Zelicoff, from Sandia National Laboratories, analyzed Soviet documents for the Monterey Institute of International Studies in California and interviewed survivors of the 1971 outbreak that struck a port on the Aral Sea in what was then the Kazakh Republic.
Two children and a young woman died, among 10 who were infected. The seven who got sick contracted the disease despite having been vaccinated; the three who died were not vaccinated.
[red]A Soviet report from that time indicated that the first person infected was a woman on a research vessel that sailed within 10 miles of an island where a smallpox weapons test was being done.[/red]
The woman, who is a biologist today, told Zelicoff she never left the ship during the period in question, making it unlikely she contracted the disease ashore.
Once back home, she infected her brother, who also survived, while her brother's teacher contracted the disease and died.
Officials controlled the outbreak by hurriedly vaccinating more than 50,000 people.
[red]The disease normally kills one in three people who get it, but Zelicoff said the three who died had an extremely rare form that is almost always fatal.
For three in 10 to come down with that form, he said, suggests that the virus released in the Soviet test might have been engineered to be more deadly as well as to travel farther.[/red]
U.S. officials have been concentrating on building up stocks of the tried and true vaccines rather than on developing new medicines to counter potentially more lethal forms of smallpox.
Zelicoff said that may not be sufficient if terrorists have access to powerful strains in the form of a weapon.
``We cannot be satisfied with making 300 million doses of the old vaccine, as good as they were,'' he said in an interview.
Henderson challenged Zelicoff point by point. For one, he said the Kazakh outbreak could have come naturally from nearby Afghanistan, which is known to have had smallpox cases in 1971.
``This doesn't suggest we have anything that is unusual,'' he said.
On the Net:
Monterey Institute: http://www.miis.edu/
Smallpox background: http://www.cdc.gov/nip/smallpox/default.htm
06/15/02 16:54 EDT
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