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http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=38623
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Some U.S. health officials are beginning to question why the U.S. strain of West Nile virus is deadlier to humans and birds than anywhere else on the planet with the exception of Israel.
Though no human cases of the bird virus have been confirmed yet this year, the U.S. has tracked 6,000 cases in the last two years along with 550 deaths.
This is by far the worst human toll anywhere in the world at any time since the virus' discovery in Uganda in 1937.
U.S. health officials believe the West Nile virus has mutated into an illness far deadlier to human beings in the United States but they don't know why.
Interestingly, the U.S. strain appears almost identical to only one other strain in the world the one found in Israel.
The disease is spread by mosquitoes, which feed off both birds and humans along with other susceptible animals.
In most parts of the world where it has surfaced, the virus typically causes illness akin to the flu, bringing fever, headache, muscle aches and fatigue unpleasant, but rarely fatal. The virus has not even proven fatal to all birds in other parts of the world. But the U.S. strain appears nearly 100 percent fatal to birds. They usually die within five days.
Once again, this has caused some health officials and scientists, as well as intelligence sources, to wonder if West Nile Virus is not a weaponized virus one perhaps deliberately engineered and delivered to the two biggest targets of Islamic terrorism.
Israel was the first place in the world where West Nile virus was associated with killing birds. Until that outbreak in 1997, the virus was known to sicken birds, but not fatally.
Israel also was the site of an outbreak of West Nile virus in humans that caused 450 cases of neurological disease in 2000.
Despite the risk to public health, West Nile virus is not a danger to most individuals. Researchers believe that out of 150 people infected with the virus, 120 people won't feel sick at all.
As hot weather reaches across the country in the coming weeks, scientists are on edge as to whether this summer season will be as deadly as the previous two.
In California, two cases of neurological disease and one case of West Nile fever occurred last year, all in the southern part of the state, none fatal. This year health officials expect the virus to spread through California. It has previously hit hard in Colorado and the East Coast.
There is increasing evidence of Saddam Hussein's complicity in bringing West Nile virus to the U.S.
While some American intelligence sources are still suspicious about claims that Saddam Hussein had an active chemical and biological weapons program, others believe he unleashed that program on the U.S. in the form of West Nile virus.
About 85 percent of human infections occur in August and September, and the mosquito is by far the most common route. It is, however, possible to contract WNV through breast milk, blood contact and organ transplants.
Symptoms include stiff neck, photophobia, depressed states, altered consciousness and personality change. Movement disorders, including tremors, gait disturbance and Parkinsonism may occur.
While it is well-known that WNV is of Middle East origin, what is less well-known is the New Yorker report dating back to 2000 in which Saddam Hussein was quoted by a defector referring to "his final weapon, developed in laboratories outside Iraq ... free of U.N. inspection, the laboratories will develop strain SV 141 of the West Nile virus." There is also a report that the Centers for Disease Control actually sent WNV samples to Iraq in 1985.
Is it possible one of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction has actually been deployed against us? Did Iraq have the ability to deliver such a biological weapon?
There is increasing suspicion that one of his labs was not in Iraq at all but less than 50 miles from the Florida coast. Cuban defectors say that Fidel Castro's Biological Front studied ways of using migratory birds to spread infectious diseases to the U.S. Saddam Hussein was also known to have close ties to Castro. And, according to Soviet defector Ken Alibek, Cuba, Iraq, Iran and other countries simultaneously received transfers of Soviet biotechnology.
Undersecretary of State John Bolton said Cuba's biological weapons capabilities underscore lingering concerns. He told an audience at the Heritage Foundation the U.S. is suspicious about Cuban biomedical laboratories and their ability to transfer biological weapons technology to Iraq, Syria and Libya all countries that Castro visited the previous year.
In 1998, Clinton administration Defense Secretary William S. Cohen wrote a letter to Armed Service Committee Chairman Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., stating that he was "concerned about the use of Cuba as a base for intelligence activities directed against the United States" and "Cuba's potential to develop and produce biological agents, given its biotechnology infrastructure."
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