Did White House send anthrax and blame Al Qaeda after 9-11?

afoaf

Duke status
Jun 25, 2008
49,620
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Can you substantiate the Cipro claim with any sources?

Can you also consider the fact that after 9/11 that perhaps
it was standard protocol to distribute Cipro to key players
because we were dealing with a country we expected would
use biological weapons?

There was plenty of misinformation going around relative to
Iraq and 9/11, that I don't deny, but I feel like this is
a little extreme...to say that Cheney poisoned congress and
that poor old lady in New England.
 

misterhat

Billy Hamilton status
Dec 21, 2007
1,625
69
48
Can you substantiate the Cipro claim with any sources?

Can you also consider the fact that after 9/11 that perhaps
it was standard protocol to distribute Cipro to key players
because we were dealing with a country we expected would
use biological weapons?

There was plenty of misinformation going around relative to
Iraq and 9/11, that I don't deny, but I feel like this is
a little extreme...to say that Cheney poisoned congress and
that poor old lady in New England.
I'm not one for conspiracy theories, and I think there is a good amount of reasonable doubt linking the actual sending the thrax to the Bush administration. However, they did take that event to push false claims about the Iraq connection.

This talks about people being given Cipro 6 weeks before october 23rd.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/aponline/20011023/aponline201158_000.htm

Another thing that kinda bugs me is that the FBI hasnt demonstrated any evidence showing that guy was linked to the anthrax mailings. "He worked there and is crazy" isnt good enough for me.

Here is another good mention of Cipro.

http://www.slate.com/id/2186766/


The attacks were not entirely unexpected. I had been told soon after Sept. 11 to secure Cipro, the antidote to anthrax. The tip had come in a roundabout way from a high government official, and I immediately acted on it. I was carrying Cipro way before most people had ever heard of it.
 

blakestah

Phil Edwards status
Sep 10, 2002
6,139
0
0
Can you substantiate the Cipro claim with any sources?

Can you also consider the fact that after 9/11 that perhaps
it was standard protocol to distribute Cipro to key players
because we were dealing with a country we expected would
use biological weapons?

There was plenty of misinformation going around relative to
Iraq and 9/11, that I don't deny, but I feel like this is
a little extreme...to say that Cheney poisoned congress and
that poor old lady in New England.
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=27888

http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn...p;notFound=true

http://www.judicialwatch.org/1967.shtml

The White House has refused to comply with FOIA requests about why Cipro was given to White House staff after 9/11.

The White House knew the available intel on Afghanistan as well as anyone. Afghanistan has no history of using biological weapons. Recall, the White House knew that the 9/11 attacks were unrelated to Iraq - they were trying to round up intel the best they could to link them - but that was a "projected" link.

There was no reason to think anthrax would be mailed after 9/11. Unless you knew that anthrax had been taken from a US military facility.

Think about it for 10 seconds. Someone took anthrax from a US military facility. They placed it in letters with really bad fake Islamic terrorist notes. They mailed it to the major news agencies (except Fox news) and to the two top US Democratic Senators.

I wonder who could have been behind it?!?!?

Make no mistake about it. This was a shot across the bow. It was intended to intimidate the US Senators and news agencies that were not playing ball. Putting the fear of meeting their maker into a few key players can really help rev of the troops to get the war machine going.
 

afoaf

Duke status
Jun 25, 2008
49,620
23,240
113
Agreed.

Unfortunately, by killing himself he's given the media an
easy scapegoat despite the fact that the FBIs case is full
of holes...at best.

The other "suspect" has already won a $5mil suit against
the FBI for smearing him publicly.

They will never solve this case and yet the media and the
rest of the US seems to have moved on and forgotten.

Deplorable.
 

blakestah

Phil Edwards status
Sep 10, 2002
6,139
0
0
Agreed.

Unfortunately, by killing himself he's given the media an
easy scapegoat despite the fact that the FBIs case is full
of holes...at best.
You think he killed himself?

