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Discuss four advantages and the four disadvantages of biological weapons (biowarfare).

Include relevant examples to support your evaluation.

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Introductions
War is something that is dreaded by mankind. This is because the main goal of the war

was to kill and destroy their enemies. Biological weapon is one of the methods used by mankind
instead of nuclear and chemical weapons. Biological weapon is rooted in the ancient past and it
became a science in the early 20th century following the breakthrough discoveries in
microbiology and immunology of the late 1800s. Biological Warfare" is the use of disease to
harm or kill an adversary's military forces, population, food, and livestock. This includes any
living(or non-living virus) microorganism or bioactive substance that is produced by a
microorganism that can be delivered by conventional warhead or even civilian means.
Biological weapons are used of microorganisms, organisms and toxins in causing disease
and death towards living things such as human, animal and plant. Microorganisms used in
biological weapon are bacteria, virus and fungi that can act as pathogen towards human or other
living things. In the simplest sense, the direction of biological weapons against military or
national defense is biowarfare.

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Four Advantages of Biological Weapon

2.1

Biological weapons are relatively easy to deliver and dissemination


Biological agent is the most important component in biological weapons. Biological

weapons are relatively easy to deliver and dissemination because they are easy to hide and
difficult to detect or protect against. They are invisible, odorless, tasteless, and can be spread
silently. Biological weapons are unique in their invisibility and their delayed effects. This
biological weapons are low visibility and undetectable to spy technology.
Biological weapons are unconventional weapons that can be delivered by unconventional
means such as aerosol sprays, food and water contamination, conventional explosive munitions
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or by covert injections. Biological weapons are a weapon that is easy to be delivered and
disseminated towards enemy without any notice because of its smaller size. The size of particle
is very important and the size range of particles should be 1 to 5 m in diameter. This is to
provide and allow good penetration into the lungs of humans. Particles larger than this would
either settle out onto the ground or be filtered out in the upper respiratory tract of those who
inhale them. According to Agarwal, Shukla, Dharmani, & Gandhi (2004), because of their
particle size which is 1-5m, biological weapons are most efficiently delivered to their target
area which is the air sacs of lung in human body. This is because to be infected, a person must
breathe a sufficient quantity of particles into the lungs to cause illness.
An adversary designing a biological weapon would therefore seek to produce such a
small particle size, and would require the equipment and technology to do so. Aerosol generators
will generate particle of optimal size which is around 1 to 5 m. Particles in this size range are
invisible to the human eye. Thus, a cloud of such particles would not generally be detected by
those attacked, even if such a cloud were to be carried through their position (M.Eitzen, Jr.,
M.P.H, & Facep, n.d.).

Biological weapons agents could be spread using equipment for

producing aerosol such as spray devices, via bombs or missiles. They could also be dispersed
from airplanes, ships, vehicles, or, as we have recently seen, via letters or mails.

Mode of delivery of biological weapons


For example, 2001 Anthrax attacks were a series of incidents in the United States
involving biological weapons. This biological weapon attack is also known as Amerithrax. The
attacks began on Tuesday, September 18, 2001 and lasted for several weeks. Bacillus anthracis
was delivered via mail. The anthrax spores were put in envelopes and sent to several news media
offices and two of the United State senate offices. There were 31 people were infected and five
people were died. It was believed that the person who was responsible for this attack was Dr.
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Bruce Ivins, senior biodefense researcher and also involving al-Qaeda, a group of extremist and
terrorist.

