Tuesday, August 09, 2005
That explains everything....
From the London Times: Saddam's germ war plot is traced back to one Oxford cow By Dominic Kennedy A BRITISH cow that died in an Oxfordshire field in 1937 has emerged as the source of Saddam Hussain’s “weapons of mass destruction” programme that led to the Iraq war. An ear from the cow was sent to an English laboratory, where scientists discovered anthrax spores that were later used in secret biological warfare tests by Winston Churchill. The culture was sent to the United States, which exported samples to Iraq during Saddam’s war against Iran in the 1980s. Inspectors have found that this batch of anthrax was the dictator’s choice in his attempts to create biological weapons. Uh, oh . . . supported by 126 MPs in the last Parliament, for a UN investigation into whether Washington broke a weapons control agreement. “It just makes them look more hypocritical than ever,” he said. Sounds like some chickens coming home to roost. “Iraq declared researching different strains of B. anthracis, but settled on the American Type Culture Collection strain 14578 as the exclusive strain for use as a BW,” Mr Duelfer said. But wait! Apparently this little bit of anthrax has been globe trotting . . . Its catalogue shows that batch 14578 consists of “bovine anthrax”, isolated by R. L. Vollum, a professor of bacteriology at Oxford University during the 1930s. It is named after him. So MAYBE its really THEIR fault . . . The Vollum anthrax was used in biological weapons tests on the Scottish island of Gruinard in 1942, which had to be quarantined for 48 years. “It killed any number of sheep in Gruinard,” Professor Hugh-Jones said. OK. So there really were WMD . . . someplace . . . but it was the fault of the . . . . Americans . . . no, no . . . its the fault of the British . . . well, but the anthrax spores came from some bones that originated in S. Rhodesia, so its their fault, yeah, yeah, that's the ticket. Yeesh. |