I mean, how tough is it to knock someone out on a gas anesthetic, dump a lethal dose of codeine down his throat, and walk out the door?

Like there is not motive and opportunity.
 

speedo

Miki Dora status
Jan 7, 2005
4,608
0
0
921OB
and in other news....................




Book says White House ordered forgery
By: Mike Allen
August 5, 2008 07:46 AM EST

A new book by the author Ron Suskind claims that the White House ordered the CIA to forge a back-dated, handwritten letter from the head of Iraqi intelligence to Saddam Hussein.

Suskind writes in “The Way of the World,” to be published Tuesday, that the alleged forgery – adamantly denied by the White House – was designed to portray a false link between Hussein’s regime and al Qaeda as a justification for the Iraq war.

The author also claims that the Bush administration had information from a top Iraqi intelligence official “that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq – intelligence they received in plenty of time to stop an invasion.”

The letter’s existence has been reported before, and it had been written about as if it were genuine. It was passed in Baghdad to a reporter for The (London) Sunday Telegraph who wrote about it on the front page of Dec. 14, 2003, under the headline, “Terrorist behind September 11 strike ‘was trained by Saddam.’”

The Telegraph story by Con Coughlin (which, coincidentally, ran the day Hussein was captured in his “spider hole”) was touted in the U.S. media by supporters of the war, and he was interviewed on NBC's "Meet the Press."

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"Over the next few days, the Habbush letter continued to be featured prominently in the United States and across the globe," Suskind writes. "Fox's Bill O'Reilly trumpeted the story Sunday night on 'The O'Reilly Factor,' talking breathlessly about details of the story and exhorting, 'Now, if this is true, that blows the lid off al Qaeda—Saddam.'"

According to Suskind, the administration had been in contact with the director of the Iraqi intelligence service in the last years of Hussein’s regime, Tahir Jalil Habbush al-Tikriti.

“The White House had concocted a fake letter from Habbush to Saddam, backdated to July 1, 2001,” Suskind writes. “It said that 9/11 ringleader Mohammad Atta had actually trained for his mission in Iraq – thus showing, finally, that there was an operational link between Saddam and al Qaeda, something the Vice President’s Office had been pressing CIA to prove since 9/11 as a justification to invade Iraq. There is no link.”

The White House flatly denied Suskind’s account. Tony Fratto, deputy White House press secretary, told Politico: “The allegation that the White House directed anyone to forge a document from Habbush to Saddam is just absurd.”

The White House plans to push back hard. Fratto added: "Ron Suskind makes a living from gutter journalism. He is about selling books and making wild allegations that no one can verify, including the numerous bipartisan commissions that have reported on pre-war intelligence."

Before “The Way of the World: A Story of Truth and Hope in an Age of Extremism,” Suskind wrote two New York Times bestsellers critical of the Bush administration – “The Price of Loyalty” (2004), which featured extensive comments by former Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill, and “The One Percent Doctrine” (2006).

Suskind writes in his new book that the order to create the letter was written on “creamy White House stationery.” The book suggests that the letter was subsequently created by the CIA and delivered to Iraq, but does not say how.

The author claims that such an operation, part of “false pretenses” for war, would apparently constitute illegal White House use of the CIA to influence a domestic audience, an arguably impeachable offense.

Suskind writes that the White House had “ignored the Iraq intelligence chief’s accurate disclosure that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq – intelligence they received in plenty of time to stop an invasion.


“They secretly resettled him in Jordan, paid him $5 million – which one could argue was hush money – and then used his captive status to help deceive the world about one of the era’s most crushing truths: that America had gone to war under false pretenses,” the book says.

Suskind writes that the forgery “operation created by the White House and passed to the CIA seems inconsistent with” a statute saying the CIA may not conduct covert operations “intended to influence United States political processes, public opinion, policies or media.”

