Agent
Orange on Trial
by Peter H. Schuck
Paperback: 363 pages
Harvard Univ Pr; ISBN: 0674010264; Revised edition (December
1987)
America's
Achilles' Heel: Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Terrorism and Covert
Attack
by Richard A. Falkenrath, et al
Paperback ; Published 1998
Banning
Chemical Weapons : The Scientific Background
by Hugh D. Crone
Paperback: 122 pages
Cambridge University Press; ISBN: 0521427118; (December
1992)
Biohazard
by Ken Alibek with Stephen Handelman
In this fast-paced memoir, Ken Alibek combines cutting-edge science
with the narrative techniques of a thriller to describe some of the most
awful weapons imaginable. The result will remind readers of The Hot Zone,
Richard Preston's smart bestseller about the Ebola virus. That book focuses
on the dangers of a freak accident; Biohazard shows how disease can become
a deliberate tool of war. Alibek, once a top scientist in the Soviet Union's
biological weapons program, describes putting anthrax on a warhead and
targeting a city on the other side of the world. "A hundred kilograms of
anthrax spores would, in optimal atmospheric conditions, kill up to three
million people in any of the densely populated metropolitan areas of the
United States," he writes. "A single SS-18 [missile] could wipe out the
population of a city as large as New York."
Chilling passages like these, plus discussions of proliferation and
terrorism, make Biohazard a harrowing book, but it also has a human side.
Alibek, who defected to the United States, describes the routine danger
of his work: "A bioweapons lab leaves its mark on a person forever." An
unending stream of vaccinations has destroyed his sense of smell, afflicted
him with allergies, made it impossible to eat certain kinds of food, and
"weakened my resistance to disease and probably shortened my life." But
it didn't take away his ability to tell an astonishing story. --John
J. Miller - Amazon.com
Hardcover: 319 pages
Random House; ISBN: 0375502319; (May 1999)
The Continuing Storm : Iraq, Poisonous Weapons, and Deterrence
by Avigdor Haselkorn
Listed under Gulf War 1991
Germs:
Biological Weapons and America's Secret War
by Judith Miller, et al
Three reporters from The New York Times survey the recent history of
biological weapons and sound an alarm about the coming threat of the "poor
man's hydrogen bomb." Germs begins ominously enough, recounting the chilling
attack by the followers of the Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh in 1984 on the Dalles,
Oregon--no one died, but nearly 1,000 were infected with a strain of salmonella
that the cult had legally obtained, then cultured and distributed. While
the U.S. maintained an active "bugs and gas" program in the '50s and early
'60s, bio-weapons were effectively pulled off this country's agenda in
1972 when countries around the world, led by the United States, forswore
development of such weapons at the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention.
The issue reemerged in the early '90s thanks to Saddam Hussein and revelations
of the clandestine and massive buildup of bio-weapons in remote corners
of the Soviet Union. The book's description of the Soviet program is horrific.
At its peak the program employed thousands of scientists, developing bioengineered
pathogens as well as producing hundreds of tons of plague, anthrax, and
smallpox annually. The authors conclude that while a biological attack
against the United States is not necessarily inevitable, the danger of
bio-weapons is too real to be ignored. Well-researched and documented,
this book will not disappoint readers looking for a reliable and sober
resource on the topic. --Harry C. Edwards - Amazon.com
Hardcover: 352 pages
Simon & Schuster; ISBN: 0684871580; (September 2001) |
| |
Jane's Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Defense
Listed under Jane's Military Books
When
Every Moment Counts: What You Need to Know About Bioterrorism from the
Senate's Only Doctor
by Bill Frist, William H. Frist
Paperback: 192 pages
Rowman & Littlefield; ISBN: 0742522458; (March 2002)
Silent
Warfare : Understanding the World of Intelligence
by Abram N. Shulsky, Gary J. Schmitt
Paperback: 320 pages
Brasseys, Inc.; ISBN: 1574883453; 3rd edition (October
2002)
Nightmare
in Bari : The World War II Liberty Ship Poison Gas Disaster and Coverup
by Gerald Reminick
Hardcover: 288 pages
Glencannon Press; ISBN: 1889901210; (July 15, 2001)
The
United States and Biological Warfare : Secrets from the Early Cold War
and Korea
by Stephen Endicott, Edward Hagerman
(Hardcover - January 1999)
The
UNSCOM Saga : Chemical and Biological Weapons Non-Proliferation (Global
Issues Series)
by Graham S. Pearson
Hardcover - 256 pages (November 2000)
Palgrave; ISBN: 0312229593
Saddam's
Bombmaker: The Terrifying Inside Story of the Iraqi Nuclear and Biological
Weapons Agenda
by Khidr Abd Al-Abbas Hamzah, et al
(Hardcover - November 2000)
21st
Century Complete Guide to Bioterrorism, Biological and Chemical Weapons,
Germs and Germ Warfare, Nuclear and Radiation Terrorism - Military Manuals
and Federal Documents with Practical Emergency Plans, Protective Measures,
Medical Treatment and Survival Information
by Department of Defense
Over 30,000 pages in 146 documents (occupying over 600 MB) from all
major Federal agencies, including the Department of Defense, U.S. Army,
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Dept. of Health and Human Services,
Centers for Disease Control (CDC), Dept. of Energy, Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC), EPA, and GAO give detailed, useful, practical, current
information on the NBC (nuclear, biological, and chemical) threat. The
Publisher.
