Past Activities
Various projects CBWNP has undertaken in it's history
2010
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Botulinum Neurotoxin and International Arms Control
Approximately 500
different types of toxins—natural poisons produced by microorganisms,
animals, and plants—are known to science, and artificial toxins have been
produced by advanced chemical and biotechnology techniques. Toxins can be useful
research tools in physiology and pharmacology, and a few, such as botulinum
toxin and ricin, have therapeutic value in medical practice. Yet toxins can also
be employed for nefarious purposes such as crime, terrorism, and warfare. With
funding from the private foundations and government agencies, CBWNP staff are
analyzing how best to preserve the legitimate scientific and therapeutic
applications of toxins while preventing their proliferation.
In the spring of 2008, CBWNP began working on a project that aims to generate findings
on the proliferation threat posed by the illicit manufacture of botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT).
Specifically, the project is assessing the threat posed to U.S.
security by illicit producers of botulinum toxin that are sold for purported
therapeutic and cosmetic purposes. Information about illicit manufacturers,
criminal middlemen and/or unethical end-users of the black or grey-market toxin
is being gathered and analyzed. The threat assessment based on these findings were
spelled out in a report that was submitted to the Defense Threat Reduction Agency in
March 2010. In addition, a shorter version of the report was published in
Scientific
American in June 2010.
2007
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Pandemic Flu Watch (2007-2010)
MBayFluWatch provided up-to-date pandemic influenza information for the world, the U.S., California, and Monterey Bay area residents.
It included the latest news on A(H1N1) or "Swine Flu", and H5N1 or "Avian Flu".
The site was a collaborative effort between the Monterey County Health Department and the CBWNP.
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Beijing On Biohazards: Chinese Experts on Bioweapons Nonproliferation Issues
Completed in September 2007, Beijing On Biohazards offers a
first-of-its-kind collection of essays from top Chinese experts on the threat of
biological weapons proliferation; new Chinese regulations on biosafety,
biosecurity and oversight of genetic engineering research; the lessons that can
be learned from the United Nations Special Commission's inspections in
Iraq to help construct a verification protocol for the Biological and Toxin
Weapons Convention; and China's policies and programs to hinder bioweapons
proliferation. First and foremost, this volume, edited by Amy E. Smithson, is a
reflection of the readiness of Chinese experts to discuss and address these
extremely important matters. Second, these essays indicate that Chinese views on
bioweapons nonproliferation policies and mechanisms are evolving. Third, these
essays provide considerable information for their colleagues in the West to
contemplate, to appreciate, to agree with, and to contest. These essays, in
other words, are seeds for a dialogue between Chinese and Western policy
analysts, scientists, and officials about the nature of the biological weapons
threat and the tools that can be applied domestically and internationally to
reduce the threat of biological weapons proliferation.
View the Beijing On Biohazards publication
2000
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Threat Assessment of Biological and Chemical Terrorism
In March 1995, the Japanese doomsday cult Aum Shinrikyo
launched a terror attack on the Tokyo subway with the chemical nerve agent
sarin, causing over a thousand casualties including 12 deaths. Although it is
impossible to forecast if and when a future similar terrorist event might take
place, governments must assume that they will occur and accordingly plan for
preventing them and, should they occur, dealing effectively with their
aftermath. Assessing the threat of CBW terrorism requires an understanding of
the motivations, capabilities, and patterns of behavior of groups and
individuals that might be drawn to these weapons. To this end, the CBWNP has
developed a comprehensive limited access database that contains information
about more than 800 cases in which domestic or international terrorists and
criminals sought to acquire or use chemical, biological, radiological, or
nuclear (CBRN) weapons since 1900. By maintaining and augmenting this database,
the Program provides the academic, policy, and law enforcement communities with
empirical data needed to better understand the threat and to prepare for the
most likely contingencies should the threat be realized.
The CBWNP has
also commissioned in-depth case studies of more than twenty incidents of CBW
terrorism that have occurred since World War II. These cases have been
researched utilizing a variety of primary and secondary sources, including court
documents, press accounts, police reports, declassified FBI files, and
interviews, with the aim of identifying terrorist motivations and patterns of
behavior. An edited book containing the first set of case studies, titled
Toxic Terror: Assessing Terrorist Use of Chemical and Biological Weapons,
was published by MIT Press in April 2000. Additionally, CBWNP has commissioned
studies on second-tier suppliers of dual use biotechnology equipment and
supplies.
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