a state actor. You can act on your own," says Gisselsson.

"My thought is that [the pathogen doesn't]really have to be a very good organism. It can be quite sloppy. As long as it causes fear, this new elevated wariness that we have about pandemics will trigger an enormous pandemic response and maybe an overreaction."

Gisselsson, who recently wrote a paper on the topic, said hefears thateven thesmallestbioweapon leak could create social chaos.

"I can only imagine what will happen next time if there's something which is new, seemingly dangerous but maybe not so dangerous, and this could trigger a very pronounced effect," he said.

COVID-19 putbioterrorismback on theworld's radar

In April 2020, not long after the pandemic struck, UN Secretary-GeneralAntonio Guterreswarned that bioterroristscould take inspiration from the pandemic's impact.

"Non-state groups could gain access to virulent strains that could pose similar devastation to societies around the globe," he said.

The Canadian Armed Forces runsa biological defence system. The government is in the process of procuring and building an improved one, but it won't be ready until 2030.

CBC News asked for an interview with Public Safety Minister Marco MendicinoandDefence Minister Anita Anand. Both declined.

A statement issued byMendicino'soffice acknowledges COVID-19 could "heighten the risks associated with bioterrorism, biological weapons proliferation and the deliberate use of disease as a weapon" and said the government is"working to address it on a variety of fronts."

The Justice Department released this image of an anthrax-laced letter, which was sent to then-Senate majority leader Tom Daschle in Washington on October 23, 2001. (REUTERS)

Real-world examples of bioterrorismare rare. Shortly after 9/11, letters containing samples of anthrax a rare infectious disease were mailed to politicians and members of the media, killing five people and infecting 17 others. Anthrax has a high fatality rate (as high as 80 per cent), but unlike COVID-19, it can't be spread from person to person.

In 1993, a Japanese cult calledAum Shinrikyo attempted to kill thousands by spraying anthrax from a rooftop in Kameido, but it had no apparent effect.

All eyes on Russia

Some have suggestedRussia is preparing to use biological weapons in its war on Ukraineand may already have deployed chemical weapons. The U.S. and Britain are investigating a report that Russian troops dropped a poisonous substance on the besieged city of Mariupol, causing respiratory failure in victims.

Chemical weapons involve toxic chemicals that immediately suffocate or burn its victims. Biological weapons are viruses or bacteria that are slower-movingand, as a result, harder to detect and contain.

Nadiya Trubchaninova, 70, cries at the funeral for her son Vadym, 48, in the cemetery of Mykulychi outside Kyiv, Ukraine on April 16, 2022. Vadym was killed by Russian soldiers in Bucha. (Rodrigo Abd/The Associated Press)

The White House has warned that Russia may be creating a pretext for a biological weapons attack. In February, Moscow accused the U.S. of hiding bioweapon labs in Ukraine containing deadly pathogens like anthrax and the plague. China backed up that accusation soon after.

"Now that Russia has made these false claims, and China has seemingly endorsed this propaganda, we should all be on the lookout for Russia to possibly use chemical or biological weapons in Ukraine, or to create a false-flag operation using them. It's a clear pattern," tweeted Jen Psaki, White House press secretary.

The "clear pattern" Psakicitedis a reference to Russia makingsimilar claimsbefore chemical attacks were launched against civilians during the Syrian civil war.

Global bioweapons treaty lacks teeth

The Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) is a global, legally-binding treaty between130 countries that has been in force since 1975. Itoutlaws the development or use ofbiological weapons. But critics argueit has significant flaws.

Walter Dorn is an arms control expert and professor of defence studies at the Royal Military College of Canada. He was part of an expert group in the 1990s that pushed for more teeth in the BWC.

Dornsaidthe treaty needs a verification protocol along the lines ofnuclear and chemical weapons treaties a way to confirmthat countries are complying.The BWC does not have the means or authority to investigate a threat. The UN Security Council does but it never has.

"I think we need to both be prepared to prevent a spread and also to make the treaty more effective," saidDorn. "Even though biological weapons are low probability of actual use, there are programs now to develop them. And there are violators of the BWC that need to be held to account."