CD-ROM: 30007 pages
Progressive Management; ISBN: 1931828091; (September
30, 2001) |
| |
21st
Century Bioterrorism and Germ Weapons - U.S. Army Field Manual for the
Treatment of Biological Warfare Agent Casualties (Anthrax, Smallpox, Plague,
Viral Fevers, Toxins, Delivery Methods, Detection, Symptoms, Treatment,
Equipment)
by Department of Defense (Ring-bound)
2002
Bioterrorism After the Anthrax Attacks: Complete Revised Guide to Biological
Weapons and Germ Warfare ¿ Anthrax, Smallpox, Medicines, Treatment, Preparedness,
White House, Homeland Security, CDC, HHS, FDA, NIH, Military Manuals
by U. S. Government (CD-ROM)
21st
Century Terrorism, Germs and Germ Weapons, Nuclear, Biological and Chemical
(NBC) Warfare - Army Medical NBC Battlebook
by Department of Defense (Ring-bound)
21st
Century Germs, Germ Warfare, Anthrax, and Bioterrorism: Fort Detrick Official
Medical Management Handbook plus Complete Guide to Nuclear, Biological,
and Chemical Terrorism (Book and CD-ROM)
by U.S. Government (CD-ROM)
Germ
Warfare : Terror in Central Asia
by John Lonergan
(Paperback - May 2001)
Chemical
and Biological Warfare : An Annotated Bibliography
by Eric Croddy
Hardcover: 400 pages
Publisher: Scarecrow Press; ISBN: 0810832712; Ant edition
(June 19, 1997)
Chemical
and Biological Warfare Developments, 1985 (Sipr Chemical and Biological
Warfare Studies, No 6) by Julian Perry Robinson
Paperback: 110 pages
Oxford Univ Pr; ISBN: 0198291108; (August 1996)
Chemical
and Biological Weapons : A Study of Proliferation
by Edward M. Spiers
Hardcover: Palgrave; ISBN: 0312121210; (October 1994)
Clouds
of Secrecy : The Army's Germ-Warfare Tests over Populated Areas
by Leonard A. Cole
Hardcover: 188 pages
Rowman & Littlefield Publishing; ISBN: 0847675793;
(June 28, 1988)
First
Responder Chem-Bio Handbook
by Ben N. Venzke (Editor)
(Spiral-bound)
Biological
Warfare Against Crops (Global Issues)
by Simon M. Whitby
Hardcover: 288 pages
Palgrave; ISBN: 0333920856; (February 2002)
Chemical
Warfare Agents: Toxicity at Low Levels
by Satu M. Somani (Editor), James A. Romano (Editor)
(Hardcover)
The
Continuing Storm : Iraq, Poisonous Weapons and Deterrence
by Avigdor Haselkorn
Hardcover: 336 pages
Yale Univ Pr; ISBN: 0300075820; (March 1999)
The
Diplomacy of Biological Disarmament : Vicissitudes of a Treaty in Force
1975-85
by Nicholas A. Sims
Hardcover: 356 pages
ISBN: 0312211198; (August 1988)
The
Eleventh Plague : The Politics of Biological and Chemical Warfare
by Leonard A. Cole
Hardcover:W H Freeman & Co; ISBN: 0716729504; (December
1996)
Factories of Death : Japanese Biological Warfare 1932-45 and the
American Cover-Up by Sheldon H. Harris
Listed under Japanese War Crimes
The
Future of Biological Weapons (The Washington Papers, Vol 151)
by Barend Ter Haar
Hardcover: 190 pages
Praeger Pub Text; ISBN: 0275941000; (July 1991)
Guide
to Germ Warfare (Technical Manual; No 3-216)
by Charles Piller, Keith R. Yamamoto
Hardcover: Gordon Press Publications; ISBN: 0849035708;
(May 1990)
Special order
Lethal
Mists : An Introduction to the Natural and Military Sciences of Chemical,
Biological Warfare and Terrorism
by Eric R. Taylor
Hardcover: Nova Science Publishers, Inc.
