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  • In 1968, about 6,000 sheep

  • died near this government facility.

  • They were poisoned by a chemical weapon named VX.

  • The US hasn't been known to actively use VX in combat.

  • In fact, it's begun destroying its

  • stockpile of chemical munitions

  • as part of a UN treaty.

  • But it's just one of many strange and secretive

  • experiments that happened within these walls.

  • Experiments on sheep,

  • mosquitoes,

  • and even civilians.

  • About 85 miles southwest of Salt Lake City

  • is the US government's top-secret bioweapons lab.

  • It's called the Dugway Proving Ground.

  • The 77-year-old facility covers about 800,000 acres.

  • That's just a little larger than

  • the entire state of Rhode Island.

  • And it tests some of the deadliest chemical,

  • biological, radiological, and explosive

  • hazards on Earth.

  • Less famous than Area 51,

  • Dugway dates all the way back to 1942.

  • Right in the middle of World War II.

  • Clip: The decisive battle of war has begun.

  • Narrator: The government needed a large area

  • to test powerful weapons,

  • eventually settling on this stretch of land

  • in the Utah desert.

  • Back then, the site was used to test

  • everything from chemical sprays and flamethrowers

  • to various antidotes and protective equipment,

  • and even fire-bombing.

  • After World War II,

  • Dugway mostly shut down.

  • Until the Korean War began in 1950.

  • That's when the proving ground

  • turned into what it is today:

  • a permanent military base.

  • In Dugway's first few decades,

  • the base worked mostly on offensive weaponry:

  • biological and chemical munitions

  • designed to directly attack enemies.

  • Clip: Sampling devices,

  • positioned throughout the test area,

  • yield valuable information to chemical core researchers.

  • Narrator: The 1950s, for example,

  • saw the launch of Operation Big Itch,

  • an experiment that was testing weaponized fleas.

  • The fleas weren't infected with

  • any type of disease or agent,

  • but experimenters were working

  • with thousands of them.

  • And the fleas were dropped in cluster bombs,

  • to gauge if they would survive

  • the fall from an airplane.

  • And this was only part one.

  • Dugway launched a second experiment,

  • called Project Bellwether,

  • in the 1960s.

  • Only this time, mosquitoes were injected

  • with inert diseases,

  • inert bacteria,

  • and inert viruses.

  • But get this.

  • Those mosquitoes were released upon

  • several groups of human volunteers.

  • Who were bitten again and again during the trials.

  • And there are records dating back

  • to the late 1950s,

  • which describe experiments that used

  • infected mosquitoes.

  • And those are just two experiments

  • known to the public.

  • Exactly what goes on at Dugway is,

  • well, pretty unclear.

  • And that's not by accident.

  • The area is intensely guarded.

  • Everything that comes in and out

  • is carefully monitored,

  • guards are on constant patrol and actively armed,

  • and the perimeter is lined with tall,

  • barbed-wire fencing.

  • There are even signs that authorize

  • "deadly force" when necessary.

  • Since the 1940s,

  • officials say operations have shifted

  • from offensive to defensive tactics.

  • Case in point,

  • most of the current known work

  • prepares agents to defend against

  • potential biological and chemical attacks.

  • For example,

  • a multitude of training programs

  • are held on-site for the armed forces.

  • Here's one in which Army Reserve soldiers are tasked

  • with checking the radiation levels of artillery rounds.

  • And here's another where soldiers

  • were tasked with identifying substances

  • in a simulated chemical lab.

  • Dugway's main operations include

  • the "BRAUCH" training facility,

  • constructed from various shipping containers.

  • It simulates underground environments

  • for military training.

  • There are also various buildings and rooms

  • that serve specific purposes.

  • Like the decontamination testing chamber,

  • the wind-tunnel testing room,

  • and the material test facility.

  • But perhaps the most interesting

  • room of all is this:

  • the Smartman Laboratory facility,

  • which houses the Smartman dummy,

  • a model that's used to simulate

  • human contact with chemical agents,

  • including the infamous VX nerve agent.

  • Specifically, the Smartman helps the lab develop

  • more effective individual protection respiratory equipment,

  • essentially gas masks and the like.

  • A variety of chemists, chemical analysts,

  • and technicians work on-site.

