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Reports 

Table of Contents

2010

  1. Education and Ethics in the Life Sciences: Strengthening the Prohibition of Biological Weapons, 2010
  2. Prevention of WMD Proliferation and Terrorism Report Card, January 2010
  3. Symposium on Opportunities and Challenges in the Emerging Field of Synthetic Biology, 2010

2009

  1. The Global Forum on Biorisks, December 2009
  2. Prevention of Biothreats: A Look Ahead, December 2009
  3. National Strategy for Countering Biological Threats, November 2009
  4. High-Containment Laboratories: National Strategy for Oversight Is Needed, September 2009

2008

  1. World At Risk: The Report of the Commission on the Prevention of WMD Proliferation and Terrorism
  2. AAAS Workshop Report: Professional and Graduate-Level Programs on Dual Use Research and Biosecurity for Scientists Working in the Biological Sciences, December 2008
  3. Test and Evaluation of Biological Standoff Detection Systems: Abbreviated Version, August 2008
  4. Biological Surety, July 2008
  5. Analysis of the Department of Homeland Security's Fiscal Year 2009 Budget Request for Nuclear and Biological Security Activities, May 2008
  6. Federal Funding for Biological Weapons Prevention and Defense, Fiscal Years 2001-2009, April 2008
  7. Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Weapons and Missiles: Status and Trends, February 2008
  8. Summary Report on State, Local, Private, and Commercial Laboratories' Compliance With Select Agent Regulations, January 2008

2007

  1. Ready or Not? Protecting the Public's Health from Diseases, Disasters, and Bioterrorism, December 2007
  2. Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act (Public Law 109-417) Progress Report, November 2007
  3. Technical Input on the National Institutes of Health's Draft Supplementary Risk Assessments and Site Suitability Analyses for the National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratory, Boston University, November 2007
  4. Towards a New Implementation Mechanism for the BTWC, November 2007
  5. Science and Security in a Post 9/11 World, October 2007
  6. High-Containment Biosafety Laboratories: Preliminary Observations on the Oversight of the Proliferation of BSL-3 and BSL-4 Laboratories in the United States, October 2007
  7. Beijing on Biohazards: Chinese Experts on Bioweapons Nonproliferation Issues, September 2007
  8. NIAID Strategic Plan for Biodefense Research, September 2007
  9. A Code of Conduct for Biosecurity, August 2007
  10. Green Paper on Bio-Preparedness, July 2007
  11. Federal Funding for Biological Weapons Prevention and Defense, Fiscal Years 2001 to 2008, June 2007
  12. Proposed Framework for the Oversight of Dual Use Life Sciences Research: Strategies for Minimizing the Potential Misuse of Research Information, June 2007
  13. Report on Activities and Programs for Countering Proliferation and NBC Terrorism, Executive Summary, May 2007
  14. Transformational Medical Technologies Initiative (TMTI) Fiscal Year 2007 (FY 2007) Congressional Report, 2007
  15. The Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act: Provisions and Changes to Preexisting Law, March 2007
  16. Project BioShield: Appropriations, Acquisitions, and Policy Implementation Issues for Congress, March 2007
  17. Anthrax Detection: DHS Cannot Ensure That Sampling Activities Will Be Validated, March 2007
  18. Biological Research Laboratories: Issues Associated with the Expansion of Laboratories Funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, February 2007
2006
  1. NIAID Biodefense Research Agenda for CDC Catagory A Agents, Overview of 2006 Progress Report
  2. NIAID Biodefense Research Agenda for CDC Category A Agents, 2006 Progress Report
  3. Addressing Biosecurity Concerns Related To The Synthesis of Select Agents, December 2006
  4. Report of the RS-IAP-ICSU International Workshop on Science and Technology Developments Relevant to the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention, September 2006
  5. INTERPOL Bioterrorism Incident Pre-Planning and Response Guide, July 2006
  6. Biosecurity: A Comprehensive Action Plan, June 2006
  7. Federal Funding for Biological Weapons Prevention and Defense, Fiscal Years 2001 to 2007, June 2006
  8. Transparency in Past Offensive Biological Weapon Programmes: An Analysis of Confidence Building Measure Form F 1992-2003, June 2006
  9. Unresolved Questions Regarding US Government Attribution of a Mobile Biological Production Capacity by Iraq, June 2006
  10. Weapons of Terror: Freeing the World of Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Arms, June 2006
  11. Advancing International Cooperation on Bio-Initiatives in Russia and the CIS, May 2006
  12. Anthrax: Federal Agencies Have Taken Some Steps to Validate Sampling Methods and to Develop a Next-Generation Anthrax Vaccine, May 2006
  13. Overcoming Challenges to Develop Countermeasures Against Aerosolized Bioterrorism Agents: Appropriate Use of Animal Models, April 2006
  14. Chemical and Biological Defense: DOD Needs Consistent Policies and Clear Processes to Address the Survivability of Weapon Systems Against Chemical and Biological Threats, April 2006
  15. Minimum Security Standards for Safeguarding Biological Select Agents and Toxins, April 2006
  16. Safeguarding Biological Select Agents and Toxins, April 2006
  17. Uniting Against Terrorism: Recommendations for a Global Counter-terrorism Strategy, April 2006
  18. Meeting the Challenges of Reviewing the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention, March 2006
  19. Oversight of Dual-Use Biological Research: The National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity, March 2006
  20. A Survey of Asian Life Scientists: The State of Biosciences, Laboratory Biosecurity, and Biosafety in Asia, February 2006
  21. "Sensitive But Unclassified" Information and Other Controls: Policy and Options for Scientific and Technical Information, February 2006
  22. Science and Technology Policy: Issues for the 109th Congress, February 2006
  23. Globalization, Biosecurity, and the Future of the Life Sciences, January 2006
2005
  1. Plum Island Animal Diseases Center: DHS and USDA Are Successfully Coordinating Current Work, But Long-Terms Plans Are Being Assessed, December 2005
  2. Nuclear, Biological, Chemical, and Missile Proliferation Sanctions: Selected Current Law, October 2005
  3. Bioterrorism and Mass Casualty Preparedness in Hospitals: United States, 2003, September 2005
  4. A Model Law: The Biological and Toxin Weapons Crimes Act, September 2005
  5. Biological Science and Biotechnology in Russia: Controlling Diseases and Enhancing Security, July 2005
  6. Microbial Threats to Health: The Threat of Pandemic Influenza, July 2005
  7. Project BioShield (Congressional Research Service Report), June 2005
  8. Survey for Determining the Location, Capacity, and Status of Existing and Operating BSL-3 Laboratory Facilities within the United States, June 2005
  9. An International Perspective on Advancing Technologies and Strategies for Managing Dual-Use Risks: Report of a Workshop, May 2005
  10. Bioterrorism Countermeasure Development: Issues in Patents and Homeland Security, May 2005
  11. National Biodefense Analysis and Countermeasures Center: Issues for Congress, April 2005
  12. Anthrax Detection: Agencies Need to Validate Sampling Activities in Order to Increase Confidence in Negative Results, April 2005
  13. Inspection of the FBI's Security Risk Assessment Program for Individuals Requesting Access to Biological Agents and Toxins, March 2005
  14. Weapons of Mass Destruction: Nonproliferation Programs Need Better Integration, January 2005
2004
  1. Seeking Security: Pathogens, Open Access, and Genome Databases, September 2004
  2. Naval Forces' Defense Capabilities Against Chemical and Biological Warfare Threats, September 2004
  3. NIAID Biodefense Research Agenda for Category B and C Prioirty Pathogens, Progress Report, June 2004
  4. Summary Report on Select Agent Security at Universities, March 2004
  5. Biotechnology Research in an Age of Terrorism, aka "The Fink Report", February 2004
  6. Safeguarding Biological Select Agents and Toxins, February 2004
  7. Giving Full Measure to Countermeasures: Addressing Problems in the DoD Program to Develop Medical Countermeasures Against Biological Warfare Agents, January 2004
2003
  1. NIAID Biodefense Research Agenda for CDC Category A Agents, Progress Report, August 2003
  2. The Science and Technology of Combating Terrorism, July 2003
  3. Project BioShield (Congressional Research Service Report), July 2003
  4. Balancing Scientific Publication and National Security Concerns: Issues for Congress, July 2003
  5. Bioterrorism: Information Technology Strategy Could Strengthen Federal Agencies' Abilities to Respond to Public Health Emergencies, May 2003
  6. Biological Weapons and "Bioterrorism"; in the First Years of the 21st Century, April 2003
  7. Infectious Disease Outbreaks: Bioterrorism Preparedness Efforts Have Improved Public Health Response Capacity, but Gaps Remain, April 2003
  8. Microbial Threats to Health: Emergence, Detection, and Response, March 2003
  9. Terrorist Motivations for Chemical and Biological Weapons Use: Placing the Threat in Context, March 2003
  10. Weapons of Mass Destruction: Additional Russian Cooperation Needed to Facilitate U.S. Efforts to Improve Security at Russian Sites, March 2003
  11. NIAID Biodefense Research Agenda for CDC Category B and C Priority Pathogens, January 2003
2002
  1. Biotechnology and Chemical Weapons Control, December 2002
  2. CDC Smallpox Response Plan and Guidelines, September 2002
  3. Countering Agricultural Bioterrorism, September 2002
  4. DoD Smallpox Response Plan, September 2002
  5. Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act (P.L. 107-188): Provisions and Changes to Preexisting Law, August 2002
  6. National Strategy For Homeland Security, July 2002
  7. Making the Nation Safer: The Role of Science and Technology in Countering Terrorism, June 2002
  8. Countering Bioterrorism: The Role of Science and Technology, June 2002
  9. The USA PATRIOT Act: A Legal Analysis, April 2002
  10. Biological Threats and Terrorism: Assessing the Science and Response Capabilities: Workshop Summary, March 2002
  11. NIAID Biodefense Research Agenda for CDC Category A Agents, February 2002
  12. NIAID Strategic Plan for Biodefense Research, February 2002
1982-2001
  1. Biological Weapons in the Twentieth Century: A Review and Analysis, June 2001
  2. Agricultural Biowarfare and Bioterrorism: An Analytical Framework and Recommendations for the Fifth BTWC Review Conference, November 2000
  3. The Experience of the Japanese Aum Shinrikyo Group and Biological Agents, October 2000
  4. An Assessment of the Biological Weapons Threat to the United States, July 2000
  5. Biosafety in Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratories (BMBL), 4th Edition, April 1999
  6. Chemical and Biological Terrorism: Research and Development to Improve Civilian Medical Response, March 1999
  7. Guidelines for the Surveillance and Control of Anthrax in Human and Animals, 3rd Edition, 1998
  8. The Militarily Critical Technologies List Part II: Weapons of Mass Destruction Technologies, February 1998
  9. WHO Recommended Guidelines for Epidemic Preparedness and Response: Ebola Haemorrhagic Fever (EHF), 1997
  10. NATO Handbook on the Medical Aspects of NBC Defensive Operations, February 1996
  11. Technologies Underlying Weapons of Mass Destruction, December 1993
  12. Emerging Infections: Microbial Threats to Health in the United States, October 1992
  13. Scientific Communication and National Security, aka "The Corson Report", September 1982
  14. Department of Defense Chemical and Biological Defense Program Reports to Congress

2010 Reports


Education and Ethics in the Life Sciences: Strengthening the Prohibition of Biological Weapons
ANU E Press, Edited by Brian Rappert
Published: 2010

"This publication examines a variety of attempts to bring greater awareness to security concerns associated with the life sciences. It identifies lessons from practical initiatives across a wide range of national contexts as well as more generic reflections about education and ethics. In offering their assessment about what must be done and by whom, each of the contributors addresses a host of challenging practical and conceptual questions. As a result, this will be of interest to those planning and undertaking activities elsewhere. In asking how education and ethics matter in an emerging area of unease, it will also be of interest to those with more general concerns about professional conduct and social problems."


