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The Nature of the Threat

The potential destructive power of biological weapons is enormous, yet the opportunity for access to dangerous pathogens can be fairly routine and inexpensive. Moreover, the knowledge and expertise to obtain or prepare bioweapons are increasingly available, and the potential for exploitation is embedded in the very scientific and technological advances that hold promise for improving health and preventing disease.

"Of all the various weapons of mass destruction, biological weapons are of the greatest concern to me...the one that scares me to death."

General Colin Powell, Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff, before the House Armed Services Committee March 30, 1993

An attack with a bioweapon could produce an infectious disease epidemic that would sicken and kill large numbers and persist over a prolonged period as contagion spreads. Unlike other types of attack, there would likely be no recognizable event or immediate casualties, and no physical location where damage is concentrated. In the absence of an announcement or a fortuitous discovery, authorities may remain unaware that a biological attack has happened until days or weeks have passed and victims begin to appear in physicians' offices and hospital emergency rooms.

Biological weapons are relatively easy to produce and inexpensive. They can inflict significant damage in small quantities and in the absence of sophisticated delivery mechanisms. Pathogens suitable for bioweapons can be easily concealed and transported, and many are found in nature, as well as in government, university and industry laboratories. Information about how to obtain and prepare bioweapons is increasingly available on the Internet and in open scientific literature. Moreover, bioweapons activities can be easily hidden within legitimate research laboratories or pharmaceutical sites.

The idea of a "dual-use dilemma" has emerged because the same technologies and materials that are used for research to benefit society can also be used by terrorists to make biological weapons.

The biological threat challenges traditional ways of thinking about prevention, deterrence and response, requiring us to develop new tools for threat reduction. Compared with the nuclear and chemical threats, the strategic and analytic framework for addressing biological threats and the depth of expertise are much less developed. The response to the biological threat—with its close links to naturally occurring infectious disease--requires a new thinking.

 

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