“It is not the sort of offense, such as assault or burglary, that carries specific penalties, for example, a fine or jail time,” Suskind writes. “It is much broader than that. It pertains to the White House’s knowingly misusing an arm of government, the sort of thing generally taken up in impeachment proceedings.”

Habbush is still listed as wanted on a State Department website designed to help combat international terrorism, with the notation: “Up to $1 Million Reward.”

Suskind is scheduled to discuss the book’s findings – and his assertion that the country has “diminished moral authority” -- in a pair of interviews by NBC’s Meredith Vieira on the “Today” show at 7:10 p.m. Eastern on Tuesday and Wednesday.

y placing so much on its secret ledger,” Suskind writes in his final chapter, “the administration profoundly altered basic democratic ideals of accountability and informed consent.”

The book (HarperCollins, $27.95) was not supposed to be publicly available until Tuesday, but Politico purchased a copy Monday night at a Washington bookstore.

Suskind, an engaging and confident Washingtonian, writes that the book was “one tough project.” He won the Pulitzer Prize for feature writing as a reporter for The Wall Street Journal, where he worked from 1993 to 2000.

The White House said Suskind received no formal cooperation. He writes in the acknowledgments section at the end of the book: “It should be noted that the intelligence sources who are quoted in this book in no way disclosed any classified information. None crossed the line.”

Among the 415-page book’s other highlights:

--John Maguire, one of two men who oversaw the CIA’s Iraq Operations Group, was frustrated by what Suskind describes as the “tendency of the White House to ignore advice it didn’t want to hear – advice that contradicted its willed certainty, political judgments, or rigid message strategies.”

And Suskind writes that the administration “did not want to hear the word insurgency.”


--In the first days of his presidency, Bush rejected advice from the CIA to wiretap Russian President Vladimir Putin in February 2001 in Vienna, where he was staying in a hotel where the CIA had a listening device planted in the wall of the presidential suite, in need only of a battery change. The CIA said that if the surveillance were discovered, Putin’s respect for Bush would be heightened.

But Condoleezza Rice, Bush’s national security adviser, advised that it was “too risky, it might be discovered,” Suskind writes. Bush decided against if as “a gut decision” based on what he thought was a friendship based on several conversations, including during the presidential campaign. The CIA had warned him that Putin “was a trained KGB agent … [who] wants you to think he’s your friend.”

--Suskind reports that Bush initially told Cheney he had to "‘step back’ in large meetings when they were together, like those at the NSC [National Security Council], because people were addressing and deferring to Cheney. Cheney said he understood, that he’d mostly just take notes at the big tables and then he and Bush would meet privately, frequently, to discuss options and action.”

--Suskind contends Cheney established “deniability” for Bush as part of the vice president’s “complex strategies, developed over decades, for how to protect a president.”

“After the searing experience of being in the Nixon White House, Cheney developed a view that the failure of Watergate was not the break-in, or even the cover-up, but the way the president had, in essence, been over-briefed. There were certain things a president shouldn’t know – things that could be illegal, disruptive to key foreign relationships, or humiliating to the executive.

“They key was a signaling system, where the president made his wishes broadly known to a sufficiently powerful deputy who could take it from there. If an investigation ensued, or a foreign leader cried foul, the president could shrug. This was never something he'd authorized. The whole point of Cheney’s model is to make a president less accountable for his action. Cheney’s view is that accountability – a bedrock feature of representative democracy – is not, in every case, a virtue.”

--Suskind is acidly derisive of Bush, saying that he initially lost his “nerve” on 9/11, regaining it when he grabbed the Ground Zero bullhorn. Suskind says Bush’s 9 p.m. Oval Office address on the fifth anniversary was “well along in petulance, seasoned by a touch of self-defensiveness.”

“Moving on its own natural arc, the country is in the process of leaving Bush – his bullying impulse fused, permanently, with satisfying vengeance – in the scattering ashes of 9/11,” Suskind writes. “The high purpose his angry words carried after the attacks, and in two elections since, is dissolving with each passing minute.”