Prevention of WMD Proliferation and Terrorism Report Card
Commission on the Prevention of WMD Proliferation and Terrorism Report
Published: January 2010

"In December 2008 in accordance with the Implementing Recommendations of the 9/11 Commission Act of2007 (P.L. 110-53), the Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation and Terrorism submitted its report, World at Risk. This report card provides an assessment of the progress that the U.S. government has made in implementing the recommendations of the Commission. It is our hope that by identifying areas of progress, as well as those in need of further attention, appropriate action will be taken to mitigate the threat posed by weapons of mass destruction to the United States."


Symposium on Opportunities and Challenges in the Emerging Field of Synthetic Biology
OECD & Royal Society Synthesis Report
Published: 2010

"The myriad of issues raised by synthetic biology are likely to be viewed differently and to receive differing levels of attention across the international landscape. This can affect the development of the field and the realisation of its potential benefits. It is therefore important to understand and to address globally the opportunities and challenges presented by synthetic biology. This report, and the symposium on which it draws, aim to contribute to this process."


2009 Reports


The Global Forum on Biorisks
Report of the CSIS Homeland Security Program
Published: December 2009

“This report introduces the Global Forum on Biorisks—a "comprehensive, integrated, international, and multisectoral approach to dissuading, mitigating, interdicting, countering, and responding to biological threats of natural, accidental, or intentional origin".



Prevention of Biothreats: A Look Ahead
The Center for Biosecurity of UPMC Conference Report
Published: December 2009

“On October 6, 2009, the Center for Biosecurity of UPMC organized a 1-day conference, ‘‘Prevention of Biothreats: A Look Ahead,’’ in Washington, DC. Participants discussed a wide range of U.S. government programs, international approaches, and nongovernment efforts aimed at preventing the development and use of biological weapons, including arms control and multilateral agreements; efforts to prevent the unlawful acquisition of materials, equipment, and information; deterrence, intelligence, and surveillance; and improving resilience to biological attacks as a means of dissuasion and prevention. This summary report was prepared by the staff of the Center for Biosecurity of UPMC to provide a brief synopsis of each day’s panel discussions and individual presentations."


National Strategy for Countering Biological Threats
National Security Council Report
Published: November 2009

Released by National Security Council, this report recognizes the progressing pace and challenges that arise from advancing research in the life sciences. It outlines efforts "to prevent incidents by reducing the risk that misuse of the life sciences or derivative materials, techniques, or expertise will result in the use or intent to use biological agents to cause harm. It also complements existing policies, plans, and preparations to advance our ability to respond to public health crises of natural, accidental, or deliberate origin. Finally, it establishes a series of mutually reinforcing activities to address specific threats as they arise."


High-Containment Laboratories: National Strategy for Oversight Is Needed
GOA Report to Congressional Requesters
Published: September 2009

“U.S. laboratories working with dangerous biological pathogens have proliferated in recent years. As a result, the public is concerned about the oversight of these laboratories. GAO was asked to determine (1) to what extent, and in what areas, the number of high-containment laboratories has increased in the United States, (2) which federal agency is responsible for tracking this expansion and determining the associated aggregate risks, and (3) lessons learned from highly publicized incidents at these laboratories and actions taken by the regulatory agencies. GAO surveyed and interviewed federal agency officials, consulted with experts in microbiology, reviewed literature, conducted site visits, and analyzed incidents at high-containment laboratories."


2008 Reports 


World At Risk
The Report of the Commission on the Prevention of WMD Proliferation and Terrorism
Published: December 2008

“This report assesses the nation’s activities, initiatives and programs to prevent weapons of mass destruction proliferation and terrorism. The commission’s findings are centered on several areas: the crossroads of terrorism and proliferation in the poorly governed parts of Pakistan, the prevention of biological and nuclear terrorism, and the potential erosion of international nuclear security, treaties and norms.” The commission stated that it believed there would be WMD attack somewhere in the world by the end of 2013, an attack that would most likely be biological.This is the first time that a major report has highlighted biological threats over nuclear threats.


Professional and Graduate-Level Programs on Dual Use Research and Biosecurity for Scientists Working in the Biological Sciences
AAAS Workshop Report
Published: December 2008

On November 21 the AAAS held a workshop that brought together a number of .international participants from the biosecurity field. The issues and ideas discussed during the workshop were combined into a report on dual use research and education of students in the biological sciences. “The aim of this report is to document and describe existing educational programs and materials on Biosecurity and dual use research for scientists, to provide recommendations for developing an educational program on dual use research and to highlight major challenges in developing and implementing educational initiatives on Biosecurity-related issues.”


Test and Evaluation of Biological Standoff Detection Systems: Abbreviated Version
The National Academies
Published: August 2008

"The office of the Product Director for Test Equipment, Strategy, and Support (PD TESS) of the Joint Program Executive Office for Chemical and Biological Defense in the Department of Defense (DOD) is responsible for ensuring that sufficient infrastructure exists for the effective and timely testing and evaluation of chemical and biological defense equipment. That responsibility requires technical knowledge, capital, and physical resources. To support its mission, PD TESS asked the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) to assess current and future needs for testing and evaluating biological standoff detection systems, to assess current test and evaluation (T&E) capabilities (in scientific and technical knowledge and existing or near-term facilities), and to provide guidance on how to meet the future needs of this T&E mission."


Biological Surety
Army Regulation 50-1
Published: July 2008

"This regulation prescribes policies, procedures, and responsibilities for the Army Biological Surety Program in accordance with DODD 5210.88. Along with guidance to be published by the Office of the Provost Marshal General, it also implements DOD physical security requirements pertaining to surety matters for biological select agents and toxins."


Analysis of the Department of Homeland Security's Fiscal Year 2009 Budget Request for Nuclear and Biological Security Activities
Partnership for Global Security
Published: May 1, 2008

"The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Fiscal Year (FY) 2009 budget request for its major nuclear and biological security activities is an estimated $1.18 billion. This total includes funding for projects within the Domestic Nuclear Detection Office, Science and Technology Directorate, Office of Health Affairs, and Customs and Border Protection."


Federal Funding for Biological Weapons Prevention and Defense, Fiscal Years 2001-2009
Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation
Published: April 2008

"Since the 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States, the U.S. government has spent or allocated nearly $50 billion among 11 federal departments and agencies to address the threat of biological weapons. For Fiscal Year 2009 (FY2009), the Bush Administration proposes an additional $9 billion in bioweapons-related spending, approximately $2.5 billion (39%) more than the amount that Congress appropriated for FY2008. New U.S. funding for bioweapons-related activities focuses primarily on research, development, and acquisition of medical countermeasures."


Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Weapons and Missiles: Status and Trends
Congressional Research Service Report
Published: February 2008

"The United States has long recognized the dangers inherent in the spread of nuclear, biological, and chemical (NBC) weapons, and missiles. This report, which analyzes NBC weapons programs potential threat patterns around the globe, is updated as needed."


Summary Report on State, Local, Private, and Commercial Laboratories' Compliance With Select Agent Regulations
Office of Inspector General
Department of Health and Human Services
Published: January 2008

"The attached final report summarizes the results of our reviews of eight State, local, private, and commercial laboratories' compliance with select agent regulations during various periods from November 2003 to September 2005. Because of the sensitivity of the issues we identified, we restricted the distribution of each report to the individual entity and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The individual reports are also exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. We are providing this summary report for CDC's use in reducing vulnerabilities at laboratories that possess, use, or transfer select agents."


2007 Reports 

Ready or Not? Protecting The Public's Health From Diseases, Disasters, And Bioterrorism
Trust for America's Health
Published: December 2007

"This report finds that on some measures, significant progress has been made in the nation's preparedness. There are important areas, however, where continued, concerted action is needed. From assuring an adequate stockpile of pandemic influenza countermeasures to having a public health workforce large enough and trained enough to respond to an emergency, federal and state policies still fall short of their stated goals."


Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act (Public Law 109-417) Progress Report
Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response
Department of Health and Human Services
Published: November 2007

"In December 2006 Congress passed and the President signed the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act (PAHPA), Public Law No. 109-417, which has broad implications for HHS's preparedness and response activities. The Act established within the Department a new Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR); provided new authorities for a number of programs, including the advanced development and acquisition of medical countermeasures; and called for the establishment of a quadrennial National Health Security Strategy. This Progress Report highlights some of the major activities that the Department has undertaken since the enactment of PAHPA. It also includes a preview of the Way Forward - activities the Department plans as it moves ahead to continue implementing the legislation. The Report is divided into eight sections, each of which addresses a major program area under PAHPA."


Technical Input on the National Institutes of Health's Draft Supplementary Risk Assessments and Site Suitability Analyses for the National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratory, Boston University
National Research Council
Published: November 2007

"The National Research Council (NRC) established an expert Committee to provide technical input on the document Draft Supplementary Risk Assessments and Site Suitability Analyses for the National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratory, Boston University (hereafter referred to as the Draft Supplemental Environmental Report, or DSER) to the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The DSER stated that it was prepared by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in response to concerns raised in a federal court proceeding to address aspects of the construction of a proposed National Biocontainment Laboratory containing a Biosafety Level 4 (BSL-4) facility in the South End of the City of Boston, Massachusetts (the National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratory, or NEIDL)."


Towards a New Implementation Mechanism for the BTWC
Graham S. Pearson and Nicholas A. Sims
University of Bradford
Published: November 2007

"At the Meeting of Experts on 20 to 24 August 2007 it was notable that a number of the States Parties who made statements in the opening plenary session made reference to the importance of an implementation mechanism for the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (BTWC). The case for making progress in this respect was argued in the chapter on Article V: Consultation and Cooperation in the Bradford Briefing Book Key Points for the Sixth Review Conference that was circulated to the States Parties to the BTWC in September 2006. This Review Conference Paper has been written to consider how best the States Parties can move forward to a new implementation mechanism as it was evident that some of the statements made at the Meeting of Experts in August 2007 were not reflecting the reality of the situation and appeared to suggest that the States Parties might just resume consideration of the draft 'rolling text' of the legally binding instrument as it was when last considered in 2001."