2001 Anthrax Attack in United States of America

2.2

Biological weapons can end war quickly

Probably the biggest advantage of most biological weapons is the killing efficiency that can end
war quickly. Smallpox, Ebola, Marburg virus, and Japanese encephalitis (JE), are among of
biological weapons that have a reputation for causing a more horrifying illness. Only small
quantities are required to cause large and terrifying effects (Roffey, Lantorp, Tegnell, & Elgh,
2002).
Many biological weapons components are highly concentrated. a few drops of certain
virus, bacteria or toxins can literally kill millions of people once they hit the air, food or water
supply within a community. This will eliminate the enemy population quickly and effectively
without using destructive forces. It is estimated that 1 gram of toxin could kill 10 million people.
A purified form of botulinum toxin is approximately 3 million times more potent than Sarin, a
chemical nerve agent. As a comparison, a SCUD missile filled with botulinum toxin could affect
an area of 3700 sq. km, an area 16X greater than could be affected with Sarin.
Biological weapons can end war quickly because it can kill millions of people using a
small dose of biological weapons. In a war, biological weapon was used to weaken the enemy by
paralyzing the number of soldiers and led to loss of life. They will start to panic and seeking for
treatment and cure of the disease. This automatically will lead to end of war quickly.
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The history had shown us how exactly biological weapons can end war quickly. During
second war, one method used by the Japanese in Manchuria was dropping rice and plague
infected fleas out of airplanes (Katz, 2001). This area is not occupied by any Japanese. The rice
attracted rats, which then became infected with the fleas, thus creating efficient epidemiologic
conditions by which the disease spread to humans over a large geographic area. This action had
infected many numbers of people in China for that time being. When the League of Nations sent
a commission to investigate Japans actions in Manchuria, Japanese military officials attempted,
unsuccessfully, to poison their food with cholera. This show how Japanese weaken their enemy
using biological weapon and able to defeat and conquer China at that time.

Japanese in Macnchuria, China


Besides causing physically effect such as epidemic, disease and death, biological
weapons also had physiological effect towards human being that can end war quickly. Images on
the patients, death of infected people, doctors, nurses, and law enforcement personnel in full
protective gear could cause widespread public distraction and anxiety. These factors allow those
who use biological weapons to inculcate fear and cause confusion among their victims and to
escape undetected. It is clear that biowarfare attack would not only cause sickness and death in a
large number of victims but would also aim to create fear, panic, and paralyzing uncertainty. Its
goal is disruption of social and economic activity, the breakdown of government authority, and
the impairment of military responses. Hence, this will contribute to the end of war.

2.3

Biological weapons are low in cost


Another advantage is the cost effectiveness of biological weapons. In order to "affect" 1

square kilometer, it would cost approximately $2000 using conventional weapons, $800 using
nuclear weapons, $600 using chemical weapons, but it only cost $1.00 using biological weapons.
This fact has caused biological agents to be called as Poor Man's Atomic Bomb.
Biological weapons are weapons that low in cost is due to its agent are available naturally
from living organisms and does not need advance invention to be used as a weapon. Biological
weapons agent can be found mostly from our surrounding. Biological weapons are effectively
deadly partially because of how cheaply and easily they can be made. Literally anyone able to
create their own crude biological weapons if they have the flu and leave samples of the virus in
container that they can manage to keep the virus alive over time. The infected people also can
became agent of biological weapon because they can transmit disease easily without involve
additional cost. Thats why biological weapons are low in cost.
Examples of biological weapons are corpse, animals poison, infected human, plants,
animals, and existence contagious disease. In primitive times, poisoning and fecal contamination
of arrows, spears, and fungi sticks were commonly used (Hilleman, 2002). Poison used usually
comes from natural poison that comes from animals and plants while the fecal contamination can
be found from human and animals fecal. This involves very low cost but efficiently work as a
weapon.

Vietnam-American War
In Vietnam-American War, according to history, even though Vietnam is lack of advance
technology in term of weapons and known as poor country, Vietnamese able to defeat American
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soldier by using one of its strategy which is using biological weapon. They use traps that had
been put with poison from animal and fecal. Many of American soldier dead because of their
brilliant strategy.