--Suskind writes in the acknowledgments that his research assistant, Greg Jackson, “was sent to New York on a project for the book” in September 2007 and was “detained by federal agents in Manhattan. He was interrogated and his notes were confiscated, violations of his First and Fourth Amendment rights.” The author provides no further detail.

© 2008 Capitol News Company, LLC
 

blakestah

Phil Edwards status
Sep 10, 2002
6,139
0
0
"many things are debateable but did the White House send snthrax? Hell no. "

- I agree with you. But you can not deny that they used a domestic incident concerning weapons grade anthrax (and the White House had been briefed on the strain of the anthrax) and used it to push their all out phony agenda to invade Iraq. Where, by the way, we are still mired in the biggest geo political blunder in this country's history. And that's the current Republican presidential candidate in that Letterman clip, carrying the rotten water for a bunch of neocon zealots and an administration made up of Texas oil men and a border line retard that wanted to out do his "daddy." An F-ing cheerleader no less!!!
<img src="/forum/images/graemlins/censored.gif" alt="" /> <img src="/forum/images/graemlins/cussing.gif" alt="" />
Whereas I somewhat agree (why else would the White House staff be taking Cipro), there are other considerations.

Consider the notes.



They are obvious forgeries. Most notably, they use Americanized dates (someone from an Arab country would write 11-9-01, whereas in America it would be 9-11-01). They used obvious and childish taunting while posing as an Islamic terrorist. The first four lines of the note are intentionally and directly addressed to Leahy and Daschle, the other lines are the frame-up of Iraq.

Then consider the targets. They were
1) The two highest ranking Democratic Senators
2) All major press networks, except Fox

This was an intentionally sent message. Neither Daschle nor Leahy could have considered it the work of Islamic terrorists. It was an obvious frame-up job with a double intent of leading America to war with Iraq and intimidating the most likely people to oppose the war. Literally threatening their lives.

If we add up what we know...it is clear. We know it was sent by someone with access to Fort Detrick. It was sent to intimidate the press and democratic senators, and to frame Islamic terrorists. The White House knew it was coming ahead of time. It sort of spells out that there was some kind of loose cannon operating on behalf of the White House trying to further their cause.
 

ringer

Tom Curren status
Aug 2, 2002
11,351
628
113
Huntington Beach, California
"many things are debateable but did the White House send snthrax? Hell no. "

- I agree with you. But you can not deny that they used a domestic incident concerning weapons grade anthrax (and the White House had been briefed on the strain of the anthrax) and used it to push their all out phony agenda to invade Iraq. Where, by the way, we are still mired in the biggest geo political blunder in this country's history. And that's the current Republican presidential candidate in that Letterman clip, carrying the rotten water for a bunch of neocon zealots and an administration made up of Texas oil men and a border line retard that wanted to out do his "daddy." An F-ing cheerleader no less!!!
<img src="/forum/images/graemlins/censored.gif" alt="" /> <img src="/forum/images/graemlins/cussing.gif" alt="" />
Whereas I somewhat agree (why else would the White House staff be taking Cipro), there are other considerations.

Consider the notes.



They are obvious forgeries. Most notably, they use Americanized dates (someone from an Arab country would write 11-9-01, whereas in America it would be 9-11-01). They used obvious and childish taunting while posing as an Islamic terrorist. The first four lines of the note are intentionally and directly addressed to Leahy and Daschle, the other lines are the frame-up of Iraq.

Then consider the targets. They were
1) The two highest ranking Democratic Senators
2) All major press networks, except Fox

This was an intentionally sent message. Neither Daschle nor Leahy could have considered it the work of Islamic terrorists. It was an obvious frame-up job with a double intent of leading America to war with Iraq and intimidating the most likely people to oppose the war. Literally threatening their lives.

