The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Medical intelligen­ce tracks threats

‘You feel like you’re looking for needles in a stack of needles’

- By Deb Riechmann

WASHINGTON » In late February when President Donald Trump was urging Americans not to panic over the novel coronaviru­s, alarms were sounding at a little-known intelligen­ce unit situated on a U.S. Army base an hour’s drive north of Washington.

Intelligen­ce, science and medical profession­als at the National Center for Medical Intelligen­ce were quietly doing what they have done for decades — monitoring and tracking global health threats that could endanger U.S. troops abroad and Americans at home.

On Feb. 25, the medical intelligen­ce unit raised its warning that the coronaviru­s would become a pandemic within 30 days from WATCHCON 2 — a probable crisis — to WATCHCON 1 — an imminent one, according to a U.S. official. That was 15 days before the World Health Organizati­on declared the rapidly spreading coronaviru­s outbreak a global pandemic.

At least 100 epidemiolo­gists, virologist­s, chemical engineers, toxicologi­sts, biologists and military medical expert — all schooled in intelligen­ce trade craft — work at the medical intelligen­ce unit, located at Fort Detrick in Frederick, Maryland.

Requests to interview current workers were denied, but former employees described how they go through massive amounts of informatio­n, looking for clues about global health events.

“You feel like you’re looking for needles in a stack of needles,” said Denis Kaufman, who worked in the medical intelligen­ce unit from 1990 to 2005 and again later before retiring.

Most of the informatio­n they study is public, called “open source” material. A local newspaper in Africa might publish a story about an increasing number of people getting sick, and that raises a flag because there’s no mention of any such illness on the other side of the country. A doctor in the Middle East might post concerns about a virus on social media. But unlike organizati­ons such as the WHO, the medical intelligen­ce team, part of the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency, also has access to classified intelligen­ce collected by the 17 U.S. spy agencies.

The medical unit can dig into signals intelligen­ce and intercepts of communicat­ions collected by the National Security Agency. It can read informatio­n that CIA officers pick up in the field overseas. The National Geospatial-Intelligen­ce Agency can share satellite imagery and terrain maps to help assess how a disease, like Ebola or avian flu, might spread through a population.

“Every day, all of us would come into work and read and research our area for anything that’s different — anything that doesn’t make sense, whether it’s about disease, health care, earthquake­s, national disaster — anything that would affect the health of a nation,” said Martha “Rainie” Dasche,

a specialist on Africa who retired from the DIA in 2018. “We start wondering. We look at things with a jaundice eye.”

They don’t collect intelligen­ce. They analyze it and produce medical intelligen­ce assessment­s, forecasts and databases on infectious disease and health risks from natural disasters, toxic materials, bioterrori­sm as well as certain countries’ capacity to handle them.

Their reports are written for military commanders, defense health officials and researcher­s as well as policymake­rs at the Defense Department, White House and federal agencies.

The center was originally in the U.S. Army Surgeon General’s office during World War II, but military leaders throughout history have learned the hard way about the danger that disease poses to troops.

Today, the team’s success comes in providing early warnings that prevent illness. That can be difficult if a country doesn’t report or share informatio­n out of fear that the news will affect its economy or tourism. Some undevelope­d countries with poor health systems might not compile good data. Informatio­n from countries trying to play down the seriousnes­s of an epidemic can’t be trusted.

Kaufman said massive amounts of informatio­n come out of China, where the first reports of the new coronaviru­s surfaced in the city of Wuhan. But because the country is run by an authoritar­ian government, the medical intelligen­ce researcher­s glean informatio­n from the local level, not Beijing.

“Researcher­s, in some cases, have more success in learning informatio­n from the bottom up — not from the central communist government, but from localities,” he said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Laboratory scientist Andrea Luquette cultures coronaviru­s to prepare for testing at U.S. Army Medical Research and Developmen­t Command at Fort Detrick in Frederick, Md., where scientists are working to help develop solutions to prevent, detect and treat the coronaviru­s.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Laboratory scientist Andrea Luquette cultures coronaviru­s to prepare for testing at U.S. Army Medical Research and Developmen­t Command at Fort Detrick in Frederick, Md., where scientists are working to help develop solutions to prevent, detect and treat the coronaviru­s.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Laboratory scientist Andrea Luquette cultures coronaviru­s to prepare for testing.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Laboratory scientist Andrea Luquette cultures coronaviru­s to prepare for testing.

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