Science and Security in a Post 9/11 World
National Research Council
Published: October 2007

"Recognizing that a robust national science and engineering research enterprise is critical to our Nation's overall economic well-being and security, the National Academies also took a close look at how the events of September 11th might affect our research universities and institutions and organized a two-day symposium in Washington, D.C., in December 2001. During those deliberations, it became clear that over time there would be a need to assess the effects of new and proposed legislation and regulations-as well as the enforcement of existing requirements-on the conduct of research and the training of scientists at U.S. academic institutions. Subsequently, the House Committee on Science and Technology, under the leadership of Representatives Boehlert and Gordon, asked the National Academies to organize regional meetings on university campuses to gain a better understanding of whether concerns about our country's need to protect itself from terrorist threats had resulted in policy changes that were altering our ability to attract the best and brightest scientists and engineers and to undertake and conduct leading-edge research. Those meetings formed the basis of this report and the recommendations of this committee."


High-Containment Biosafety Laboratories: Preliminary Observations on the Oversight of the Proliferation of BSL-3 and BSL-4 Laboratories in the United States
Government Accountability Office
Published: October 2007

"In response to the global spread of emerging infectious diseases and the threat of bioterrorism, high-containment biosafety laboratories (BSL)--specifically biosafety level (BSL)-3 and BSL-4--have been proliferating in the United States. These labs-classified by the type of agents used and the risk posed to personnel, the environment, and the community-often contain the most dangerous infectious disease agents, such as Ebola, smallpox, and avian influenza. This testimony addresses (1) the extent to which there has been a proliferation of BSL-3 and BSL-4 labs, (2) federal agencies' responsibility for tracking this proliferation and determining the associated risks, and (3) the lessons that can be learned from recent incidents at three high-containment biosafety labs."


Beijing on Biohazards:
Chinese Experts on Bioweapons Nonproliferation Issues

The James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Amy E. Smithson, Editor
Published: September 2007

"China's attitudes towards arms control in general and biological weapons nonproliferation in particular have evolved over the last few decades. Beijing on Biohazards provides an informative and intriguing snapshot of current Chinese views on a variety of interlocking topics that fall under the umbrella of biological weapons nonproliferation."


NIAID Strategic Plan for Biodefense Research
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease
Published: September 2007

"This updated Strategic Plan for Biodefense Research builds upon the successes and investments of the first plan and accompanying research agendas; it is consistent with the HHS Public Health Emergency Medical Countermeasures Enterprise (PHEMCE) Strategy for Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear Threats, the HHS PHEMCE Implementation Plan, and the Homeland Security Presidential Directive (HSPD)-18, which outline strategies for identifying medical countermeasure requirements and establishing priorities for their research, development, and acquisition. These successes and investments include advances in understanding the biology of specific pathogens and the host's immune response; construction of new biocontainment laboratory facilities; professional training in biosafety and biocontainment; and establishment of critical research resources and infrastructure that support applied science and advanced product development."


A Code of Conduct for Biosecurity
Biosecurity Working Group of the InterAcademy Panel
Published: August 2007

"The Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science asked the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (knaw) to provide it with advice and input for a national Biosecurity Code of Conduct for scientists, as required by the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (btwc), which was ratified in 1972. The request arose in part from the knaw's active contribution to the Statement on Biosecurity issued by the InterAcademy Panel (iap) in 2005. The knaw is the iap's 'lead academy' for activities relating to biosecurity. The knaw agreed to the ministry's request and carried out a study into the possibilities and conditions for a code of conduct on Biosecurity."


Green Paper On Bio-Preparedness
Commission Of The European Communities
Published: July 2007

"This Green Paper intends to stimulate a debate and launch a process of consultation at European level on how to reduce biological risks, and to enhance preparedness and response ("bio-preparedness")". This consultation may lead to concrete actions within the ambit of the Community's and Union's competence, in the field of bio-preparedness in 2008. Concrete actions may have to be presented and developed separately in specific strands of work following the applicable decision-making procedures and, where appropriate, impact assessment."


Federal Funding for Biological Weapons Prevention and Defense,
Fiscal Years 2001 to 2008

Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation
Published: June 2007

"Since the 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States, the U.S. government has spent or allocated over $40 billion among 11 federal departments and agencies to address the threat of biological weapons. For Fiscal Year 2008 (FY2008), the Bush Administration is proposing an additional $6.77 billion in bioweapons-related spending, approximately $550 million (9%) more than the amount that Congress appropriated for FY2007. U.S. funding for bioweapons-related activities focuses primarily on research, development, and acquisition of medical countermeasures and protective equipment, enhancing medical surveillance and environmental detection of biological weapons agents, and improving state, local, and hospital preparedness. The Department of Defense proposes to double the amount of money that it spends on efforts to prevent the development, acquisition and use of biological weapons by states and terrorists and other non-state actors in FY2008. However, activities aimed at prevention still account for less than 2% of all federal bioweapons-related funding since FY2001. Further strengthening of prevention efforts, including a commitment to broad cooperative international action, are essential for improving our nation's security."


Proposed Framework for the Oversight of Dual Use Life Sciences Research: Strategies for Minimizing the Potential Misuse of Research Information
National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity
Published: June 2007

"In this report, the NSABB identifies principles that should underpin the oversight of dual use life sciences research, lists key features of such oversight (e.g., federal guidelines, awareness and education, evaluation and review of research for dual use potential, assessment and management of risk, compliance, and periodic evaluation at the local (e.g., research institution) and federal levels of the impact and effectiveness of oversight procedures) and proposes roles and responsibilities for researchers, institutions, the institutional review entity, and the NSABB and other federal government entities. The report also describes the major steps in local oversight of dual use life sciences research, including evaluation of life sciences research for its dual use potential, review of research identified as being potentially dual use of concern, conduct of dual use research of concern in accordance with risk management strategies, and responsible communication of research with dual use potential."


Report on Activities and Programs for Countering Proliferation and NBC Terrorism, Executive Summary
Counterproliferation Program Review Committee
Published: May 2007

"This Report on Activities and Programs for Countering Proliferation and NBC Terrorism is submitted to the United States Congress as required by the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1994 (as amended). The report provides the findings of the interagency Counterproliferation Program Review Committee (CPRC). The CPRC was chartered by Congress in 1994 to report on the activities and programs of the Department of Defense (DoD), Department of Energy (DOE), and the intelligence community (IC) that address improvements in the U.S. Government's efforts to combat weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and their means of delivery. In 1997, Congress broadened the CPRC's responsibilities to review those research and development (R&D) activities and programs related to countering terrorist nuclear, biological, and chemical threats."


Transformational Medical Technologies Initiative (TMTI)
Fiscal Year 2007 (FY 2007) Congressional Report

Department of Defense
Published: 2007

"The mission of TMTI is to protect the warfighter from conventional or genetically engineered biological threats, known or emerging, by accelerating the seamless discovery and development of broad-spectrum medical countermeasures through the use of novel technology platforms and innovative management approaches. The TMTI program implements one of the key decisions in the Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR) 2006: develop broad-spectrum medical countermeasures against advanced bio-terror threats, including genetically engineered, intracellular bacterial pathogens and hemorrhagic fevers."


The Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act: Provisions and Changes to Preexisting Law
Congressional Research Service
Published: March 2007

"The 109th Congress passed P.L. 109-417, the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act. The act reauthorized a number of expiring preparedness and response programs in the Public Health Service Act, and established some new authorities, including the creation of a Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), a new office in HHS to support, coordinate, and provide oversight of advanced development of vaccines and biodefense countermeasures. The act's provisions reflected the concerns of Members of the 109th Congress and others regarding the flawed response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and the threat of a possible influenza pandemic."


Project BioShield: Appropriations, Acquisitions, and Policy Implementation Issues for Congress
Congressional Research Service
Published: March 2007

"This report discusses actions taken by Congress and the Administration that have affected this program, describes the decision-making process for choosing countermeasures, describes the countermeasures for which the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has contracted, and discusses accounting discrepancies present in budget documents describing Project BioShield."


Anthrax Detection: DHS Cannot Ensure That Sampling Activities Will Be Validated
Government Accountability Office
Published: March 2007

"In September and October 2001, contaminated letters laced with Bacillus anthracis were sent through the mail to two U.S. senators and members of the media. Postal facilities in New Jersey, Washington, D.C., and elsewhere became heavily contaminated. The anthrax incidents highlighted major gaps in civilian preparedness to detect anthrax contamination in buildings. GAO was asked to describe and assess federal agencies' activities to detect anthrax in postal facilities, assess the results of agencies' testing, and assess whether agencies' detection activities were validated."


Biological Research Laboratories: Issues Associated with the Expansion of Laboratories Funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Government Accountability Office
Published: February 2007

"In response to the Strategic Plan, NIAID established the National Biocontainment Laboratory (NBL) and Regional Biocontainment Laboratory (RBL) construction programs. The overall objective of the NBL construction program is to provide funding to design and construct state-of-the-art biosafety level (BSL) 4, 3, and 2 laboratories, including associated research and administrative support space, and the objective of the RBL construction program is to provide similar facilities containing BSL-3 and -2 laboratories...In fiscal year 2003, NIAID awarded funding to two universities to construct NBLs and to nine universities to construct RBLs, and in fiscal year 2005, NIAID awarded funding to four more universities to construct RBLs. As of January 2007, the NBLs and RBLs are at various stages of design and construction and are not yet operational. Because the deliberate or accidental release of biological pathogens from a biocontainment laboratory could have disastrous consequences, concerns exist about the oversight of these laboratories. This report responds to your November 30, 2005, request that we provide information associated with the construction of NBLs and RBLs funded by NIAID in fiscal years 2003 and 2005."


2006 Reports

NIAID Biodefense Research Agenda for CDC Category A Agents
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Overview of 2006 Progress Report

"It has been three years since the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) released its first research progress report on Category A agents. Since that time, extraordinary progress has been made to increase scientific knowledge of these potentially deadly pathogens and to advance medical countermeasures along the research and development pathway."


NIAID Biodefense Research Agenda for CDC Category A Agents
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
2006 Progress Report

"In 2002, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), convened a Blue Ribbon Panel on Bioterrorism and Its Implications for Biomedical Research. This panel of experts came together to provide guidance on the Institute's biodefense research agenda, which was published soon afterward. In 2003, NIAID released its first progress report on accomplishments toward the goals outlined in the Research Agenda. To demonstrate the enormity of the research efforts conducted over the last several years, the 2006 progress report details many examples of scientific accomplishments organized according to the areas of emphasis specified in the Research Agenda: biology of the microbe, host response, vaccines, diagnostics, and therapeutics. The achievements made meet all of the immediate goals outlined in the Research Agenda."