If we add up what we know...it is clear. We know it was sent by someone with access to Fort Detrick. It was sent to intimidate the press and democratic senators, and to frame Islamic terrorists. The White House knew it was coming ahead of time. It sort of spells out that there was some kind of loose cannon operating on behalf of the White House trying to further their cause.
Hey, that's Karl Rove's handwriting!

Case solved! Good work Blakestah!

You aren't as utterly paranoid and loony as I thought you were!
 

misterhat

Billy Hamilton status
Dec 21, 2007
1,625
69
48
This is getting more interesting. Apparently the FBI is going to release their evidence tomorrow.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121789293570011775.html?mod=opinion_main_commentaries&amp;nn=2

Bruce Ivins Wasn't the Anthrax Culprit
By RICHARD SPERTZEL
August 5, 2008

Over the past week the media was gripped by the news that the FBI was about to charge Bruce Ivins, a leading anthrax expert, as the man responsible for the anthrax letter attacks in September/October 2001.

But despite the seemingly powerful narrative that Ivins committed suicide because investigators were closing in, this is still far from a shut case. The FBI needs to explain why it zeroed in on Ivins, how he could have made the anthrax mailed to lawmakers and the media, and how he (or anyone else) could have pulled off the attacks, acting alone.

I believe this is another mistake in the investigation.

Let's start with the anthrax in the letters to Sens. Tom Daschle and Patrick Leahy. The spores could not have been produced at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, where Ivins worked, without many other people being aware of it. Furthermore, the equipment to make such a product does not exist at the institute.

Information released by the FBI over the past seven years indicates a product of exceptional quality. The product contained essentially pure spores. The particle size was 1.5 to 3 microns in diameter. There are several methods used to produce anthrax that small. But most of them require milling the spores to a size small enough that it can be inhaled into the lower reaches of the lungs. In this case, however, the anthrax spores were not milled.

What's more, they were also tailored to make them potentially more dangerous. According to a FBI news release from November 2001, the particles were coated by a "product not seen previously to be used in this fashion before." Apparently, the spores were coated with a polyglass which tightly bound hydrophilic silica to each particle. That's what was briefed (according to one of my former weapons inspectors at the United Nations Special Commission) by the FBI to the German Foreign Ministry at the time.

Another FBI leak indicated that each particle was given a weak electric charge, thereby causing the particles to repel each other at the molecular level. This made it easier for the spores to float in the air, and increased their retention in the lungs.

In short, the potential lethality of anthrax in this case far exceeds that of any powdered product found in the now extinct U.S. Biological Warfare Program. In meetings held on the cleanup of the anthrax spores in Washington, the product was described by an official at the Department of Homeland Security as "according to the Russian recipes" -- apparently referring to the use of the weak electric charge.

The latest line of speculation asserts that the anthrax's DNA, obtained from some of the victims, initially led investigators to the laboratory where Ivins worked. But the FBI stated a few years ago that a complete DNA analysis was not helpful in identifying what laboratory might have made the product.

Furthermore, the anthrax in this case, the "Ames strain," is one of the most common strains in the world. Early in the investigations, the FBI said it was similar to strains found in Haiti and Sri Lanka. The strain at the institute was isolated originally from an animal in west Texas and can be found from Texas to Montana following the old cattle trails. Samples of the strain were also supplied to at least eight laboratories including three foreign laboratories. Four French government laboratories reported on studies with the Ames strain, citing the Pasteur Institute in Paris as the source of the strain they used. Organism DNA is not a very reliable way to make a case against a scientist.

The FBI has not officially released information on why it focused on Ivins, and whether he was about to be charged or arrested. And when the FBI does release this information, we should all remember that the case needs to be firmly based on solid information that would conclusively prove that a lone scientist could make such a sophisticated product.

From what we know so far, Bruce Ivins, although potentially a brilliant scientist, was not that man. The multiple disciplines and technologies required to make the anthrax in this case do not exist at Army's Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases. Inhalation studies are conducted at the institute, but they are done using liquid preparations, not powdered products.

