Nerve Gas Used On Sailors In
'60s Tests
WASHINGTON, May 24, 2002
The Pentagon has admitted for the
first time that chemical and biological weapons were tested on Navy ships in the
1960s, and said anyone who was harmed could be eligible for health benefits.
As first reported by CBS News Correspondent Vince Gonzales in 2000, the
Pentagon conducted more than 100 of the secret biological warfare tests.
In two of those tests, code-named "Autumn Gold" and "Copper
Head," more than a thousand U.S. sailors were sprayed with materials once
thought to be harmless.
Two kinds of nerve gas and a biological toxin were sprayed on the ships,
military officials said Thursday. Four tests in the Pacific from 1964 to 1968
used either the deadly nerve agent sarin, the nerve gas known as VX, or a
biological toxin that causes flu-like symptoms, Defense Department statements
said.
Sketchy records of the tests and ships' logs do not indicate any of those
involved in the tests suffered serious health problems at the time, said Dr.
Michael E. Kilpatrick, a Defense Department health official.
"We believe if anything catastrophic happened or if there were large
numbers of ill people, it would be in the log," said Kilpatrick, who was
involved in reviewing the records. "There's no indication on any of these
tests that that had occurred."
Yet many of those sailors — some of whom claim they were subjected to the test
without their consent and were never told what it involved — feel their health
has been damaged.
The Department of Veterans Affairs has mailed letters to about 600 veterans who
may have taken part in the tests, VA Secretary Anthony Principi said Thursday.
"There's always been a question whether veterans and active-duty service
members became ill as a result of that testing," Principi said in an
interview with The Associated Press. "It's been controversial, so we were
sending out letters to veterans to ask them to take a physical and to see if
they are entitled to any benefits."
The Pentagon released details about six tests from a 1960s program to evaluate
chemical and biological weapons and defenses against them. The Defense
Department agreed two years ago to begin releasing details about the tests and
contacting participants after pressure from Rep. Mike Thompson, D-Calif., and
veterans involved in the tests.
"I'm somewhat alarmed by it," Thompson said. "It seems to me
enough time has passed that someone over there should have known who was
involved and what was going on."
The tests also used chemicals and bacteria meant to simulate weapons, as well as
fluorescent or radioactive chemicals used as tracers, the Defense Department
said. One type of bacteria used to simulate germ weapons was later found to
cause infections, and a separate test where that germ was sprayed on San
Francisco is believed to have caused an infection that killed a man.
The tests were among 113 conducted as part of a project called SHAD, or
Shipboard Hazard and Defense. The Pentagon has acknowledged using chemical and
biological simulants before, but has not admitted using the actual weapons
agents themselves.
Sarin, the deadly nerve gas used by a cult to kill a dozen people in a Tokyo
subway in 1995, was used in a 1964 test off the Hawaiian coast. Both sarin and a
chemical simulant were also sprayed onto the USS George Eastman and injected
into the ship's ventilation system, the Pentagon statement said.
Crew members wore gas masks during the tests, and those who worked most directly
with the sarin wore chemical protection suits, the statement said.
Monkeys were used as test subjects during the exercises using nerve gas and were
later "sacrificed" to determine whether they were exposed to the
weapons, Kilpatrick said. Although records do not say how potent the sarin was,
the fact that participants used protective gear indicates it was in a harmful or
deadly form, Kilpatrick said.
Tests in 1964 and 1965 used VX, another deadly nerve gas. During tests in 1965,
George Eastman was sprayed with VX and a simulant to test decontamination
procedures. VX gas tagged with radioactive phosphorus was also sprayed on a
barge to test decontamination procedures.
That second test used a compound that was 90 percent VX — "the most
lethal nerve agent" and one that can linger for weeks, Kilpatrick said. But
there is no evidence any people were on the barge sprayed with VX, which was
towed nearly a half-mile behind a tugboat, he said.
A 1968 test used staphylococcal enterotoxin Type B — a poison produced by
bacteria that causes flu-like symptoms such as fever, muscle aches, cough,
vomiting and diarrhea.
During that test, the toxin was sprayed over five tugboats, the USS Granville S.
Hall and parts of a Pacific atoll to evaluate how it could be spread from the
air.
©MMII CBS Worldwide Inc. All
Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or
redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
HOME | CONTACT | OPERATION FACT SHEETS | BACKGROUND INFO | NEWS | CONTAMINANTS | SHIPS | LINKS
copyright © ProjectShad.org 2002