Addressing Biosecurity Concerns Related To The Synthesis of Select Agents
National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity
Published: December 2006

"DNA synthesis technology, in combination with other rapidly-evolving capabilities in the life sciences, such as directed molecular evolution and viral reverse genetics, has galvanized segments of the scientific community. It also has captured the attention of the general public and policymakers, and prompted far-reaching questions about the potential uses of these techniques-including the synthesis of novel forms of life. These techniques promise to accelerate scientific discovery and provide access to previously-unexplored biological and molecular diversity. This technology also is employed in the field of Synthetic Genomics to create sophisticated live vaccines and to discover new therapeutics for infectious diseases. However, this same technology can be misused to generate dangerous pathogens de novo that are subject to oversight, thus circumventing the extant regulatory framework for controlling the possession and use of such organisms. This dichotomy illustrates the dual use nature of synthetic genomics and underscores the need to develop strategies to address the possibility that knowledge and technologies emanating from vitally important biological research will be misused to threaten public health or national security."


Report of the RS-IAP-ICSU International Workshop on Science and Technology Developments Relevant to the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention
Royal Society, IAP, and ICSU
Published: September 2006

"This workshop, held on 4 - 6 September 2006, brought together 84 leading international scientific and policy experts from 23 countries to discuss scientific and technological developments most relevant to the operation of the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (BTWC). The meeting aimed to inform the delegates at the Sixth Review Conference being held in Geneva in November 2006. Developments addressed included synthetic biology, post genomic technologies, immunological research, drug discovery and delivery, agricultural and environmental biotechnology, and diagnosis and surveillance of infectious diseases. These advances will undoubtedly bring positive benefits to humankind. The challenge facing the international scientific and political communities is to identify what measures can be taken to reduce the chance of misusing these developments without jeopardising the enormous potential benefits, that is to manage what is often called the 'dual use' risk."


INTERPOL Bioterrorism Incident Pre-Planning and Response Guide (PDF)
INTERPOL
Published: July 2006

"The threat of bio-terrorism is real. It is becoming increasingly possible for terrorists to be able to produce and deploy bio-weapons, as the volume and sophistication of the necessary information becomes ever more accessible through publications, the internet, and other sources. Given the magnitude of the harm that could be caused by a bioterrorist attack -- an untold number of deaths is possible -- it is clear to Interpol that we must take this threat seriously. This Bio-terrorism Incident Pre-Planning and Response Guide provides important tools to use in prevention and response efforts. Other tools are also provided by Interpol, including web resources and training opportunities available through the Bio-terrorism Unit working in conjunction with National Central Bureaus."


Biosecurity: A Comprehensive Action Plan (PDF)
Center for American Progress
Andrew J. Grotto and Jonathan B. Tucker
Published: June 2006

"The federal government's plan for responding to the twin threats of natural pandemics and biological terrorism bears a striking resemblance to the plan that was to guide the federal response to Hurricane Katrina: both assume that state and local entities have the resources and capabilities to take over primary responsibility for managing the crisis. Unfortunately, the reality is that they do not...Since 9/11, the United States has undertaken a series of worthy efforts to strengthen biosecurity, but they do not add up to an effective biosecurity system for all Americans. The primary reason is a failure to correlate plans on paper with the capabilities needed to implement them. The report offers more than three dozen recommendations in the interrelated and mutually reinforcing areas of global nonproliferation, domestic and international public health, and scientific research and development."


Federal Funding for Biological Weapons Prevention and Defense, Fiscal Years 2001 to 2007 (PDF)
Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation
Biological and Chemical Weapons Control Program
Published: June 2006

"In the years since the 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States, the U.S. government has spent or allocated over $36 billion among 11 federal departments and agencies to address the threat of biological weapons. For Fiscal Year 2007 (FY2007), the Bush Administration is proposing an additional $8 billion in bioweapons-related spending, approximately $120 million (or 1.5%) more than the amount that Congress appropriated for FY2006. This funding has and continues to focus primarily on research, development, and acquisition of medical countermeasures and protective equipment, enhancing medical surveillance and environmental detection of biological weapons agents, and improving state, local, and hospital preparedness. Only 2% of all federal bioweapons-related funding has been devoted to efforts to prevent the development, acquisition, and use of biological weapons by states and terrorists and other non-state actors."


Transparency in Past Offensive Biological Weapon Programmes: An Analysis of Confidence Building Measure Form F 1992-2003 (PDF)
University of Hamburg
Hamburg Centre for Biological Arms Control
Nicholas Isla
Published: June 2006

"There are very few transparency enhancement mechanisms in the area of biological arms control and the most important thus far, are the Confidence Building Measures (CBMs). Since their inception, CBMs have suffered from weak participation and mixed quality. Almost half of the States Parties have never submitted a CBM report. In terms of quality, submissions have been plagued with inaccuracies and omissions. While on the one hand, any CBM submission can be seen as a commitment to the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC), in order for there to be an increasing degree of transparency and ultimately confidence in compliance, CBMs need to be accurate, complete, submitted regularly and they must address the relevant topics. This paper analyses information provided in CBM Form F and assesses its accuracy and completeness. CBM Form F requests information on past offensive and defensive biological research and development programmes."


Unresolved Questions Regarding US Government Attribution of a Mobile Biological Production Capacity by Iraq (PDF)
Center for International and Security Studies at Maryland
University of Maryland at College Park
Milton Leitenberg, Senior Research Scholar
Published: June 2006

This report examines information regarding Iraq's alleged mobile biological production capacity and speculates what was done to determine if that capability was possible.


(PDF)
Weapons of Mass Destruction Commission
Published: June 2006

"This report argues for the aim of outlawing all weapons of mass destruction. It concentrates on what could and should be short- and medium-term steps in this direction. The Commission takes the view that, while many unilateral, bilateral and regional steps and measures are needed and helpful, the abhorrence of the peoples of all nations of weapons of mass destruction requires an approach that builds on the cooperation and support of the entire world community. Regimes that invite and encourage the adherence of all states must be established and managed on a global scale. Treaties and international organizations, notably the United Nations, are indispensable tools and forums."


(PDF)
Russian American Nuclear Security Advisory Council and Landau Network-Centro Volta
Published: May 2006

"In April 2005, RANSAC [Russian American Nuclear Security Advisory Council] and LNCV [Landau Network-Centro Volta] held a meeting titled Advancing International Cooperation on Bio-Initiatives in Russia and the CIS in Rome, Italy. The participants included government officials and academic experts from key Western countries, and biological scientists and biosecurity experts from Russia, Kazakhstan, and Uzbekistan. The event was the second in a series of meetings on how to further cooperation between these governments and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to prevent biological terrorism by promoting biosecurity, biosafety, and the involvement of commercial entities in key biological institutes. The event provided for the discussion of a broad range of topics from a spectrum of specialists. The following is a digest of the findings from the RANSAC and LNCV organizers of the meeting and the conference proceedings."


(PDF)
Report Summary (PDF)
Government Accountability Office
Report No. GAO-06-756T
Published: May 2006

"GAO has done many studies over the past 7 years on anthrax vaccine safety and anthrax detection methods. GAO has reported the lack of validated methods for detecting anthrax contamination and has recommended a coordinated approach to improving the overall process for detecting anthrax that included a probability-based sampling strategy. GAO also reported that the vaccine has not been adequately tested on humans; no studies have been done to determine the optimum number of doses; the long-term safety has not been studied and data on short-term reactions are limited; however, women report higher rates of reactions than do men. Given these problems, GAO recommended the development, of a better, alternative vaccine. The Secretary of Homeland Security needs to develop a formal strategic plan, including a roadmap, outlining how individual agency efforts would lead to the validation of the overall sampling process."



National Academies
Committee on Animal Models for Testing Interventions Against Aerosolized Bioterrorism Agents
April 2006

"An integral part of the development of new vaccines and therapeutics is obtaining the necessary approvals from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration both for their initial use in people and their eventual licensure for general use. The present accelerated pace of development, however, has led to several additional needs: standardization of methods for the generation and characterization of aerosols of bioterrorism agents for use in animal studies (necessary for licensure of vaccines and therapeutics), characterization of the threat to the population, and expansion of the number of laboratories conducting the research. The Committee on Animal Models for Testing Interventions Against Aerosolized Bioterrorism Agents was convened by the National Research Council to address these issues. It was tasked by its sponsor, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, to prepare a short consensus report that articulates the difficulties of testing countermeasures to aerosolized bioterrorism agents and considers whether there are opportunities for improving current approaches to animal testing of countermeasures against aerosols by applying knowledge from other fields of science."


(PDF)
Report Summary (PDF)
Government Accountability Office
Report No. GAO-06-592
Published: April 2006

"The possibility that an adversary may use chemical or biological weapons against U.S. forces makes it important for a weapon system to be able to survive such attacks. In the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2005, Congress mandated that the Department of Defense submit a plan to address weapon system chemical and biological survivability by February 28, 2005. This plan was to include developing a centralized database with information about the effects of chemical and biological agents on materials used in weapon systems. DOD did not submit its plan as mandated. GAO was asked to evaluate (1) the extent to which DOD addresses weapon system chemical and biological survivability during the acquisition process, and (2) DOD's internal controls for maintaining a comprehensive database that includes chemical and biological survivability research and test data for weapon system design and development."


(PDF)
Department of Defense Instruction
Number 5210.89
Published: April 2006

"This Instruction: implements security policy and assigns responsibilities under [DoD Directive 5210.88, 'Safeguarding Biological Select Agents and Toxins']; establishes minimum standards for securing and safeguarding biological select agents and toxins (BSAT) in the custody or possession of the Department of Defense; establishes the criteria for personnel regarding BSAT, including requirements for the Biological Personnel Reliability Program (BPRP); permits BSAT to be used for bona fide research and other peaceful purposes and ensures the security of BSAT from attack, theft, wrongful use, and inappropriate transfer to unauthorized personnel, organizations, and/or laboratories; directs responsible personnel and agencies to ensure secure access and control of applicable BSAT and to establish minimum physical security measures; establishes requirements for initial and periodic security reviews, threat and vulnerability assessments, and inspections."


(PDF)
Air Force Policy Directive 10-39
Published: April 2006

"This directive establishes the Air Force Biological Security Program and outlines policy to ensure the Air Force safeguards biological select agents and toxins in the manner prescribed by higher Department of Defense (DoD) guidance and the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR). This directive applies to all facilities under Air Force command (to include Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve Command facilities) using, possessing, transferring, or receiving biological select agents or toxins, as well as Air Force contracted facilities furnished DoD-supplied biological select agents or toxins. Compliance with this directive is mandatory for all applicable Air Force military, civilian, and contractor personnel."



