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US-funded biolab sparks alarm

Kazakhstan unit reported to be studying deadly pathogens that could be used in bioterror attacks

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Acontrover­sial biological laboratory in Kazakhstan has caused concerns among local residents. The laboratory used to be controlled by the Soviet Union, but now it is funded by the US.

In a suburb near the city of Almaty, Kazakhstan, the Central Reference Laboratory, which opened in 2017, is studying some of the deadliest pathogens that could be used in bioterrori­sm attacks, according to reports.

The facility is a $102 million biosecurit­y laboratory funded by the United States Defense Threat Reduction Agency, or DTRA, and the NunnLugar Cooperativ­e Threat Reduction Program, or CTR. The lab is studying the highest-risk diseases such as plague and cholera, the National Geographic channel reported.

Russia’s TASS news agency reported in January 2022 that social media users speculated that experts in chemical protective suits were working near the lab due to “a leak of dangerous pathogens”.

The lab’s existence has been controvers­ial, and the Kazakh government had previously denied any involvemen­t in producing biological weapons.

The lab also provides steady employment for scientists who might otherwise be tempted to sell their high-level and potentiall­y destructiv­e knowledge to hostile groups, said Lieutenant Colonel Charles Carlton, director of the DTRA offices in Kazakhstan, according to National Geographic.

Historical­ly, Kazakhstan monitored high-risk diseases in laboratori­es of the Soviet anti-plague system, which fell into severe disrepair after the fall of the Soviet Union and the subsequent lack of funding, according to the James Martin Center for Nonprolife­ration Studies, a California-based nongovernm­ental organizati­on that aims to curb the spread of weapons of mass destructio­n.

The US then engaged with this former Soviet lab through the CTR program. It was not the first time the US took over former Soviet biological research.

Beginning in the late 1990s, the US started to establish partnershi­ps and develop collaborat­ions in the field of biological research with a number of former Soviet republics to seek “to dismantle the former Soviet Union’s massive biological weapons research, developmen­t and production infrastruc­ture”, according to The Jamestown Foundation, a Washington­based think tank.

The DTRA and the CTR have carried out various “bio-threat reduction projects” in Russia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Ukraine, according to The Jamestown Foundation.

Moscow has repeatedly claimed that such cooperatio­n represents a threat to Russia. Major General Igor

Kirillov, the commander of Russia’s Radiologic­al, Chemical and Biological Defense Troops, said in 2018 that “under the guise of peaceful research, (the US) is building up its militarybi­ological potential”.

“The Pentagon has been doing it since 2005, working with Ukrainians, to quote, ‘eliminate biological weapons’ left behind by the Soviets. That makes sense,” Fox News host Tucker Carlson said on his TV show in March 2022.

“But wait, 2005 was 17 years ago. How long does it take to eliminate Soviet bioweapons? Seventeen years seems like a long time. If you had 17 years and ample funding from Congress, you could probably remove and catalog every grain of sand on Waikiki Beach. And yet somehow, over that same period, 17 years, the Pentagon has not finished removing test tubes from Soviet-era freezers,” he said.

In fact, the US has an increasing number of biolabs around the world.

The Biological Threat Reduction Program of the US Department of Defense, or DoD, has reportedly supported a total of 336 biolabs across Africa, Eastern Europe, Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East, as well as several biosecurit­y labs operated directly by the DoD overseas, according to a report presented by the US to the Meeting of the Biological Weapons Convention in November 2021.

Undersecre­tary of State for Political Affairs Victoria Nuland mentioned last March in a Senate hearing that she feared the labs in Ukraine would “fall into Russian hands”, prompting further suspicions over the biological program.

“If nothing bad is happening in these biolabs, why are you concerned about them falling under Russian control?” Scotty A said in a comment posted on YouTube.

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