The FBI spent between 12 and 18 months trying "to reverse engineer" (make a replica of) the anthrax in the letters sent to Messrs. Daschle and Leahy without success, according to FBI news releases. So why should federal investigators or the news media or the American public believe that a lone scientist would be able to do so?

Mr. Spertzel, head of the biological-weapons section of Unscom from 1994-99, was a member of the Iraq Survey Group.
 

blakestah

Phil Edwards status
Sep 10, 2002
6,139
0
0
"many things are debateable but did the White House send snthrax? Hell no. "

- I agree with you. But you can not deny that they used a domestic incident concerning weapons grade anthrax (and the White House had been briefed on the strain of the anthrax) and used it to push their all out phony agenda to invade Iraq. Where, by the way, we are still mired in the biggest geo political blunder in this country's history. And that's the current Republican presidential candidate in that Letterman clip, carrying the rotten water for a bunch of neocon zealots and an administration made up of Texas oil men and a border line retard that wanted to out do his "daddy." An F-ing cheerleader no less!!!
<img src="/forum/images/graemlins/censored.gif" alt="" /> <img src="/forum/images/graemlins/cussing.gif" alt="" />
Whereas I somewhat agree (why else would the White House staff be taking Cipro), there are other considerations.

Consider the notes.



They are obvious forgeries. Most notably, they use Americanized dates (someone from an Arab country would write 11-9-01, whereas in America it would be 9-11-01). They used obvious and childish taunting while posing as an Islamic terrorist. The first four lines of the note are intentionally and directly addressed to Leahy and Daschle, the other lines are the frame-up of Iraq.

Then consider the targets. They were
1) The two highest ranking Democratic Senators
2) All major press networks, except Fox

This was an intentionally sent message. Neither Daschle nor Leahy could have considered it the work of Islamic terrorists. It was an obvious frame-up job with a double intent of leading America to war with Iraq and intimidating the most likely people to oppose the war. Literally threatening their lives.

If we add up what we know...it is clear. We know it was sent by someone with access to Fort Detrick. It was sent to intimidate the press and democratic senators, and to frame Islamic terrorists. The White House knew it was coming ahead of time. It sort of spells out that there was some kind of loose cannon operating on behalf of the White House trying to further their cause.
Hey, that's Karl Rove's handwriting!

Case solved! Good work Blakestah!

You aren't as utterly paranoid and loony as I thought you were!
It ain't Rove's handwriting. But the choices of targets speaks volumes. The anthrax was sent on behalf of the neocons.

 

blakestah

Phil Edwards status
Sep 10, 2002
6,139
0
0
So today the FBI releases the evidence in the anthrax case.

Sophisticated DNA testing linked the DNA of the anthrax to Ivins lab. 11 people had access to it.

The envelopes used to mail the anthrax were the same type used in the lab.

And Ivins has mental health issues.

Problems...

1) The FBI has confirmed that they cannot duplicate the weaponization of the anthrax, and neither can anyone at Fort Detrick or in any known US facility. Ivins' expertise had NOTHING to do with weaponization of anthrax, he worked on the bacteria, its spores, and vaccines. The intelligence community states it has no idea where the weaponization could have occurred (they probably know, but it is classified).

2) Ivins cannot be placed at the spot where the letters were mailed.

The FBI did not consider anything related to why the White House was using Cipro a full week before the anthrax was mailed. They have no motive for any of the targets. There is no evidence about the other 10 people with equal access. There is no clue about how it was weaponized.

According to the FBI - case closed.

At the end of the conference, they also confirmed that Oswald acted alone, that sophisticated modelling confirmed that WTC7 fell from a fire and not from a demo, and that Elvis is truly dead.

<img src="/forum/images/graemlins/socrazy.gif" alt="" />
 

blakestah

Phil Edwards status
Sep 10, 2002
6,139
0
0
Here is a WSJ op-ed by Spertzel, a UN Inspector Expert whose area of expertise is weaponization of anthrax. Now, this guy is arguing that the weaponization would require a lot of expertise, and that expertise did not exist in Ivins lab, nor is there any evidence of where and how the weaponization occurred.