United Nations
Office of the Secretary General
Report No. A/60/825
Published: April 2006

"The present report contains recommendations for a global counter-terrorism strategy, with an emphasis on specific proposals for strengthening the capacity of the United Nations to combat terrorism. In formulating these recommendations, [Kofi Annan has] been assisted by the Counter-Terrorism Implementation Task Force, which [Annan] created in 2005 to bring together key actors in the United Nations system and its partners dealing with counter-terrorism issues." According to the report, "the most important under-addressed threat relating to terrorism, and one which acutely requires new thinking on the part of the international community, is that of terrorists using a biological weapon."


Meeting the Challenges of Reviewing the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (PDF)
Geneva Forum
Published: March 2006

"To provide an opportunity for focused discussion of ideas and strategy, the Geneva Forum organised an informal residential seminar on 9-10 March 2006 entitled, Meeting the Challenges of Reviewing the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention. The seminar brought together 35 high-level representatives of governments, international organizations and non-governmental organizations from around the world...The range of ideas and proposals put forward by participants at the Glion meeting demonstrate that States have been giving serious consideration to how to make the most of the sixth BTWC Review Conference. In presenting some of these ideas and proposals, this report hopes to enrich debate and discussion in the run-up to the Review Conference and to contribute to its successful outcome."


(PDF)
Congressional Research Service
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Dana A. Shea, Specialist in Science and Technology Policy
Code RL33342
Published: March 2006

"Some of the same scientific and technological advances that provide great benefits to society can also be used maliciously. For example, biological research on the origins of virulence, the development of vaccines, and the genetic manipulation of biological agents are simultaneously relevant to public health and to biological weapons. Some policymakers are concerned that publishing such dual-use research results in the open literature could aid or further the goals of adversaries of the United States. The National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB) was established to facilitate understanding and oversight of such potentially contentious research. Issues of potential congressional interest include the mechanism and appropriateness of NSABB review of scientific research; the scope of NSABB recommendations with respect to publication of scientific research; the domestic and international adoption of practices or codes developed by the NSABB; the implementation of NSABB guidelines at the local level; and applicability of NSABB recommendations to federal agencies other than HHS."


"Sensitive But Unclassified" Information and Other Controls: Policy and Options for Scientific and Technical Information (PDF)
Congressional Research Service
Resources, Science,and Industry Division
Genevieve J. Knezo, Specialist in Science and Technology Policy
Code RL33303
Published: February 2006

"This report traces the evolution of SBU [sensitive but unclassified]-related controls; summarizes actions taken to protect certain types of scientific and technical information; describes critiques of some control policies; and summarizes proposals and actions, including congressional, executive and other initiatives, to clarify these issues and develop policies that serve various stakeholders. It also raises issues that may warrant further attention."



Congressional Research Service
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Frank Gottron, Coordinator
Code RL32837
Published: February 2006

"This report indicates the sweep of science and technology in many public policy issues, although it cannot provide a comprehensive examination of every science or technology issue which may be of interest to Congress. In some areas, such as global climate change and stem cell research, the importance of science and technology is explicit and in the forefront of the policy debate. In others, such as patent protection and telecommunications reform, science and technology may not be as explicit, but are important drivers affecting how policy makers may make decisions. This report also addresses key issues that directly affect, or are affected by, science and technology. Other mechanisms which may indirectly impact science and technology - such as tax, antitrust, and trade policies - are outside the scope of this report."


A Survey of Asian Life Scientists: The State of Biosciences, Laboratory Biosecurity, and Biosafety in Asia (PDF)
Sandia National Laboratories
Biological Weapons Nonproliferation Department
Jennifer Gaudioso
SAND2006-0842
Published: February 2006

"Over 300 Asian life scientists were surveyed to provide insight into work with infectious agents. This report provides the reader with a more complete understanding of the current practices employed to study infectious agents by laboratories located in Asian countries-segmented by level of biotechnology sophistication. The respondents have a variety of research objectives and study over 60 different pathogens and toxins. Many of the respondents indicated that their work was hampered by lack of adequate resources and the difficulty of accessing critical resources. The survey results also demonstrate that there appears to be better awareness of laboratory biosafety issues compared to laboratory biosecurity. Perhaps not surprisingly, many of these researchers work with pathogens and toxins under less stringent laboratory biosafety and biosecurity conditions than would be typical for laboratories in the West."



National Academies
Committee on Advances in Technology and the Prevention of Their Application to Next Generation Biowarfare Threats
Published: January 2006

"Rather than a formal risk assessment the Committee has proposed, instead, a conceptual framework for how to think about the nature of the future threat landscape. Indeed, as the world becomes more competent and sophisticated in the biological sciences, it is vitally important that the national security, public health and biomedical science communities have the necessary knowledge and tools to address the present and future applications of advances in the life sciences."


2005 Reports

(PDF)
Report Summary (PDF)
Government Accountability Office
Report No. GAO-06-132
Published: December 2005

"The livestock industry, which contributes over $100 billion annually to the national economy, is vulnerable to foreign animal diseases that, if introduced in the United States, could cause severe economic losses. To protect against such losses, critical research and diagnostic activities are conducted at the Plum Island Animal Disease Center in New York. The Department of Agriculture (USDA) was responsible for Plum Island until June 2003, when provisions of the Homeland Security Act of 2002 transferred the facility to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Under an interagency agreement, USDA continues to work on foreign animal diseases at the island. GAO examined (1) DHS and USDA coordination of research and diagnostic activities, (2) changes in research and diagnostic priorities since the transfer, and (3) long-term objectives of joint activities at Plum Island."


(PDF)
Congressional Research Service
Foreign Affairs and National Defense Division
Dianne E. Rennack, Specialist in Foreign Policy Legislation
Code RL31502
Updated: October 2005

"This report offers a listing and brief description of legal provisions that require or authorize the imposition of some form of economic sanction against countries, companies, or persons who violate U.S. nonproliferation norms. For each provision, information is included on what triggers the imposition of sanctions, their duration, what authority the President has to delay or abstain from imposing sanctions, and what authority the President has to waive the imposition of sanctions. This report also includes a list of legislation pending before the 109th Congress that, if enacted, would be relevant in the use of economic sanctions as a part of U.S. nonproliferation policy."


Bioterrorism and Mass Casualty Preparedness in Hospitals: United States, 2003
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Division of Health Care Statistics
Richard W. Niska, M.D., M.P.H., and Catharine W. Burt, Ed.D.
Published: September 2005

"This study examined the content of hospital terrorism preparedness emergency response plans; whether those plans had been updated since September 11, 2001; collaboration of hospitals with outside organizations; clinician training in the management of biological, chemical, explosive, and nuclear exposures; drills on the response plans; and equipment and bed capacity." This examination was done through a Bioterrorism and Mass Casualty Supplement included in the 2003 National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS), - an annual survey of a probability sample of approximately 500 non-Federal general and short-stay hospitals in the United States."

 
A Model Law: The Biological and Toxin Weapons Crime Act
International Committee of the Red Cross
Verification Research, Training, and Information Centre
Christopher B. Harland and Angela Woodward
Published: September 2005

"This year marks the 80th anniversary of the 1925 Geneva Protocol and the 30th anniversary of the entry into force in 1975 of the 1972 Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention. These instruments are relatively widely accepted: 133 states are party to the protocol and 155 to the convention. It was thus felt opportune to draft the following model legislation, not only in light of the anniversaries but also in view of the fact that domestic implementation of the Convention has been relatively weak, and in response to a growing number of requests to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) by States Parties for assistance in fulfilling their obligations."



National Academies
Committee on Future Contributions of the Biosciences to Public Health, Agriculture, Basic Research, Counterterrorism, and Nonproliferation Actvitives in Russia
Published: July 2005

"The report offered a number of recommendations that could help restore Russia's ability to join with the United States and the broader international community in leading an expanded global effort to control infectious diseases. A proposed bilateral intergovernmental commission could play a pivotal role toward that end as cooperation moves from assistance to partnership. The report proposed the establishment of two model State Sanitary Epidemiological Surveillance Centers in Russia, more focused support of competitively selected Russian research groups as centers of excellence, the promotion of investments in biotechnology niches that are well suited for Russian companies, and expanded opportunities for young scientists to achieve scientific leadership positions in Russia. Also, the report highlighted the importance of U.S. programs that support the integration of former Soviet defense scientists with civilian researchers who had not been involved in military-related activities."


Microbial Threats to Health: The Threat of Pandemic Influenza
National Academies
Committee on Emerging Microbial Threats to Health in the 21st Century
Published: July 2005

"The public, scientific community, and policy makers must understand that the threat of an influenza pandemic is real and imminent. To this end, we have republished a section of the Microbial Threats report entitled: -Influenza: A Case in Point- in an effort to educate readers about the ecology of influenza and facilitate an informed response. In addition, we have included the executive summary of the report that has key information about the factors that lead to the emergence of microbial threats and the recommendations of the committee for implementing an effective and appropriate response."


(PDF)
Congressional Research Service Report
Resources, Science, and Technology Division
Frank Gottron, Analyst in Science and Technology Policy
Code RS21507
Published: June 2005

"Many potential biological terrorism agents lack available countermeasures. President Bush proposed Project BioShield to address this need. The 108th Congress considered this proposal in S. 15 (Gregg), S. 1504 (Gregg), and H.R. 2122 (Tauzin). President Bush signed S. 15 into law on July 21, 2004 (The Project BioShield Act of 2004, P.L. 108-276). The main provisions of this law include (1) relaxing procedures for bioterrorism-related procurement, hiring, and awarding research grants; (2) guaranteeing a federal government market for new biomedical countermeasures; and (3) permitting emergency use of unapproved countermeasures. Project BioShield countermeasure procurement is funded by the Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2004 (P.L. 108-90) which advance-appropriated $5.593 billion for FY2004-FY2013. Additional measures to encourage the development of countermeasures are being considered by the 109th Congress in S. 3 (Gregg) and S. 975 (Lieberman)."


(PDF)
Constella Health Sciences
Center for Health Research
Published: June 2005

"In 2004, the NIAID recognized a need to further refine information about current BSL-3 laboratory capacity in the US. In partnership with American Society of Microbiologist (ASM), NIAID conducted a survey of academic, biotechnology, and pharmaceutical facilities in the US to help better identify the location, capacity and status of existing and operating US laboratory facilities that incorporate Biosafety Level 3 (BSL-3) containment. BSL-3 containment is applicable to clinical, diagnostic, teaching, research or production facilities in which work is done with indigenous or exotic agents that may cause serious or potentially lethal disease as a result of exposure by the inhalation route."