2.4

Biological weapons are availability and ease of production

Another term for biological weapons is Lazy Man's Atomic Bomb. This is because of its
availability and the ease of production. As we all know, the characteristic of ideal biological
agents are relatively easy to acquire, process, and use. Biological agents are often simpler to
acquire and produce than nuclear, chemical or some conventional weapons. Only small amounts
would be needed to kill or incapacitate hundreds of thousands of people in targeted area.
Biological weapons are easily to produce. Other weapons are produced through further
and advance investigation that involve time, cost and human power. However, for biological
weapons it only takes low cost, less time and less human power. Biological weapons such as
poison from animals are easy to get which is the biological weapon can be obtain directly from
animal. Animal cadavers substituted for poisons during the Greek and Roman eras and Emperor
Barbarossa used human corpses to the same end, although it is likely that a simple spoiling of the
water supply, rather than the spreading of disease, was intended (Frischknecht, 2008). Another
example is Hannibal suggested a more active approach when advising the Bithynians to catapult
jars filled with snakes towards enemy ships in 184 BC.
Besides that, victim of infected disease also contribute to the easiness of production
biological weapons. Military leaders in the Middle Ages recognized that victims of infectious
diseases

could

become

weapons

themselves.

Along with this is the fact that with certain organisms, only a few particles would be needed to
start an infection (produce biological weapon) that could potentially cause an epidemic.
Conventional weapons explode once and are finished. With a few particles of Hanta virus many
thousands of people could become carriers that infect thousands more people. This is a bonus for
biological weapons if we compared to others weapons.

1346 Siege of Caffa which also known as Spelled Kaffa. Kaffa now is known as
Feodosija at Ukraine. This tragic incident involved the most gruesome and crudest example of
biological warfare when the bodies of Mongol warriors of the Golden Horde who had died of
plague were thrown over the walls of the besieged Crimean city of Kaffa. This is happen when
the city could not be taken, the attackers catapulted corpses of their soldiers who had died of
plague over the city walls (Roffey et al., 2002). This show that Mongolian does not need high
cost to create biological weapons. They just used infected Mongolians warriors that are dead
from plague. Mountains of dead people were thrown into the city. Many of the inhabitants are
infected. This resulted in many deaths if we compared from the Black Death (plague).

Siege of Caffa

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Four Disadvantages of Biological Weapons

3.1

Biological Weapons are massive amounts of collateral damage


Biological weapons are known as massive amounts of collateral damage because it

involves a lot of people and not only on targeted enemies. In addition, biowarfare will produce
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collateral damage not only during biowarfare but also during tested period of the weapons. It is
estimated that several tens of thousands of people died as a consequence of offensive biological
research, including soldiers on both sides. In any given population, there are going to be civilians
who are not active combatants in whatever conflict is going on. Biological warfare eliminates the
entire population center, not just the military forces. This means that a toxin or biological agents
released in a city of millions could potentially murder over a million people in the name of war.
Example, in World War II, Japanese conduct a large scale human experiments and
biological warfare in China. This project was started by the radical nationalist Shiro Ishii. He
started his research in 1930 and became the first head of Japans bioweapon program during
World War II. This evil project was conducted by Unit 731. At its peak, the program employed
over 5000 people, killing as many as 600 prisoners a year in human experiments in the largest of
its many centers. According to Frischknecht (2008), at least 25 different disease causing agents
were cruelly tested on prisoners and unsuspecting civilians. Water wells in Chinese villages were
poisoned to study cholera and typhus outbreaks. Plague infested fleas were dropped by plane
over Chinese cities or distributed by saboteurs in rice fields and along roads, causing epidemics
in areas where the plague was unknown, some persisting for years after the war ended.

Japanese Biological Weapons Project in China during World War II

Biological weapons infected a lot of innocent people especially during testing period. In
1966 Bacillus subtilis was released into the subway system of New York City to determine how
vulnerable it was to attack. Results showed that the entire underground tunnel system could be
infected by release in only one station due to the winds created by the trains. This is so cruel and
inhumanity act had occurred.
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Smallpox is one of biological weapons that will cause collateral damage. According to
Stern et al. (2003) Smallpox, which killed some 300 million people in the twentieth century
alone, is highly contagious and lethal to 30 percent of those it infects. There is no treatment
other than vaccination within four days of exposure. Since 1980, when the World Health
Organization (WHO) certified that smallpox had been eradicated, few countries have maintained
vaccine stocks that will be use as potential biological weapon. If smallpox were released, much
of the worlds population would be vulnerable. Hence, it is supported here that biological
weapons are massive amounts of collateral damage.