--------------------------

Bruce Ivins Wasn't the Anthrax Culprit
By RICHARD SPERTZEL
August 5, 2008; Page A17

Over the past week the media was gripped by the news that the FBI was about to charge Bruce Ivins, a leading anthrax expert, as the man responsible for the anthrax letter attacks in September/October 2001.

But despite the seemingly powerful narrative that Ivins committed suicide because investigators were closing in, this is still far from a shut case. The FBI needs to explain why it zeroed in on Ivins, how he could have made the anthrax mailed to lawmakers and the media, and how he (or anyone else) could have pulled off the attacks, acting alone.

I believe this is another mistake in the investigation.

Let's start with the anthrax in the letters to Sens. Tom Daschle and Patrick Leahy. The spores could not have been produced at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, where Ivins worked, without many other people being aware of it. Furthermore, the equipment to make such a product does not exist at the institute.

Information released by the FBI over the past seven years indicates a product of exceptional quality. The product contained essentially pure spores. The particle size was 1.5 to 3 microns in diameter. There are several methods used to produce anthrax that small. But most of them require milling the spores to a size small enough that it can be inhaled into the lower reaches of the lungs. In this case, however, the anthrax spores were not milled.

What's more, they were also tailored to make them potentially more dangerous. According to a FBI news release from November 2001, the particles were coated by a "product not seen previously to be used in this fashion before." Apparently, the spores were coated with a polyglass which tightly bound hydrophilic silica to each particle. That's what was briefed (according to one of my former weapons inspectors at the United Nations Special Commission) by the FBI to the German Foreign Ministry at the time.

Another FBI leak indicated that each particle was given a weak electric charge, thereby causing the particles to repel each other at the molecular level. This made it easier for the spores to float in the air, and increased their retention in the lungs.

In short, the potential lethality of anthrax in this case far exceeds that of any powdered product found in the now extinct U.S. Biological Warfare Program. In meetings held on the cleanup of the anthrax spores in Washington, the product was described by an official at the Department of Homeland Security as "according to the Russian recipes" -- apparently referring to the use of the weak electric charge.

The latest line of speculation asserts that the anthrax's DNA, obtained from some of the victims, initially led investigators to the laboratory where Ivins worked. But the FBI stated a few years ago that a complete DNA analysis was not helpful in identifying what laboratory might have made the product.

Furthermore, the anthrax in this case, the "Ames strain," is one of the most common strains in the world. Early in the investigations, the FBI said it was similar to strains found in Haiti and Sri Lanka. The strain at the institute was isolated originally from an animal in west Texas and can be found from Texas to Montana following the old cattle trails. Samples of the strain were also supplied to at least eight laboratories including three foreign laboratories. Four French government laboratories reported on studies with the Ames strain, citing the Pasteur Institute in Paris as the source of the strain they used. Organism DNA is not a very reliable way to make a case against a scientist.

The FBI has not officially released information on why it focused on Ivins, and whether he was about to be charged or arrested. And when the FBI does release this information, we should all remember that the case needs to be firmly based on solid information that would conclusively prove that a lone scientist could make such a sophisticated product.

From what we know so far, Bruce Ivins, although potentially a brilliant scientist, was not that man. The multiple disciplines and technologies required to make the anthrax in this case do not exist at Army's Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases. Inhalation studies are conducted at the institute, but they are done using liquid preparations, not powdered products.

The FBI spent between 12 and 18 months trying "to reverse engineer" (make a replica of) the anthrax in the letters sent to Messrs. Daschle and Leahy without success, according to FBI news releases. So why should federal investigators or the news media or the American public believe that a lone scientist would be able to do so?

Mr. Spertzel, head of the biological-weapons section of Unscom from 1994-99, was a member of the Iraq Survey Group.