National Academies
Committee on Advances in Technology and the Prevention of Their Application to Next Generation Biowarfare Threats
Published: May 2005

"As part of its study, the committee held a workshop at the Instituto Nacional de Salud Publica (National Institute of Public Health) in Cuernavaca, Mexico, in September 2004. The purpose of the workshop was to sample global perspectives on the current advancing technology landscape. Experts from different fields and from around the world presented their diverse outlooks on: advancing technologies and forces that drive technological progress; local and regional capabilities for life sciences research, development, and application (both beneficial and malevolent); national perceptions and awareness of the risks associated with advancing technologies; and measures that have been taken, or could or should be taken, to reduce the potential for misapplication of technology(ies) or malevolent purposes. This report summarizes the formal and informal discussions held at the workshop."


(PDF)
Congressional Research Service
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Wendy H. Schacht, Specialist in Science and Technology
John R. Thomas, Visiting Scholar
Code RL32917
Published: May 2005

"Patents appear to be important in the promotion of innovation, particularly in the pharmaceutical sector. This report explores the role of patents in encouraging the development and commercialization of new inventions and discusses the relationships between patent ownership and the generation of biomedical products. However, the grant of a patent on a pharmaceutical does not permit marketing of the product without the approval of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Thus, this report also examines policies concerning the use of FDA marketing exclusivity as an additional incentive to industry research and development (R&D) in this arena. Current law and suggested legislative changes are discussed to provide a context for further exploration of the related issues.


(PDF)
Congressional Research Service
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Dana A. Shea, Analyst in Science and Technology Policy
Code RL32891
Published: April 2005

"Oversight of federal research and development in biodefense is an area of international interest, as only defensive research activities are allowed under the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention. Congressional oversight of programs, especially those performed in federal facilities for homeland security purposes, is considered key to maintaining transparency in biodefense. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) play leading roles protecting civilians against biological weapons. The Department of Homeland Security has requested and received appropriated funding for the construction of the National Biodefense Analysis and Countermeasures Center (NBACC), a biodefense facility dedicated to homeland security activities. This facility, the first DHS laboratory focused on biodefense, has drawn the attention of Congress, arms control experts, and others. This report will outline the organizational structure of NBACC, describe its mission, and report the funding DHS has received for construction of its facility. It will then discuss policy issues such as funding for NBACC facility construction, oversight of NBACC research, and the potential for duplication of federal effort between NBACC and other agencies."


(PDF)
Report Summary (PDF)
Government Accountability Office
Report No. GAO-05-493T
Published: April 2005

"In September and October 2001, letters laced with Bacillus anthracis (anthrax) spores were sent through the mail to two U.S. senators and to members of the media. These letters led to the first U.S. cases of anthrax disease related to bioterrorism. In all, 22 individuals, in four states and Washington, D.C., contracted anthrax disease; 5 died. These cases prompted the Subcommittee [on National Security, Emerging Threats, and International Relations in the House of Representatives] to ask GAO to describe and assess federal agencies' activities to detect anthrax in postal facilities, assess the results of agencies' testing, and assess whether agencies' detection methods were validated."


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U.S. Department of Justice
Office of the Inspector General
Report No. I-2005-003
Published: March 2005

"This report presents the results of an Office of the Inspector General (OIG) inspection of the Security Risk Assessment (SRA) program that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) established under the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act of 2002 (Bioterrorism Act), Pub. Law No. 107-188. The OIG initiated the inspection in response to concerns about a backlog at the FBI of pending SRA applications submitted by researchers seeking access to dangerous biological agents and toxins controlled under the Bioterrorism Act. The objectives of our inspection were to: determine whether the FBI had a backlog of pending SRA applications and, if so, why; and identify any program vulnerabilities that needed to be corrected. We initiated our review on September 20, 2004, and analyzed productivity data through January 10, 2005."


(PDF)
Report Summary (PDF)
Government Accountability Office
Report No. GAO-05-157
Published: January 2005

"Since 1992, the Congress has provided more than $7 billion for threat reduction and nonproliferation programs in the former Soviet Union (FSU). These programs have played a key role in addressing the threats of weapons of mass destruction and are currently expanding beyond the FSU. The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2004 mandated that GAO assess (1) Department of Defense (DOD) and Department of Energy (DOE) strategies guiding their threat reduction and nonproliferation programs and (2) efforts to coordinate DOD, DOE, and Department of State threat reduction and nonproliferation programs that share similar missions."


2004 Reports


National Academies
Committee on Genomics Databases for Bioterrorism Threat Agents
Published: September 2004

"Within the last 30 years, the genomes of thousands of organisms, from viruses, to bacteria, to humans, have been sequenced or partially sequenced and deposited in databases freely accessible to scientists around the world. This information is accelerating scientists' ability to fight disease and make other medical advances, but policymakers must consider the possibility that the information could also be used for destructive purposes in acts of bioterrorism or war. Based in part on views from working biological scientists, the report concludes that current policies that allow scientists and the public unrestricted access to genome data on microbial pathogens should not be changed. Because access improves our ability to fight both bioterrorism and naturally occurring infectious diseases, security against bioterrorism is better served by policies that facilitate, not limit, the free flow of this information."



National Academies
Committee for an Assessment of Naval Forces' Defense Capabilities Against Chemical and Biological Warfare Threats
Published: September 2004

"Of increasing importance are [threats] from chemical and biological warfare (CW and BW). To help review its current state of preparedness, the Chief of Naval Operations asked the National Research Council (NRC) to assess the U.S. Navy's defense capabilities against CW and BW threats. In particular to what extent are they being developed to enable naval forces to sense and analyze quickly the presence of chemical and biological agents, withstand or avoid exposure to such agents, deal with contamination under a broad spectrum of operational conditions, and over what period will these capabilities be realized. This report presents the results of that assessment. It provides an overview of the potential threats, and an evaluation of the Navy's operations, non-medical programs, and medical countermeasures designed to confront those threats. The report also presents a series of general and specific findings and recommendations based on these assessments."


(PDF)
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Published: June 2004

"Significant progress also has been made since the January 2003 release of the NIAID Biodefense Research Agenda for Category B and C Priority Pathogens; these scientific advances and programmatic activities are described in this new progress report. Specific topics include: progress made towards meeting general recommendations in the areas of research, product development, and research resources, which are crucial for building a robust biodefense infrastructure; and scientific advances and research activities related to the immediate goals in the research agenda. In keeping with these goals, this progress report focuses on basic and applied research aimed at developing pathogen-specific diagnostics, therapeutics, and vaccines, as well as progress in understanding the biology of Category B and C microbes and the host response to them. The report also summarizes scientific progress in the area of immune-based strategies for biodefense."


(PDF)
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Office of the Inspector General
Published: March 2004

"Immediately following the 2001 terrorist attacks and the subsequent anthrax release, the Office of Inspector General (OIG) initiated a program to review select agent1 security at laboratories operated by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and universities. In early 2002, we began reviews of 11 universities that received National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding for research involving select agents. Of these, 10 had select agents on the premises, and 1 planned to obtain such agents. We used the following laws, regulations, and guidance as criteria for evaluating the adequacy of security measures at the universities we reviewed: Biosafety in Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratories (BMBL), 4th Edition, Appendix F; the select agent transfer regulation (42 CFR - 72.6); the Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001 (USA PATRIOT Act); and Office of Management and Budget Circular A-130, Appendix III, 'Security of Federal Automated Information Resources.' The purpose of this report is to summarize our findings and discuss the universities' responses, regulatory changes affecting select agents, and actions taken by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and NIH to address the issues raised by our reviews."



National Academies
Committee on Research Standards and Practices to Prevent the Destructive Application of Biotechnology
Published: February 2004

"In recent years much has happened to justify an examination of biological research in light of national security concerns. The destructive application of biotechnology research includes activities such as spreading common pathogens or transforming them into even more lethal forms. Policymakers and the scientific community at large must put forth a vigorous and immediate response to this challenge. This new book by the National Research Council recommends that the government expand existing regulations and rely on self-governance by scientists rather than adopt intrusive new policies. One key recommendation of the report is that the government should not attempt to regulate scientific publishing but should trust scientists and journals to screen their papers for security risks, a task some journals have already taken up. With biological information and tools widely distributed, regulating only U.S. researchers would have little effect. A new International Forum on Biosecurity should encourage the adoption of similar measures around the world. Seven types of risky studies would require approval by the Institutional Biosafety Committees that already oversee recombinant DNA research at some 400 U.S. institutions. These experiments of concern include making an infectious agent more lethal and rendering vaccines powerless."


(PDF)
Department of Defense Instruction
Number 5210.88
Published: February 2004

"Pursuant to [the Directive-Type Memorandum "Safeguarding Biological Select Agents"], this Directive establishes security policy and assigns responsibilities for safeguarding biological select agents and toxins."



National Academies
Committee on Accelerating the Research, Development, and Acquisition of Medical Countermeasures Against Biological Warfare Agents
Published: January 2004

"According to a new congressionally mandated report from the Institute of Medicine and National Research Council of the National Academies, to successfully develop these drugs, vaccines, and other medical interventions against biowarfare agents, Congress should authorize the creation of a new agency within the Office of the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Defense. The committee recommended that Congress should improve liability protections for those who develop and manufacture these products, to stimulate willingness to invest in new research and development for biowarfare protection. Giving Full Measure to Countermeasures also identifies other challenges such as the need for appropriate animal models and laboratories equipped with high-level biosafety protections that will require attention if DoD efforts to develop new medical countermeasures are to be successful."


2003 Reports

(PDF)
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Published: August 2003

"In addition to increasing the breadth and depth of biodefense research, NIAID has made significant progress in meeting the specific goals and recommendations of the [2002] Blue Ribbon Panel [on Bioterrorism and Its Implications for Biomedical Research]. This progress report describes the progress that has been made toward addressing the immediate goals outlined in the research agenda. The first section of this report reviews progress on meeting the general recommendations made by the panel that apply to all areas of NIAID biodefense research. Research goals specific to each of the Category A pathogens are covered in individual chapters. Finally, the progress made thus far on immunology as it relates to biodefense is described in a separate chapter." This report updates the recommendations and assesses progress in research and development since the February 2002 NIAID Biodefense Research Agenda for CDC Category A Agents.


(PDF)
Office of Science and Technology Policy
President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology
Published: July 2003

"The Panel's recommendations focus on protecting citizen health through the creation of a comprehensive national readiness strategy, helping first responders, helping businesses protect our nation and improving the technology of personal identification. Importantly, the actions proposed emphasize helping citizens help themselves. We also offer suggestions on cyberterrorism and other matters involving threat detection, assessment and response. In each instance we attempt to acknowledge the activities that already exist in the private sector (citizen and corporate), and to suggest the appropriate governmental tools that could be applied to achieve the desired objectives in the particular situation addressed. As already noted, in a number of instances the Panel's recommendations are intended to confirm, augment or refocus efforts that are currently under way or under consideration."


