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Slate: Did the U.S. Wage Biowarfare Against Nazi Germany? By Timothy Noah 4/11/2001 12:44 am Sun |
[Amerika memang diketahui mempunyai kepakaran serta memajukan
senjata bio-kimia. Jika Amerika sanggup menggunakan bom atom untuk
menyerang Jepun, tidak mustahil ia sanggup menggunakan senjata
bio-kimia. Lagipun teknologi senjata kimia Iraq itu datangnya dari
Amerika. Hanya mereka yang ganas sahaja mencipta dan menggunakan senjata
kimia. Oleh itu serangan anthrax itu mungkin dilakukan oleh Amerika
sendiri kerana ia memang memiliki teknologi ini dan CIA pernah
menggunakannya. - Editor] Slate Magazine Posted Thursday, November 1, 2001, at 3:29 PM PT
Did the U.S. Wage Biowarfare Against Nazi Germany?
By Timothy Noah One of the very few moments of comic relief to be found in Germs:
Biological Weapons and America's Secret War, by New York Times
correspondents Judith Miller, Stephen Engelberg, and William Broad,
concerns what the authors describe as "America's only known
biological attack." It occurred in the early 1940s, long before
President Richard Nixon formally renounced the use of biological
weapons [http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB58/RNCBW20.pdf].
The target was the Third Reich's answer to Alan Greenspan, a man
with the improbable name of Hjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht. (A
stay in the United States during the 1870s, and in particular Horace
Greeley's editorials for the New York Tribune, had made a deep and
favorable impression on the parents of this future president of
Germany's Reichsbank.) Schacht is remembered today, mainly by
economists, as a highly successful inflation-fighter and an early
practitioner of Keynesian economics. But reading over Schacht's
biography, Hitler's Banker, published in 1997 by the men's fashion
designer John Weitz (who has a sideline writing World War II
histories), leads Chatterbox to conclude that Schacht will more likely
be remembered by history for his indestructibility.
As Miller et al. relate it, the revelation that the United States had once
attacked another nation with a biological weapon was made at a
1975 hearing on the Central Intelligence Agency chaired by Sen.
Frank Church, the man who famously (and accurately) described the
CIA of the preceding era as a "rogue elephant." CIA Director William
Colby was being cross-examined about the CIA's stockpiling of
biological weapons, in apparent violation of the Nixon-era ban.
Colby said [http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB58/RNCBW25.pdf]
that the CIA's predecessor agency, the World War II-era Office of
Strategic Services, had completed "a successful operation using
biological warfare materials to incapacitate a Nazi leader
temporarily." Details didn't emerge until a follow-up hearing
conducted by Sen. Edward Kennedy in 1977, when the CIA
submitted a report on its biological weapon stockpile that included the
following passage: Discussions indicate that the perception of the requirement for such
capabilities was tied to earlier OSS experience. This experience
included the development of two different types of agent suicide pills
to be used in extremis and a successful operation using BW [i.e.,
biological-weapon] materials against a Nazi leader. In the latter case,
Staph. enterotoxin (food poisoning) was administered to Hjalmar
Schacht so as to prevent his appearance at a major economic
conference during the war. [Italics Chatterbox's.] This agent was
included in the materials maintained for the agency by SOD [i.e., the
Special Operations Division at Fort Detrick ].
Neither Colby nor the CIA report spell out precisely how the
staphylococcus bacteria surreptitiously poured over Schacht's
weinerschnitzel managed to keep Schacht from attending his "major
economic conference." Miller et. al. guess that Schacht came down
with "chills, headache, muscle pain, coughing, and high fever."
Documentation doesn't appear to exist about what conference it was
that Schacht missed, whether he really did miss it, and whether, if he
missed it, it made any difference to the war effort. All we can say for
certain is that Schacht, in spite of whatever tummy ache the OSS
may have inflicted on him, did not die. He lived until 1970, when he
expired at the ripe old age of 93. Prior to Germs, the CIA's U.S. biowarfare revelation had apparently
escaped the attention of the press and of historians, save for one
Ehrhard Geissler, who wrote about it in German in 1999. Oddly, the
Times hasn't reported on the OSS and Schacht even since the
publication of its own correspondents' best-selling book (unless you
count one brief mention in a review). Weitz, whose Schacht
biography makes no mention of the food-poisoning incident-and
who, coincidentally, served in the OSS during the war-told
Chatterbox today that he thinks the story is "absolute bullshit." The
OSS, Weitz argued, was "a very exciting and good organization that
in its wildest dreams would have not thought this possible." In a
footnote to Germs, Miller et. al. have Weitz further arguing that the
CIA had a good motive to cook up the Schacht story-it would have
made the CIA's bioweapons stockpiling seem more justifiable. That
the OSS's actions did justify the CIA's is certainly the thrust of the
passage quoted above. But Chatterbox thinks it's much more fun to believe that the OSS did
target Schacht and, in doing so, chose very poorly. Although
Schacht had been hugely important to Germany's economy during
the Weimar era and during Hitler's rise to power, by 1938, it was
Goering, not Schacht, who was running the Third Reich's economy.
Hitler continued to use Schacht as a sort of respectability
ambassador to the Western economic powers, but that role would
have been pretty well played out once the shooting started. Schacht,
whose ties to the Nazis had always been opportunistic, grew
increasingly disenchanted, and eventually Schacht became a
peripheral figure in Count von Stauffenberg's plot to assassinate
Hitler. In The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, William L. Shirer avers
that after the war Schacht "clearly exaggerated the importance of his
role in the various conspiracies against Hitler." But it was enough to
get him arrested by the Nazis in 1944 and sent to Dachau and also
enough to clear him at Nuremberg. (In Hitler's Banker, Weitz notes
that the 10 defendants who heard their sentences immediately prior to
Schacht were all hanged.) By the 1950s, Schacht had a thriving
business advising Third World countries. When he died in Munich in
June 1970, the cause of death was a fall that occurred while he was
stepping into formal evening wear. Timothy Noah writes "Chatterbox" for Slate. |