  • And the use of airtight chambers

  • and gas masks is not only common,

  • but mandatory.

  • Despite all of this dangerous experimentation,

  • the work done at Dugway hasn't

  • always been properly contained.

  • Remember that sheep incident?

  • That marked the start of a worrisome track record.

  • It happened when overhead planes

  • spewed out the nerve agent into the wind,

  • accidentally sending it into nearby

  • farmland in Skull Valley.

  • Within the next couple of days,

  • farmers found thousands of sheep

  • dead in their fields.

  • The Army compensated the farmers

  • and lent them bulldozers to bury the sheep.

  • But the accident sparked a whole debate

  • on the use of chemical weapons in warfare.

  • Adding on to these questionable practices,

  • a 1994 Senate hearing on veterans' health

  • focused specifically on Dugway veterans and civilians.

  • A report found that people at Dugway

  • were exposed to biological and chemical simulants

  • believed to be safe at the time

  • but that the Army had later stopped

  • using many of them because "they realized

  • they were not as safe as previously believed."

  • One veteran, who was accidentally sprayed

  • in the face with the chemical DMMP in 1984,

  • found himself wheezing and coughing the next day,

  • symptoms that ended up lasting several weeks.

  • Despite this, he was given only cough medicine

  • and antibiotics by the Dugway Army Hospital.

  • The Dugway Safety Office assured him

  • that the chemical was safe.

  • But by 1988, officials at Dugway had reevaluated

  • the simulant's danger and were concerned

  • it could cause cancer and kidney damage.

  • In 2011, the facility slipped up again:

  • It went on lockdown after workers

  • lost a vial containing the VX nerve agent.

  • Nobody was permitted to enter or exit the facility,

  • not even the employees.

  • And in 2016, the CDC and the Department of Defense

  • launched a major investigation

  • when a review team found that Dugway

  • had been operating dangerously

  • for several years without the government's knowledge.

  • USA Today reported "egregious failures"

  • by the facility's leadership and staff.

  • The reports singled out the head colonel

  • in command at Dugway, Brig. Gen. William King.

  • The Army's accountability investigation

  • recognized King as unqualified,

  • lacking the education and training

  • to effectively oversee biosafety procedures

  • crucial to Dugway's operation.

  • The report admonished him,

  • saying he "repeatedly deflected blame"

  • and "minimized the severity of incidents."

  • It even says King "fails to recognize"

  • how serious the incidents truly were.

  • And how serious were the incidents, exactly?

  • Well, under King's command,

  • the facility mistakenly shipped

  • live anthrax to other labs.

  • And not just once, but multiple times.

  • For over a decade.

  • That same report revealed that workers

  • had been regularly and deliberately

  • manipulating data in important records.

  • Records meant to verify that pathogens

  • being transported elsewhere were killed

  • and safe for researchers to handle

  • without protective gear.

  • Still, the facility's shady past,

  • secretive operations, and intense surveillance

  • have captured the attention, and skepticism,

  • of some closer observers,

  • including several conspiracy-theorist groups.

  • There are suggestions that the facility

  • is the "new Area 51."

  • And the local community has raised

  • their own questions about the facility's operations.

  • Dugway was even featured in an episode

  • of The History Channel's "UFO Hunters,"

  • in which local residents and UFO watchers

  • were interviewed and footage from

  • the area was examined.

  • It's hard not to wonder,

  • when you live in close proximity

  • to such a restricted landscape.

  • Despite these theories,

  • Dugway has expressed a desire to be

  • "more transparent."

  • And representatives have said the facility wants to be

  • "more a part of the local community"

  • by better informing citizens

  • about what exactly goes on there.

  • So far, they've delivered some on that.

  • The facility has its own events page,

  • which lists several events open to

  • the general public and the local Utah community.

  • This year, they're hosting a trail race

  • on the facility grounds.

  • Certainly, today's Dugway is a far cry

  • from the 1940s Dugway,

  • which was entirely closed off to the public.

  • But despite the shift in the level of secrecy,

  • much of Dugway's testing remains classified,

  • preserving the skepticism and

  • mysteriousness surrounding the facility.

In 1968, about 6,000 sheep

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Inside The US Government's Top-Secret Bioweapons Lab

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    joey joey に公開 2021 年 05 月 28 日
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