Project BioShield (PDF)
Congressional Research Service Report
Resources, Science, and Technology Division
Frank Gottron, Analyst in Science and Technology Policy
Code RS21507
Published: July 2003

"Many potential biological terrorism agents lack available countermeasures. President Bush proposed Project BioShield to encourage companies to develop new bioterror countermeasures. The main provisions of that proposal include: (1) relaxing procedures for bioterrorism-related procurement and peer review; (2) guaranteeing a market through contract authority granted to the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) to buy countermeasures following Presidential approval, funded by a permanent, indefinite appropriation; and (3) allowing the Secretary of HHS to permit the emergency use of unapproved countermeasures. Some critics suggest that biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies will require even more incentives than contained in these proposals."


(PDF)
Congressional Research Service
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Dana A. Shea, Analyst in Science and Technology Policy
Code RL31695
Published: July 2003

"This report presents recent examples of scientific research results whose publication raised concern regarding the threat they potentially pose to national security. Past and current information control mechanisms are discussed, along with current federal policy concerning dissemination of fundamental research results through the open literature. Recent policy actions regarding dissemination of federal information and federally funded research results are outlined, along with the responses these actions have evoked from various professional societies and publishers. The advantages and disadvantages to potential policy actions addressing classification and other controls over open publication of federally funded research results are also described."


(PDF)
Report Summary (PDF)
Government Accountability Office
Report No. GAO-03-139
Published: May 2003

"The October 2001 anthrax attacks, the recent outbreak of the virulent Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), and increased awareness that terrorist groups may be capable of releasing lifethreatening biological agents have prompted efforts to improve our nation's preparedness for, and response to, public health emergencies-including bioterrorism. GAO was asked, among other things, to identify federal agencies' information technology (IT) initiatives to support our nation's readiness to deal with bioterrorism. Specifically, we compiled an inventory of such activities, determined the range of these coordination activities with other agencies, and identified the use of health care standards in these efforts."


(PDF)
Report Summary (PDF)
Government Accountability Office
Report No. GAO-03-654T
Published: May 2003

"The efforts of state and local public health agencies to prepare for a bioterrorist attack have improved the nation's capacity to respond to infectious disease outbreaks and other major public health threats, but gaps in preparedness remain. GAO found workforce shortages and gaps in disease surveillance and laboratory facilities. The level of preparedness varied across cities GAO visited. Jurisdictions that have had multiple prior experiences with public health emergencies were generally more prepared than others. GAO found that regional planning was generally lacking between states but that states were developing their own plans for receiving and distributing medical supplies for emergencies, as well as plans for mass vaccinations in the event of a public health emergency."


(PDF)
Center for International and Security Studies at Maryland
University of Maryland at College Park
Milton Leitenberg, Senior Research Scholar
Published: April 2002
Updated: April 2003

"The purpose of this paper is to review three processes that are providing the context in which biological weapons issues are evolving...The first is the destruction in 2001 by the United States of any possibility of achieving a negotiated Verification Protocol to the Biological Weapon Convention...The second is the emphasis on the threat of bioterrorism that became a significant national political concern in the United States since the second half of 1995, but which has been enormously magnified by the September 2001 events, as well as the subsequent distribution of expertly prepared powdered anthrax through the US postal system...The second of these, the frequently exaggerated anticipation of 'bioterrorism,' produced the third process: an enormous expansion in the U.S. biodefense program, the consequences of which risk catalyzing a major expansion in both global interest and capabilities in the area of biological weapons and warfare."


Microbial Threats to Health: Emergence, Detection, and Response
National Academies
Committee on Emerging Microbial Threats to Health in the 21st Century
Published: March 2003

"Following up on a high-profile 1992 report from the Institute of Medicine, Microbial Threats to Health examines the current state of knowledge and policy pertaining to emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases from around the globe. It examines the spectrum of microbial threats, factors in disease emergence, and the ultimate capacity of the United States to meet the challenges posed by microbial threats to human health. From the impact of war or technology on disease emergence to the development of enhanced disease surveillance and vaccine strategies, Microbial Threats to Health contains valuable information for researchers, students, health care providers, policymakers, public health officials. and the interested public."


(PDF)
Congressional Research Service
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Audrey Kurth Cronin, Specialist in Terrorism
Code RL31831
Published: March 2003

"There is widespread belief that the likelihood of terrorist use of chemical and biological weapons (CBW) is increasing, in part as a result of publicized new evidence of terrorist interest and capabilities, as well as the political fall-out from the war in Iraq. This is a serious present concern that deserves examination in the broader framework provided by the patterns, motivations and historical context for the current terrorist threat. Although it can have a powerful psychological impact, past CBW use by terrorists has been rare and has not caused a large number of casualties...Terrorist attacks are deliberately designed to surprise, so no trend analysis will ever perfectly predict them, especially in the contemporary international climate. This report presents the arguments for and against future nonstate terrorist acquisition and/or use of CBW weapons against the United States, as well as a brief discussion of issues for Congress concerning how best to counter the threat."


(PDF)
Report Summary (PDF)
Government Accountability Office
Report No. GAO-03-482
Published: March 2003

"Terrorists and countries of concern may be able to gain access to poorly secured weapons of mass destruction at sites throughout Russia. To address this threat to U.S. national security, the Departments of Defense (DOD) and Energy (DOE) have obligated more than $1.8 billion since 1992. GAO was asked to report on U.S. programs to help improve security at sites where Russia stores (1) weapons-usable nuclear material, (2) nuclear warheads, (3) dangerous biological pathogens, and (4) chemical weapons. For each area, GAO assessed U.S. plans to address security threats at sites in Russia, U.S. progress in implementing those plans, and the primary challenges facing DOD and DOE."


(PDF)
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Published: January 2003

"The NIAID Biodefense Research Agenda for Category B and C Priority Pathogens builds on the Strategic Plan and provides recommendations relevant to the Category B and C priority pathogens. As with the two previous research agendas, this document focuses on the need for basic research on the biology of the microbe, the host response, and basic and applied research aimed at the development of diagnostics, therapeutics, and vaccines against these agents. In addition, the Agenda addresses the research resources, facilities, and scientific manpower needed to conduct both basic and applied research on these agents."


2002 Reports

(PDF)
Section of Microbiology
University of California at Davis
Mark Wheelis, Senior Lecturer
Published: December 2002

"Biotechnology is revolutionizing the way new drugs are discovered, from a substantially empirical art to a rational, predictive process in which targets of drugs are selected on the basis of known physiology, then ligands that can bind to these targets are designed. The same process could be used to identify promising new chemical weapons (CW) agents, which would be synthesized from unscheduled precursors. Biotechnology thus has the potential of fueling CW proliferation. It can also aid the development of novel nonlethal chemical agents, the development of which could have a number of negative consequences for CW control."


CDC Smallpox Response Plan and Guidelines
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Updated: September 2002

"Although smallpox was declared globally eradicated in 1980, there are concerns that smallpox virus may be used for bioterrorism. This possibility has prompted the updating of the response plan previously developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for responding to the potential importation of smallpox during the 1970s. This updated Smallpox Response Plan and Guidelines incorporates and extends many of the concepts and strategies that were successfully employed to control smallpox outbreaks and to eradicate the disease. The Plan outlines the guidelines that CDC has provided to state and local health departments to assist them in developing smallpox outbreak response plans. CDC will continue to work with state and local health officials to improve public health preparedness for responding to all potential bioterrorism events."



National Academies
Committee on Biological Threats to Agricultural Plants and Animals
Published: September 2002

Countering Agricultural Bioterrorism asseses the vulnerability of US agriculture to intentional threats and provides recommendations needed to strengthen and adapt the US system for defense against biological threats to agriculture.


DoD Smallpox Response Plan (PDF)
Department of Defense
Published: September 2002

"This plan provides implementing instructions and accompanying planning guidance to prepare for and respond to a smallpox outbreak. A single case of smallpox outside of an approved laboratory constitutes a smallpox outbreak. This document amplifies and implements the Smallpox Response Plan - Guidelines issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). This DoD Smallpox Response Plan provides for response to smallpox outbreaks on military installations and contingency operations around the world, as well as military support to civil authorities."


Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act (P.L. 107-188): Provisions and Changes to Preexisting Law (PDF)
Congressional Research Service
Domestic Social Policy Division and Resources, Science, - Industry Divsion
C. Stephen Redhead, Donna U. Vogt, and Mary E. Tiemann
Code RL31263
Published: August 2002

"This report provides a brief overview and legislative history of P.L. 107-188, followed by a detailed side-by-side comparison of the act's provisions with preexisting law. Appendix A lists, by committee, all the bioterrorism-related hearings held in the 107th Congress prior to enactment of P.L. 107-188. In most cases, hearing testimony is available on the committee Web sites. Appendix B provides a list of bioterrorism-related Web sites."


(PDF)
Office of Homeland Security
The White House
Published: July 2002

"People and organizations all across the United States have taken many steps to improve our security since the September 11 attacks, but a great deal of work remains. The National Strategy for Homeland Security will help to prepare our Nation for the work ahead in several ways. It provides direction to the federal government departments and agencies that have a role in homeland security. It suggests steps that state and local governments, private companies and organizations, and individual Americans can take to improve our security and offers incentives for them to do so. It recommends certain actions to the Congress."



National Academies
Committee on Science and Technology for Countering Terrorism
Published: June 2002

"Vulnerabilities abound in U.S. society. The openness and efficiency of our key infrastructures...make them susceptible to terrorist attacks. Making the Nation Safer discusses technical approaches to mitigating these vulnerabilities. A broad range of topics are covered in this book, including...bioterrorism, medical research, agricultural systems, and public health...There are recommendations on how to immediately apply existing knowledge and technology to make the nation safer and on starting research and development programs that could produce innovations that will strengthen key systems and protect us against future threats. The book also discusses issues affecting the government's ability to carry out the necessary science and engineering programs and the important role of industry, universities, and states, counties, and cities in homeland security efforts."



National Academies
Panel on Biological Issues, Committee on Science and Technology for Countering Terrorism
Published: June 2002

"This report was published as Chapter 3 of the National Academies' report, Making the Nation Safer: The Role of Science and Technology in Countering Terrorism. It is published here as a stand-alone report to focus on measures to counter bioterrorism.

This report is organized into three chapters: (1) intelligence, surveillance, detection, and diagnosis; (2) prevention, response, and recovery; and (3) policy and implementation followed by concluding remarks. Each chapter describes the desired capabilities that could soon exist through better application of existing science and technology (and that might therefore have a near-term payoff) as well as desired capabilities that cannot now be provided through existing science and technology (S&T) but might be available in the future, given longer-term research and possibly more innovative funding and organizational approaches. The report focuses on research needs related to both human and agricultural health...The report concludes with recommendations about education and information dissemination, strengthening the public health and agriculture infrastructures, and organizing the research and development effort through improved policies, new funding models, and public-private partnerships."


