Ukrainian Bio-Lab Threatening Russia?
Ukrainian Bio-Lab Threatening Russia?
"[There is likely a] high degree of probability that the United States and its Western allies were producing chemicals for the distinct purpose of selectively attacking] various [groups from within the population of Russia].""[Documents uncovered by the Russian military in Ukraine on 24 February - the day the Russian invasion started] show that the Ministry of Health of Ukraine has set the task of completely destroying bio-agents in laboratories.""The Pentagon knows that if these documents fall into the hands of Russian experts, then it's highly likely that Ukraine and the United States will be found to have violated the Convention on the Prohibition of Biological and Toxin Weapons."General Igor Kirillov, head, Radiation, Chemical and Biological Protection Troops, Russian Armed Forces
Russian state TV has been showing sites which officials say are being used to develop bioweapons |
"There are no indications that Ukrainian labs have been involved in any nefarious activity, or any research or development in contravention of the Biological Weapons Convention."Filippa Lentzos, biosecurity expert, King's College London"[The World Health Organization advised Ukraine to destroy high-threat pathogens stored at the country's public health labs to prevent] any potential spills [that would spread disease among the population].""[The agency collaborated with Ukrainian public health labs for several years to enhance biosafety and biosecurity and help prevent] accidental or deliberate release of pathogens."World Health Organization"These labs publish in openly available literature.""They collaborate on many public health projects with global partners."Brett Edwards, senior lecturer, security and public policy, University of Bath"Devoting considerable sums of money and significant resources to conducting bioweapons research makes no strategic sense for Ukraine given the difficulty in using them in a conflict.""Conventional warfare weapons are much easier and more effective to use for countries like Ukraine." Dan Kaszeta, former US serviceman, expert on defence against biological weapons
The US says it funds work in Ukrainian labs to tackle dangerous diseases Getty Images |
Back
in 1991, several former Soviet bioweapons laboratories in Ukraine
underwent conversion by the United States, becoming facilities meant to
decommission weapons of mass destruction. For the obvious purpose of
preventing them from falling into the possession of those who might wish
to use them following the dissolution of the Soviet Union. This appears
to be the program that has now sparked conspiracy theories, useful to
Russian propaganda intent on painting Ukraine and its Western allies
with broad, black strokes of threats by whatever means, to Russia.
In
1992 when then-Russian Premier Boris Yeltsin, visited the United
Kingdom, at a time when relations between Russia and the West were on a
friendly track with signs of warming trust and collegiality, he spoke
with members of the Defence Intelligence Staff, telling them that
Russian bioweapons scientists were undertaking research into the
influence on human genes of chemical substances.
This
was echoed years later when Dr.Christopher Davis, serving on the
Defence Intelligence Staff spoke of the research as having opened the
door to a weapon that could be indiscriminately sprayed, yet it would
prove lethal to only "certain people it was designed to find and attack".
Russia has first-hand knowledge of the potential of developing
biological weapons to target individuals of a distinct ethnic group,
since Russia itself developed such weapons in the past.
Scientists
are notoriously inquisitive about the nature of things and their
interaction; it is what moves science forward, for good and for ill.
Laboratories may not be involved directly in formulating bioweapons, but
legitimate fears abound with respect to "dual-use" biological research.
The type of research whose product could feasibly be used for nefarious
purposes, once in the wrong hands.
In
2019, the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk at Cambridge
University circulated a warning of the possibility that biological
weapons could be formulated and produced for the very purpose of
targeting a demographic representing a particular ethnic group, based
entirely on their DNA. Russia's new claims warning that Ukraine was
producing just such weapons, fall directly into the type of claims that
follow a typical pattern of disinformation linked to Russian propaganda.
Dr.
Filippa Lentzos, co-director of the Centre for Science and Security
Studies at King's College London, had on an earlier occasion tackled
similar claims made by Russia of the existence of a laboratory in
Georgia dedicated to a similar purpose, to justify its invasion and
conflict with Georgia, another former USSR satellite which was anxious
to go its own way of independence with the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Reports in Russian state media in 2018 claimed untested drugs
were given to citizens at a lab funded by the U.S. in Georgia.
A convoy of pro-Russian troops are seen outside the separatist-controlled town of Volnovakha in the Eastern Ukrainian Donetsk region on Saturday. (Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters) |
Now
the very same claims, under very similar circumstances are once again
being trotted out to justify Russia's need to invade Ukraine leading to
the destruction not of a putative bioweapons laboratory but the entire
national infrastructure. When Russia invaded Georgia, it re-possessed
the allegiance of two provinces. Moscow has already done that in
Ukraine, repeating the very same pattern that the Kremlin never seems to
tire of, declaring eastern Ukraine's Donetsk and Luhansk regions in the
Donbas to be independent of Ukraine; Russian territory. With Crimea
thrown in for good measure.
And
with Mariupol encircled and battered with artillery and constant
shelling, with the bombing of apartment buildings, schools, government
offices and hospitals it too is meant to fall into Russian hands to
provide a land link between Russia and the Crimean peninsula. A gradual,
creeping reclamation of a sovereign geography Moscow claims
historically to be part of Greater Russia.
A woman puts her head in her hands as she sits on a cot in a shelter, set up for displaced persons fleeing Ukraine, inside a school gymnasium in Przemysl, Poland, Tuesday, March 8, 2022. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber) |
Labels: Bombing Civilian Infrastructure, Conflict, Propoganda, Russian Invasion of Ukraine, War Crimes
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