ISBN: 1560724595; (February 2000)
NBC
: Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Warfare on the Modern Battlefield (Brassey's
Modern Military Equipment)
by John Norris, Will Fowler
Looks at the nature of chemical, biological and nuclear threats, the
equipment available to detect radiation and biological and chemical agents,
and the measures available to the soldier to protect himself and to continue
in an NBC environment. Amazon.com
Hardcover: 112 pages
Brasseys, Inc.; ISBN: 1857531825; 1st edition (January
15, 1997)
No
Fire, No Thunder : The Threat of Chemical and Biological Weapons
by Sean Murphy
Paperback ; Published 1984
Nonproliferation
Primer : Preventing the Spread of Nuclear, Chemical, and Biological Weapons
by Randall Forsberg (Editor), et al
Paperback ; Published 1995
Silent
Death : The Threat of Chemical and Biological Terrorism
by Kathlyn Gay
Library Binding: 128 pages
Twenty First Century Books; ISBN: 0761314016; (April
2001)
Superterrorism
: Assassins, Mobsters and Weapons of Mass Destruction
by Glenn E. Schweitzer, Carole C. Dorsch
Hardcover: 350 pages
Perseus Pr; ISBN: 0306459906; (October 1998)
U.S.
Chemical and Biological Defense Respirators : An Illustrated History (Schiffer
Military/Aviation History)
by Christopher T. Carey, Chris Carey
Hardcover: 223 pages
Schiffer Publishing, Ltd.; ISBN: 0764303872; (January
1998)
Special Order
 |
The
United States and Biological Warfare : Secrets from the Early Cold War
and Korea
by Stephen Endicott, Edward Hagerman
An airplane flies over enemy territory, dropping a shiny cylindrical
object near a town. When the townspeople go to investigate, they find flies,
spiders, and feathers scattered among bomb fragments in the snow. Biological
testing reveals that all the items are contaminated with the anthrax bacillus.
The Iran-Iraq war? International terrorism? Or the United States in northeastern
China, 1952? The term "biological warfare" brings to mind images of ruthless
dictators, delusional terrorists, and cartoonish movie villains. The assertions
made by Stephen Endicott and Edward Hagerman, that the United States engaged
in germ warfare against China and North Korea in the 1950s, are therefore
both shocking and disturbing. The United States and Biological Warfare
is an important yet flawed history of the American program, from its origin
in 1941 as the Bacteriological Warfare Committee (quickly and obfuscatingly
renamed the WBC) to its abrupt closure in the 1960s. The main focus of
the book, however, is the United States' activities in Korea and China
during the Korean War--where, Endicott and Hagerman claim, the U.S. launched
a number of biological attacks to spread anthrax, cholera, and smallpox
viruses, as well as other disease-causing agents. This book is bound to
draw criticism from many sides; despite their thorough research, the authors
have yet to find a proper "smoking gun." Some of the science is muddled,
as well--though it is at times difficult to tell if the confusion began
in the military documents or with the authors. The circumstantial evidence
and overall argument, however, are quite compelling. What is even more
disturbing than these activities (including the fact that scientists who
were active in Japan's biological warfare program in World War II were
granted immunity for their war crimes in return for sharing their knowledge)
is the wartime mentality that causes countries to contemplate and even
commit atrocities in the name of national security. A chilling read. Amazon.com
Hardcover: 304 pages
Indiana University Press; ISBN: 0253334721; (January
1999)
Verifying
Nonproliferation Treaties : Obligation, Process, and Sovereignty
by J. Christian Kessler
Paperback: 155 pages
National Defense University Press; ISBN: 0160516838;
(June 1995)
Views
on Possible Verification Measures for the Biological Weapons Convention
(Sipri Chemical and Biological Warfare Studies, No 12)
by S.J. Lundin (Editor)
Paperback: 124 pages
Oxford Univ Pr; ISBN: 0198291426; (August 1991)
Biological Warfare in the 21st Century : Biotechnology and the Proliferation
of Biological Weapons
by Malcolm Dando
Hardcover: 258 pages
ISBN: 1857530640; (July 1994)
Special Order
Out of Print - Try Used
Books
The Soldier's Guide Book (Ausa Institute of Land Warfare Book.)
Raymond K., Jr., Col. Bluhm, James B. Motley
Hardcover / Published 1995
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