3.2

Biological Weapons efficiency is depends on weather and certain conditions

The use of biological weapons must fulfill certain conditions in order to have an efficient
biological weapons effect. We need to consider few conditions before releasing the biological
agent. Weather plays an important role in dispersing and distributing the biological weapons
towards target area or enemies. There are also few biological weapons, which its dispersion must
be done at night or early morning. This is due to their limitation towards suns radiation that will
disrupt the efficiency and dispersion of biological weapons.

Ebola virus had limitation towards sun radiation


For example, Ebola virus is very sensitive towards hot temperature and also sun
radiation. Hence, in order to deliver or disperse to targeted enemies or area, they need to do it in
the condition that is low in temperature and early at the morning and night.

As been mention earlier that biological weapons agents can be spread using equipment
for producing aerosol such as spray devices, via bombs or missiles and also can be dispersed
from airplanes, ships or vehicles. In this case, the direction of wind also needs to be in correct
order and orientation. Even if there is a small change in direction of wind, this will cause
biological weapon to attack its producer back.
3.3

Biological Weapons had long life span

The life span is another major concern. These agents are living creatures that have a chance of
becoming a part of the local microflora. If we spray an area and kill enemy troops, how long is
safe before our troops can follow up? There is no 100% way to be sure. The life span of this
biological agent is unpredictable.
Biological agent is a living microorganism that can immersed and adapt with certain
condition in order to survive. Hence, it is hard for us to guarantee that there is no more biological
weapon that exist in certain area even though it takes millions of years.
The history had shown us that Gruinard Island, situated at the coast of Scotland was
chosen as the site for biological weapon testing during World War II. The island was tested with
Anthrax spores. The island contaminated with Anthrax and around 1986, 280 tans of
formaldehyde had been sprayed throughout the island to kill the spores. The original idea for
decontamination was to start a brushfire that burned off the top of the soil and killed all traces of
the organisms. Unfortunately, the spores unexpectedly embedded themselves in the soil so total
decontamination of the island was impossible. As long as no ground is disturbed, we are
supposedly safe, but how about birds or others animals that travel back and forth from mainland
to island knew about this. A tragic consequence of this testing is that even today Gruinard Island
is contaminated with Bacillus anthracis spores.

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Gruinard Island

3.4

Biological Weapons will destroy the value of humanity

The effect of biological weapon is not only at certain time, certain place nor certain people or
neither animal. Its effect includes so many innocent people and also unknown period of time.
Value of humanity is becoming the last aspect that will be considered by the creator of biological
weapon. The first aim and consideration of this creator are just to win the battle in war and also
to show off their power to their enemies. They will not care about how and who involved in the
testing process and during the real situation. Biological weapons are destroying the value of
humanity.

Japanese cruel experiment towards Chinas people


World War I and II had become field for those countries to show off their power by
creating and applying biological weapons. The worse thing ever, it is believed that large number
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of soldier is dead because of diseases arise from biological weapons if compared to death during
war. The most inhumanity act was occurred during the World War II, where Japanese had done
many test towards Chinas civilians. 3000 victims had been exposed to many infectious diseases
such as Siphillis, Anthrax, and other biological agents. This inhumanity act is not stop at this
way. After the victim had been infected with the disease, they start to do further investigation
towards the victims until they get the result that they want. Humans life is not important for
them and this is act is so cruel and inhumanity.
In British-Native American War, this war had shown us that human can do anything to
win battle without concern about value of humanity. They want to destroy the population of
Native American. Hence, British had given Native American blanket that is infected by Smallpox
virus and lot of Native American died due to this infection (Frischknecht, 2008).

British-Native American War

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Conclusion
Biological weapon is known for its effectiveness as weapons because of its visibility and

dispersion. It had been the scariest weapon because its impact is very high and had a long life
span. As been mentioning earlier, biological weapons had its own advantages and disadvantages.
From my point of view, we can use biological weapon only for defensive purpose and not to start

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war to our enemy or defeated country. The intention from the usage of biological weapon is the
key indicator for the right to use biological weapon.

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