The USA PATRIOT Act: A Legal Analysis (PDF)
Congressional Research Service
American Law Divsion
Charles Doyle
Code RL31377
Published: April 2002

This report provides a brief overview and legislative history of the USA Patriot Act and a detailed analysis of the provisions put forth by this act. This analysis includes laws within the act relating to biological and chemical weapons.



National Academies
Forum on Emerging Infections, Board on Global Health
Published: March 2002

"In the wake of September 11th and recent anthrax events, our nation's bioterrorism response capability has become an imminent priority for policymakers, researchers, public health officials, academia, and the private sector. In a three-day workshop, convened by the Institute of Medicine's Forum on Emerging Infections, experts from each of these communities came together to identify, clarify, and prioritize the next steps that need to be taken in order to prepare and strengthen bioterrorism response capabilities...It became clear that of utmost urgency is the need to cast the issue of a response in an appropriate framework in order to attract the attention of Congress and the public in order to garner sufficient and sustainable support for such initiatives...Numerous workshop participants agreed that there are many gaps in the public health infrastructure and countermeasure capabilities that must be prioritized and addressed in order to assure a rapid and effective response to another bioterrorist attack."


(PDF)
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Published: February 2002

"The Institute has developed a Strategic Plan for Biodefense Research at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), which outlines plans for addressing research needs in the broad area of bioterrorism and emerging and reemerging infectious diseases. (See Appendix B.) This Biodefense Research Agenda supplements the strategic plan and articulates the goals for research on anthrax, smallpox, plague, botulism, tularemia, and viral hemorrhagic fevers. The research agenda focuses on the need for basic research on the biology of the microbe, the host response, and basic and applied research aimed at the development of diagnostics, therapeutics, and vaccines against these agents. In addition, the agenda addresses the research resources, facilities, and scientific manpower needed to conduct both basic and applied research on these agents."


(PDF)
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Published: February 2002

"NIAID is committed to an agenda of basic and translational research for bioterrorism defense, working with partners in academia, industry, and other private and public-sector agencies. NIAID has developed this Strategic Plan to guide the implementation of the necessary research and development program. It is important to emphasize that the Strategic Plan focuses on both basic research and the application of that basic research to predetermined goals, including the development of products such as diagnostics, therapeutics, and vaccines. In the traditional manner, NIAID will provide support for the pursuit of fundamental research questions concerning microbes and the specific and nonspecific host defense mechanisms against these microbes. In addition, the Institute will work with partners in the private and public sectors to ensure that the fruits of basic research are rapidly translated into products that can be used in the worldwide Biodefense and emerging infection effort. Finally, NIAID also will collaborate with other agencies and organizations on research related to other forms of terrorism where scientific overlap and mutual opportunity exist for scientific or public health gain."


1982-2001 Reports


Center for International and Security Studies at Maryland
University of Maryland at College Park
Milton Leitenberg, Senior Research Scholar
Published: June 2001

This paper details the history of biological weapons, associated programs, and control efforts by state and non-state actors throughout the 20th Century. Information is also provided on events of the 1990s that have influenced the national and international perspectives of biological weapons.



Section of Microbiology
University of California at Davis
Mark Wheelis, Senior Lecturer
Published: November 2000

"Anti-agricultural biowarfare and bioterrorism differ significantly from the same activities directed against humans; for instance, there exist a variety of possibilities for economic gain for perpetrators, and the list of possible perpetrators includes corporations, which may have state-of-the-art technical expertise. Furthermore, attacks are substantially easier to do: the agents aren't hazardous to humans, delivery systems are readily available and unsophisticated, maximum effect may only require a few cases, delivery from outside the target country is possible, and an effective attack can be constructed to appear natural. This constellation of characteristics makes biological attack on the agricultural sector of at least some countries a very real threat, perhaps more so than attack on the civilian population."



Center for International and Security Studies at Maryland
University of Maryland at College Park
Milton Leitenberg, Senior Research Scholar
Published: October 2000

"The story of the Aum [Shinrikyo] and biological weapons (BW) is that of a religious-based fringe cult, one that would not ordinarily have been considered a "terrorist" group, but whose megalomanic leader included in his program of action the development of nerve gases and biological weapons. The group reportedly had available to it extraordinary financial resources, in the tens and hundreds of millions of dollars, some of which it converted into the procurement of equipment and facilities for work on these agents. Their efforts in the biological weapons area took several directions, but despite semi-professional capabilities, substantial time and effort, all of these efforts failed."



Center for International and Security Studies at Maryland
University of Maryland at College Park
Milton Leitenberg, Senior Research Scholar
Published: July 2000

"This paper evaluates the threat of biological weapons use against the United States in the near term. It does this by surveying, successively: the proliferation of biological weapons (BW) in identified state programs; the historical record regarding the potential for state-supported terrorism with biological weapons; the experience of the use of biological agents by non-state groups, either identified as "terrorist" organizations, or by any other designation; and the requirements and parameters for non-state groups to produce biological agents capable of being used as weapons systems."



Public Health Service, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the National Institutes of Health
Department of Health and Human Services
Published: April 1999

"This publication describes the combinations of standard and special microbiological practices, safety equipment, and facilities constituting Biosafety Levels 1-4, which are recommended for work with a variety of infectious agents in various laboratory settings."



National Academies
Committee on Research and Development Needs for Improving Civilian Medical Response to Chemical and Biological Terrorism Incidents
Published: March 1999

"Bombings at the World Trade Center and Oklahoma City's Federal Building, as well as nerve gas attacks in Japan, have made it tragically obvious that American civilians must be ready for terrorist attacks. What do we need to know to help emergency and medical personnel prepare for these attacks? Chemical and Biological Terrorism identifies the R&D efforts needed to implement recommendations in key areas: pre-incident intelligence, detection and identification of chemical and biological agents, protective clothing and equipment, early recognition that a population has been covertly exposed to a pathogen, mass casualty decontamination and triage, use of vaccines and pharmaceuticals, and the psychological effects of terror. Specific objectives for computer software development are also identified. The book addresses the differences between a biological and chemical attack, the distinct challenges to the military and civilian medical communities, and other broader issues"



World Health Organization
Division of Emerging and Other Communicable Diseases
Published: 1998

"This manual provides a comprehensive guide to the surveillance and control of anthrax in humans and animals...Information is intended for use by any veterinary or public health service confronted with an epidemic, an isolated case, or questions ranging from the duration of quarantine to the safety of milk. While noting the effectiveness of vaccines and other preventive measures, the manual gives particular attention to the complexities of controlling a disease spread by remarkably hardy spores that survive environmental extremes and many chemical disinfectants, and can travel great distances in the meat, hides, hair, wool or bones of infected animals...Throughout, an effort is made to balance recommended best practices with the realities of resource-poor settings where anthrax poses the greatest threat to human and animal health."



Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Technology
Department of Defense
Published: February 1998

"The Militarily Critical Technologies List (MCTL), is a detailed and structured compendium of the technologies the Department of Defense (DoD) assesses as critical to maintaining superior United States military capabilities. The MCTL is used as a technical foundation for U.S. proposals for export control in the New Forum, Missile Technology Control Regime, Nuclear Suppliers Groups, Australia Group, and other nonproliferation regimes. The MCTL is used as a reference for evaluating potential technology transfers and technical reports and scientific papers for public release. The information is used to determine if the proposed transaction would result in transfer that would permit potential adversaries access to technologies, not whether a transfer should or should not be approved.

Part II: Weapons of Mass Destruction Technologies addresses those technologies required for development, integration, or employment of biological, chemical, or nuclear weapons and their means of delivery. This document is not oriented to U.S. capabilities. Rather, it addresses technologies that proliferators might use to develop WMD. It provides technical information to assist various entities of the DoD to develop, support, and execute counterproliferation initiatives."


(PDF)
World Health Organization
Division of Emerging and Other Communicable Diseases
Published: 1997

"These technical guidelines are part of a series created by the World Health Organization's Division of Emerging and Other Communicable Diseases (EMC) as part of the Epidemic Preparedness and Response program. Their purpose is to update current knowledge on diseases with epidemic potential, to help health officials detect and control outbreaks, and, with the present document, to strengthen the capacity for emergency response to an epidemic of EHF."



Departments of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force
Department of Defense
Published: February 1996

"The purpose of this handbook is to provide a guide for medical officers on the medical aspects of NBC [nuclear, biological, chemical] operations. The handbook is intended as a compilation of reference material and as a source of information for training."



Office of Technology Assessment
U.S. Congress
Published: December 1993

"This background paper explores the technical pathways by which states might acquire nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons and the systems to deliver them. It also assesses the level of effort, commitment, and resources required to mount such developments. The paper is a companion to the OTA report Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction: Assessing the Risks, which describes what nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons can do and how they might be used. That report also analyzes the consequences of the spread of such weapons for the United States and the world, surveys the array of policy tools that can be used to combat proliferation, and identifies tradeoffs and choices that confront policymakers."


Emerging Infections: Microbial Threats to Health in the United States
National Academies
Committee on Emerging Microbial Threats to Health
Published: October 1992

"Disease-causing microbes have threatened human health for centuries. The Institute of Medicine's Committee on Emerging Microbial Threats to Health believes that this threat will continue and may even intensify in coming years. The committee's report, which is summarized here, describes key elements responsible for the emergence of infectious diseases; it also presents recommendations that, if appropriately implemented, should allow the United States to be better prepared to recognize and respond rapidly to these public health threats."



National Academies
Panel on Scientific Communication and National Security
Published: September 1982

"The Panel on Scientific Communication and National Security was asked to examine the various aspects of the application of controls to scientific communication and to suggest how to balance competing national objectives so as to best serve the general welfare. This task has involved a careful assessment of the sources of leakage, the nature of universities and scientific communication, the current systems of information control, and the several costs and benefits of controls. These assessments underlie the Panel's recommendations."


Department of Defense Chemical and Biological Defense Program Reports to Congress
Chemical and Biological Defense Program
Department of Defense

The Department of Defense Chemical and Biological Defense Program (CBDP) prepares these reports yearly in accordance to 50 US Code 1522 and 1523. The Annual Reports assess the Armed Forces' readiness to engage in a chemical biological warfare environment, the steps taken to improve that readiness, and the CBDPs requirements, in terms of training, detection, protection, and treatment. The Performance Plans allows the CBDP to assess their projects' effectiveness and contributions to their goals and mission and are a tool for the oversight and management of the program.

1994 Annual Report 1995 Annual Report 1996 Annual Report 1997 Annual Report
1998 Annual Report 1999 Annual Report 2000 Annual Report 2001 Annual Report
2002 Annual Report 2003 Annual Report 2004 Annual Report 2005 Annual Report
2006 Annual Report 2007 Annual Report -- --
2002 Performance Plan 2003 Performance Plan 2004 Performance Plan 2005 Performance Plan
Program Overview FY 06-07 Program Overview FY 08-09 -- --